2 resultados para "Purge and Trap"

em Universitätsbibliothek Kassel, Universität Kassel, Germany


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The collection of X chromosome insertions (PX) lethal lines, which was isolated from a screen for essential genes on the X chromosome, was characterized by means of cloning the insertion sites, mapping the sites within genomic DNA and determination of the associated reporter gene expresssion patterns. The established STS flanking the P element insertion sites were submitted to EMBL nucleotide databases and their in situ data together with the enhancer trap expression patterns have been deposited in the FlyView database. The characterized lines are now available to be used by the scientific community for a detailed analysis of the newly established lethal gene functions. One of the isolated genes on the X chromosome was the Drosophila gene Wnt5 (DWnt5). From two independent screens, one lethal and three homozygous viable alleles were recovered, allowing the identification of two distinct functions for DWnt5 in the fly. Observations on the developing nervous system of mutant embryos suggest that DWnt5 activity affects axon projection pattern. Elevated levels of DWNT5 activity in the midline cells of the central nervous system causes improper establishment and maintenance of the axonal pathways. Our analysis of the expression and mutant phenotype indicates that DWnt5 function in a process needed for proper organization of the nervous system. A second and novel function of DWnt5 is the control of the body size by regulation of the cell number rather than affecting the size of cells. Moreover, experimentally increased DWnt5 levels in a post-mitotic region of the eye imaginal disc causes abnormal cell cycle progression, resulting in additional ommatidia in the adult eye when compared to wild type. The increased cell number and the effects on the cell cycle after exposure to high DWNT5 levels is the result of a failure to downregulate cyclin B and therefore the unsuccessful establishment of a G1 arrest.

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The accurate transport of an ion over macroscopic distances represents a challenging control problem due to the different length and time scales that enter and the experimental limitations on the controls that need to be accounted for. Here, we investigate the performance of different control techniques for ion transport in state-of-the-art segmented miniaturized ion traps. We employ numerical optimization of classical trajectories and quantum wavepacket propagation as well as analytical solutions derived from invariant based inverse engineering and geometric optimal control. The applicability of each of the control methods depends on the length and time scales of the transport. Our comprehensive set of tools allows us make a number of observations. We find that accurate shuttling can be performed with operation times below the trap oscillation period. The maximum speed is limited by the maximum acceleration that can be exerted on the ion. When using controls obtained from classical dynamics for wavepacket propagation, wavepacket squeezing is the only quantum effect that comes into play for a large range of trapping parameters. We show that this can be corrected by a compensating force derived from invariant based inverse engineering, without a significant increase in the operation time.