4 resultados para Knots and splices.

em National Center for Biotechnology Information - NCBI


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Topoisomerase II is able to break and rejoin double-strand DNA. It controls the topological state and forms and resolves knots and catenanes. Not much is known about the relation between the chromosome segregation and condensation defects as found in yeast top2 mutants and the role of topoisomerase II in meiosis. We studied meiosis in a heat-sensitive top2 mutant of Schizosaccharomyces pombe. Topoisomerase II is not required until shortly before meiosis I. The enzyme is necessary for condensation shortly before the first meiotic division but not for early meiotic prophase condensation. DNA replication, prophase morphology, and dynamics of the linear elements are normal in the top2 mutant. The top2 cells are not able to perform meiosis I. Arrested cells have four spindle pole bodies and two spindles but only one nucleus, suggesting that the arrest is nonregulatory. Finally, we show that the arrest is partly solved in a top2 rec7 double mutant, indicating that topoisomerase II functions in the segregation of recombined chromosomes. We suggest that the inability to decatenate the replicated DNA is the primary defect in top2. This leads to a loss of chromatin condensation shortly before meiosis I, failure of sister chromatid separation, and a nonregulatory arrest.

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Two variables define the topological state of closed double-stranded DNA: the knot type, K, and ΔLk, the linking number difference from relaxed DNA. The equilibrium distribution of probabilities of these states, P(ΔLk, K), is related to two conditional distributions: P(ΔLk|K), the distribution of ΔLk for a particular K, and P(K|ΔLk) and also to two simple distributions: P(ΔLk), the distribution of ΔLk irrespective of K, and P(K). We explored the relationships between these distributions. P(ΔLk, K), P(ΔLk), and P(K|ΔLk) were calculated from the simulated distributions of P(ΔLk|K) and of P(K). The calculated distributions agreed with previous experimental and theoretical results and greatly advanced on them. Our major focus was on P(K|ΔLk), the distribution of knot types for a particular value of ΔLk, which had not been evaluated previously. We found that unknotted circular DNA is not the most probable state beyond small values of ΔLk. Highly chiral knotted DNA has a lower free energy because it has less torsional deformation. Surprisingly, even at |ΔLk| > 12, only one or two knot types dominate the P(K|ΔLk) distribution despite the huge number of knots of comparable complexity. A large fraction of the knots found belong to the small family of torus knots. The relationship between supercoiling and knotting in vivo is discussed.

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Very-long-baseline interferometry images of the nuclear region of the radio galaxy Cygnus A reveal a pronounced "core" and a knotty jet and counterjet. The knots are moving away from the core at apparent speeds which are subluminal for h = 1 [h = H0/100 km.s-1.Mpc-1;1 parsec (pc) = 3.09 x 10(16)m] and about c for h = 0.5. The jet is aligned with the outer, kiloparsec-scale jet to within 2 degrees. The counterjet has a total flux density at 5 GHz of about one-fifth of that of the jet. In the context of the twin relativistic jet model for active galactic nuclei, the jet in Cygnus A is oriented at an angle to our line of sight of 35-80 degrees and 55-85 degrees, and the intrinsic velocity of the jet fluid is 0.4-0.6c and 0.6-1c for h = 1 and h = 0.5, respectively.

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I will discuss several issues related to the acceleration, collimation, and propagation of jets from active galactic nuclei. Hydromagnetic stresses provide the best bet for both accelerating relativistic flows and providing a certain amount of initial collimation. However, there are limits to how much "self-collimation" can be achieved without the help of an external pressurized medium. Moreover, existing models, which postulate highly organized poloidal flux near the base of the flow, are probably unrealistic. Instead, a large fraction of the magnetic energy may reside in highly disorganized "chaotic" fields. Such a field can also accelerate the flow to relativistic speeds, in some cases with greater efficiency than highly organized fields, but at the expense of self-collimation. The observational interpretation of jet physics is still hampered by a dearth of unambiguous diagnostics. Propagating disturbances in flows, such as the oblique shocks that may constitute the kiloparsec-scale "knots" in the M87 jet, may provide a wide range of untapped diagnostics for jet properties.