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Proton-assisted growth of ultra-flat graphene films 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7789) : 204-+
作者:  Yuan, Guowen;  Lin, Dongjing;  Wang, Yong;  Huang, Xianlei;  Chen, Wang;  Xie, Xuedong;  Zong, Junyu;  Yuan, Qian-Qian;  Zheng, Hang;  Wang, Di;  Xu, Jie;  Li, Shao-Chun;  Zhang, Yi;  Sun, Jian;  Xi, Xiaoxiang;  Gao, Libo
收藏  |  浏览/下载:8/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Graphene films grown by chemical vapour deposition have unusual physical and chemical properties that offer promise for applications such as flexible electronics and high-frequency transistors(1-10). However, wrinkles invariably form during growth because of the strong coupling to the substrate, and these limit the large-scale homogeneity of the film(1-4,11,12). Here we develop a proton-assisted method of chemical vapour deposition to grow ultra-flat graphene films that are wrinkle-free. Our method of proton penetration(13-17) and recombination to form hydrogen can also reduce the wrinkles formed during traditional chemical vapour deposition of graphene. Some of the wrinkles disappear entirely, owing to the decoupling of van der Waals interactions and possibly an increase in distance from the growth surface. The electronic band structure of the as-grown graphene films shows a V-shaped Dirac cone and a linear dispersion relation within the atomic plane or across an atomic step, confirming the decoupling from the substrate. The ultra-flat nature of the graphene films ensures that their surfaces are easy to clean after a wet transfer process. A robust quantum Hall effect appears even at room temperature in a device with a linewidth of 100 micrometres. Graphene films grown by proton-assisted chemical vapour deposition should largely retain their intrinsic performance, and our method should be easily generalizable to other nanomaterials for strain and doping engineering.


  
Feedback generates a second receptive field in neurons of the visual cortex 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Shi, Enzheng;  Yuan, Biao;  Shiring, Stephen B.;  Gao, Yao;  Akriti;  Guo, Yunfan;  Su, Cong;  Lai, Minliang;  Yang, Peidong;  Kong, Jing;  Savoie, Brett M.;  Yu, Yi;  Dou, Letian
收藏  |  浏览/下载:44/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Animals sense the environment through pathways that link sensory organs to the brain. In the visual system, these feedforward pathways define the classical feedforward receptive field (ffRF), the area in space in which visual stimuli excite a neuron(1). The visual system also uses visual context-the visual scene surrounding a stimulus-to predict the content of the stimulus(2), and accordingly, neurons have been identified that are excited by stimuli outside their ffRF(3-8). However, the mechanisms that generate excitation to stimuli outside the ffRF are unclear. Here we show that feedback projections onto excitatory neurons in the mouse primary visual cortex generate a second receptive field that is driven by stimuli outside the ffRF. The stimulation of this feedback receptive field (fbRF) elicits responses that are slower and are delayed in comparison with those resulting from the stimulation of the ffRF. These responses are preferentially reduced by anaesthesia and by silencing higher visual areas. Feedback inputs from higher visual areas have scattered receptive fields relative to their putative targets in the primary visual cortex, which enables the generation of the fbRF. Neurons with fbRFs are located in cortical layers that receive strong feedback projections and are absent in the main input layer, which is consistent with a laminar processing hierarchy. The observation that large, uniform stimuli-which cover both the fbRF and the ffRF-suppress these responses indicates that the fbRF and the ffRF are mutually antagonistic. Whereas somatostatin-expressing inhibitory neurons are driven by these large stimuli, inhibitory neurons that express parvalbumin and vasoactive intestinal peptide have mutually antagonistic fbRF and ffRF, similar to excitatory neurons. Feedback projections may therefore enable neurons to use context to estimate information that is missing from the ffRF and to report differences in stimulus features across visual space, regardless of whether excitation occurs inside or outside the ffRF. By complementing the ffRF, the fbRF that we identify here could contribute to predictive processing.


Feedback projections onto neurons of the mouse primary visual cortex generate a second excitatory receptive field that is driven by stimuli outside of the classical feedforward receptive field, with responses mediated by higher visual areas.


  
Action of a minimal contractile bactericidal nanomachine 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7805) : 658-+
作者:  Peng, Ruchao;  Xu, Xin;  Jing, Jiamei;  Wang, Min;  Peng, Qi;  Liu, Sheng;  Wu, Ying;  Bao, Xichen;  Wang, Peiyi;  Qi, Jianxun;  Gao, George F.;  Shi, Yi
收藏  |  浏览/下载:13/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

The authors report near-atomic resolution structures of the R-type bacteriocin from Pseudomonas aeruginosa in the pre-contraction and post-contraction states, and these structures provide insight into the mechanism of action of molecular syringes.


R-type bacteriocins are minimal contractile nanomachines that hold promise as precision antibiotics(1-4). Each bactericidal complex uses a collar to bridge a hollow tube with a contractile sheath loaded in a metastable state by a baseplate scaffold(1,2). Fine-tuning of such nucleic acid-free protein machines for precision medicine calls for an atomic description of the entire complex and contraction mechanism, which is not available from baseplate structures of the (DNA-containing) T4 bacteriophage(5). Here we report the atomic model of the complete R2 pyocin in its pre-contraction and post-contraction states, each containing 384 subunits of 11 unique atomic models of 10 gene products. Comparison of these structures suggests the following sequence of events during pyocin contraction: tail fibres trigger lateral dissociation of baseplate triplexes  the dissociation then initiates a cascade of events leading to sheath contraction  and this contraction converts chemical energy into mechanical force to drive the iron-tipped tube across the bacterial cell surface, killing the bacterium.


  
Negative supercoil at gene boundaries modulates gene topology 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7792) : 701-+
作者:  Yuan, Guowen;  Lin, Dongjing;  Wang, Yong;  Huang, Xianlei;  Chen, Wang;  Xie, Xuedong;  Zong, Junyu;  Yuan, Qian-Qian;  Zheng, Hang;  Wang, Di;  Xu, Jie;  Li, Shao-Chun;  Zhang, Yi;  Sun, Jian;  Xi, Xiaoxiang;  Gao, Libo
收藏  |  浏览/下载:16/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Transcription challenges the integrity of replicating chromosomes by generating topological stress and conflicts with forks(1,2). The DNA topoisomerases Top1 and Top2 and the HMGB family protein Hmo1 assist DNA replication and transcription(3-6). Here we describe the topological architecture of genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae during the G1 and S phases of the cell cycle. We found under-wound DNA at gene boundaries and over-wound DNA within coding regions. This arrangement does not depend on Pol II or S phase. Top2 and Hmo1 preserve negative supercoil at gene boundaries, while Top1 acts at coding regions. Transcription generates RNA-DNA hybrids within coding regions, independently of fork orientation. During S phase, Hmo1 protects under-wound DNA from Top2, while Top2 confines Pol II and Top1 at coding units, counteracting transcription leakage and aberrant hybrids at gene boundaries. Negative supercoil at gene boundaries prevents supercoil diffusion and nucleosome repositioning at coding regions. DNA looping occurs at Top2 clusters. We propose that Hmo1 locks gene boundaries in a cruciform conformation and, with Top2, modulates the architecture of genes that retain the memory of the topological arrangements even when transcription is repressed.