Institution
Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste
Facility•Trieste, Italy•
About: Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste is a facility organization based out in Trieste, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy & Graphene. The organization has 738 authors who have published 2592 publications receiving 42179 citations.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The findings suggest that the virus is evolving and European, North American and Asian strains might coexist, each of them characterized by a different mutation pattern.
Abstract: SARS-CoV-2 is a RNA coronavirus responsible for the pandemic of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (COVID-19). RNA viruses are characterized by a high mutation rate, up to a million times higher than that of their hosts. Virus mutagenic capability depends upon several factors, including the fidelity of viral enzymes that replicate nucleic acids, as SARS-CoV-2 RNA dependent RNA polymerase (RdRp). Mutation rate drives viral evolution and genome variability, thereby enabling viruses to escape host immunity and to develop drug resistance. We analyzed 220 genomic sequences from the GISAID database derived from patients infected by SARS-CoV-2 worldwide from December 2019 to mid-March 2020. SARS-CoV-2 reference genome was obtained from the GenBank database. Genomes alignment was performed using Clustal Omega. Mann–Whitney and Fisher-Exact tests were used to assess statistical significance. We characterized 8 novel recurrent mutations of SARS-CoV-2, located at positions 1397, 2891, 14408, 17746, 17857, 18060, 23403 and 28881. Mutations in 2891, 3036, 14408, 23403 and 28881 positions are predominantly observed in Europe, whereas those located at positions 17746, 17857 and 18060 are exclusively present in North America. We noticed for the first time a silent mutation in RdRp gene in England (UK) on February 9th, 2020 while a different mutation in RdRp changing its amino acid composition emerged on February 20th, 2020 in Italy (Lombardy). Viruses with RdRp mutation have a median of 3 point mutations [range: 2–5], otherwise they have a median of 1 mutation [range: 0–3] (p value < 0.001). These findings suggest that the virus is evolving and European, North American and Asian strains might coexist, each of them characterized by a different mutation pattern. The contribution of the mutated RdRp to this phenomenon needs to be investigated. To date, several drugs targeting RdRp enzymes are being employed for SARS-CoV-2 infection treatment. Some of them have a predicted binding moiety in a SARS-CoV-2 RdRp hydrophobic cleft, which is adjacent to the 14408 mutation we identified. Consequently, it is important to study and characterize SARS-CoV-2 RdRp mutation in order to assess possible drug-resistance viral phenotypes. It is also important to recognize whether the presence of some mutations might correlate with different SARS-CoV-2 mortality rates.
842 citations
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TL;DR: It was observed that the strain within collagen fibrils is always considerably smaller than in the whole tendon, which points toward the existence of additional gliding processes occurring at the interfibrillar level.
619 citations
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TL;DR: By exciting metallic K3C60 with mid-infrared optical pulses, a large increase in carrier mobility is induced, accompanied by the opening of a gap in the optical conductivity, which is observed at equilibrium when cooling metallic K 3C60 below Tc (20 kelvin).
Abstract: The use of light to control the properties of condensed-matter materials is a promising area of research, with the long-term prospect that it might lead to the development of quantum devices driven by light. In particular, it was shown recently that nonlinear excitation of certain phonons in bilayer copper oxides induces superconducting-like optical properties at temperatures far above the material's superconducting transition temperature (Tc). This effect was accompanied by the disruption of competing charge-density-wave correlations, explaining some, but not all, of the experimental results. Andrea Cavalleri and colleagues now report that by exciting metallic K3C60 with mid-infrared optical pulses, they can induce a large increase in carrier mobility, accompanied by the opening of a gap in the optical conductivity. Strikingly, these same signatures are observed at equilibrium when K3C60 cools below its Tc of 20 K.
466 citations
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TL;DR: It is shown, using single-cell electrophysiology techniques, electron microscopy analysis and theoretical modelling, that nanotubes improve the responsiveness of neurons by forming tight contacts with the cell membranes that might favour electrical shortcuts between the proximal and distal compartments of the neuron.
