2022 New's Items

Observation of a Multitude of Correlated States at the Surface of Bulk 1T−TaSe2 Crystals

Chen, Y.
Ruan, W.
Cain, J. D.
Lee, R. L.
Kahn, S.
Jia, C.
Zettl, A.
Crommie, M. F.
2022

The interplay between electron-electron interactions and structural ordering can yield exceptionally rich correlated electronic phases. We have used scanning tunneling microscopy to investigate bulk 1TTaSe2 and have uncovered surprisingly diverse correlated surface states thereof. These surface states exhibit the same in-plane charge-...

Programmable Fabrication of Monodisperse Graphene Nanoribbons via Deterministic Iterative Synthesis

Yin, J.
Jacobse, P. H.
Pyle, D.
Wang, Z.
Crommie, M. F.
Dong, G.
2022

While enormous progress has been achieved in synthesizing atomically precise graphene nanoribbons (GNRs), the preparation of GNRs with a fully predetermined length and monomer sequence remains an unmet challenge. Here, we report a fabrication method that provides access to structurally diverse and monodisperse “designer” GNRs through utilization of an iterative synthesis strategy, in which a single monomer is incorporated into an oligomer chain during each chemical cycle. Surface-assisted cyclodehydrogenation is subsequently employed to generate the final nanoribbons, and bond-...

Imaging Gate-Tunable Tomonaga–Luttinger Liquids in 1H-MoSe2 Mirror Twin Boundaries

Zhu, T.
Ruan, W.
Wang, Y.-Q.......
Wang, F.
Moore, J. E.
Crommie, M. F.
2022

One-dimensional electron systems exhibit fundamentally different properties than higher-dimensional systems. For example, electron–electron interactions in one-dimensional electron systems have been predicted to induce Tomonaga–Luttinger liquid behaviour. Naturally occurring grain boundaries in single-layer transition metal dichalcogenides exhibit one-dimensional conducting channels that have been proposed to host Tomonaga–Luttinger liquids, but charge density wave physics has also been suggested to explain their behaviour. Clear identification of the electronic ground state of this...

Assignment of structural transitions during mechanical unwrapping of nucleosomes and their disassembly products

Díaz-Celis C
Cañari-Chumpitaz C
Sosa RP
Castillo JP
Zhang M
Cheng E
Chen AQ
Vien M
Kim J
Onoa B
Bustamante C
2022

Nucleosome DNA unwrapping and its disassembly into hexasomes and tetrasomes is necessary for genomic access and plays an important role in transcription regulation. Previous single-molecule mechanical nucleosome unwrapping revealed a low- and a high-force transitions, and force-FRET pulling experiments showed that DNA unwrapping is asymmetric, occurring always first from one side before the other. However, the assignment of DNA segments involved in these transitions remains controversial. Here, using high-resolution optical tweezers with simultaneous single-molecule FRET detection,...

Friction-driven membrane scission by the human ESCRT-III proteins CHMP1B and IST1

Cada AK
Pavlin MR
Castillo JP
Tong AB
Larsen KP
Ren X
Yokom AL
Tsai FC
Shiah JV
Bassereau PM
Bustamante CJ
Hurley JH
2022

The endosomal sorting complexes required for transport (ESCRT) system is an ancient and ubiquitous membrane scission machinery that catalyzes the budding and scission of membranes. ESCRT-mediated scission events, exemplified by those involved in the budding of HIV-1, are usually directed away from the cytosol (‘reverse-topology’), but they can also be directed towards the cytosol (‘normal-topology’). Of the ESCRT complexes 0-III, ESCRT-III is most directly implicated in membrane severing. Various subunits of ESCRT-III recruit the AAA+ ATPase VPS4, which is...

Cotemporal Single-Molecule Force and Fluorescence Measurements to Determine the Mechanism of Ribosome Translocation

Desai, VP
Frank, P
Bustamante, CJ
2022

Ribosomes are at the core of the central dogma of life. They perform the last major step of gene expression by translating the information written in the nucleotide codon sequences into the amino acid sequence of a protein. This is a complex mechanochemical process that requires the coordination of multiple dynamic events within the ribosome such as the precise timing of decoding and the subsequent translocation along the mRNA. We have previously used a high-resolution optical tweezers instrument with single-molecule fluorescence capabilities (“fleezers”) to study how ribosomes...

Preparation of Bioderived and Biodegradable Surfactants Based on an Intrinsically Disordered Protein Sequence

Klass SH
Gleason JM
Omole AO
Onoa B
Bustamante CJ
Francis MB
2022

Surfactants, block copolymers, and other types of micellar systems are used in a wide variety of biomedical and industrial processes. However, most commonly used surfactants are synthetically derived and pose environmental and toxicological concerns throughout their product life cycle. Because of this, bioderived and biodegradable surfactants are promising alternatives. For biosurfactants to be implemented industrially, they need to be produced on a large scale and also have tailorable properties that match those afforded by the polymerization of synthetic surfactants. In this paper...

Molecular organization of the early stages of nucleosome phase separation visualized by cryo-electron tomography

Zhang M
Díaz-Celis C,
Onoa B
Cañari-Chumpitaz C
Requejo KI
Liu J
Vien M
Nogales E
Ren G
Bustamante C
2022

It has been proposed that the intrinsic property of nucleosome arrays to undergo liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) in vitro is responsible for chromatin domain organization in vivo. However, understanding nucleosomal LLPS has been hindered by the challenge to characterize the structure of the resulting heterogeneous condensates. We used cryo-electron tomography and deep-learning-based 3D reconstruction/segmentation to determine the molecular organization of condensates at various stages of LLPS. We show that nucleosomal LLPS involves a...

Scientists Grow Lead-Free Solar Material With a Built-In Switch

August 30, 2022

Solar panels, also known as photovoltaics, rely on semiconductor devices, or solar cells, to convert energy from the sun into electricity.

To generate electricity, solar cells need an electric field to separate positive charges from negative charges. To get this field, manufacturers typically dope the solar cell with chemicals so that one layer of the device bears a positive charge and another layer a negative charge. This multilayered design ensures that electrons flow from the negative side of a device to the positive side – a key factor in device stability and...

Boron Nitride with a Twist Could Lead to New Way to Make Qubits

October 6, 2022

Achieving scalability in quantum processors, sensors, and networks requires novel devices that are easily manipulated between two quantum states. A team led by researchers from the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) has now developed a method, using a solid-state “twisted” crystalline layered material, which gives rise to tiny light-emitting points called color centers. These color centers can be switched on and off with the simple application of an external voltage.

“This is a first step toward a color center device that...