Abstract: Carbon nanotubes have been applied in several areas of nerve tissue engineering to probe and augment cell behaviour, to label and track subcellular components, and to study the growth and organization of neural networks. Recent reports show that nanotubes can sustain and promote neuronal electrical activity in networks of cultured cells, but the ways in which they affect cellular function are still poorly understood. Here, we show, using single-cell electrophysiology techniques, electron microscopy analysis and theoretical modelling, that nanotubes improve the responsiveness of neurons by forming tight contacts with the cell membranes that might favour electrical shortcuts between the proximal and distal compartments of the neuron. We propose the 'electrotonic hypothesis' to explain the physical interactions between the cell and nanotube, and the mechanisms of how carbon nanotubes might affect the collective electrical activity of cultured neuronal networks. These considerations offer a perspective that would allow us to predict or engineer interactions between neurons and carbon nanotubes.
465 citations
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Saint Petersburg State University1, University of Würzburg2, Dresden University of Technology3, Azerbaijan National Academy of Sciences4, Leibniz Association5, University of the Basque Country6, Donostia International Physics Center7, Johannes Kepler University of Linz8, Tomsk State University9, Russian Academy of Sciences10, Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin11, Synchrotron Radiation Center12, Hiroshima University13, Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste14, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory15, Max Planck Society16, Spanish National Research Council17
TL;DR: In this paper, an intrinsic antiferromagnetic topological insulator, MnBi2Te4, is theoretically predicted and then realized experimentally, with implications for the study of exotic quantum phenomena, such as quantized magnetoelectric coupling and axion electrodynamics.
Abstract: Magnetic topological insulators are narrow-gap semiconductor materials that combine non-trivial band topology and magnetic order1. Unlike their nonmagnetic counterparts, magnetic topological insulators may have some of the surfaces gapped, which enables a number of exotic phenomena that have potential applications in spintronics1, such as the quantum anomalous Hall effect2 and chiral Majorana fermions3. So far, magnetic topological insulators have only been created by means of doping nonmagnetic topological insulators with 3d transition-metal elements; however, such an approach leads to strongly inhomogeneous magnetic4 and electronic5 properties of these materials, restricting the observation of important effects to very low temperatures2,3. An intrinsic magnetic topological insulator—a stoichiometric well ordered magnetic compound—could be an ideal solution to these problems, but no such material has been observed so far. Here we predict by ab initio calculations and further confirm using various experimental techniques the realization of an antiferromagnetic topological insulator in the layered van der Waals compound MnBi2Te4. The antiferromagnetic ordering that MnBi2Te4 shows makes it invariant with respect to the combination of the time-reversal and primitive-lattice translation symmetries, giving rise to a ℤ2 topological classification; ℤ2 = 1 for MnBi2Te4, confirming its topologically nontrivial nature. Our experiments indicate that the symmetry-breaking (0001) surface of MnBi2Te4 exhibits a large bandgap in the topological surface state. We expect this property to eventually enable the observation of a number of fundamental phenomena, among them quantized magnetoelectric coupling6–8 and axion electrodynamics9,10. Other exotic phenomena could become accessible at much higher temperatures than those reached so far, such as the quantum anomalous Hall effect2 and chiral Majorana fermions3. An intrinsic antiferromagnetic topological insulator, MnBi2Te4, is theoretically predicted and then realized experimentally, with implications for the study of exotic quantum phenomena.
377 citations
Authors
Showing all 763 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Mario Antonelli | 93 | 412 | 71412 |
Giacinto Scoles | 70 | 300 | 18063 |
Luigi P. Badano | 65 | 405 | 39313 |
Heinz Amenitsch | 59 | 456 | 15359 |
Andrew W. Munro | 58 | 229 | 9936 |
Kevin C. Prince | 55 | 458 | 11695 |
Jean Susini | 51 | 188 | 9479 |
Sandro Santucci | 51 | 365 | 10887 |
Alessandro Vindigni | 50 | 161 | 9095 |
Martina Havenith | 49 | 297 | 9476 |
Osamu Takahashi | 48 | 551 | 9877 |
Giuseppe Legname | 48 | 220 | 10070 |
Fulvio Parmigiani | 46 | 358 | 8938 |
Maya Kiskinova | 46 | 251 | 6957 |
Vladimír Matolín | 45 | 419 | 8191 |