Uncoupling protein-3 (UCP-3) is a recently identified member of the mitochondrial transporter superfamily that is expressed predominantly in skeletal muscle. However, its close relative UCP-1 is expressed exclusively in brown adipose tissue, a tissue whose main function is fat combustion and thermogenesis. Studies on the expression of UCP-3 in animals and humans in different physiological situations support a role for UCP-3 in energy balance and lipid metabolism. However, direct evidence for these roles is lacking. Here we describe the creation of transgenic mice that overexpress human UCP-3 in skeletal muscle. These mice are hyperphagic but weigh less than their wild-type littermates. Magnetic resonance imaging shows a striking reduction in adipose tissue mass. The mice also exhibit lower fasting plasma glucose and insulin levels and an increased glucose clearance rate. This provides evidence that skeletal muscle UCP-3 has the potential to influence metabolic rate and glucose homeostasis in the whole animal.
(SPB) or y.y.kim@leeds.ac.uk (YYK). 2Structural biominerals are inorganic/organic composites that exhibit remarkable mechanical properties. However, the structure-property relationships of even the simplest building unitmineral single crystals containing embedded macromolecules -remain poorly understood. Here, by means of a model biomineral made from calcite single crystals containing glycine (0-7 mol%) or aspartic acid (0-4 mol%), we elucidate the origin of the superior hardness of biogenic calcite.We analyzed lattice distortions in these model crystals by using x-ray diffraction and molecular dynamics simulations, and by means of solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance show that the amino acids are incorporated as individual molecules. We also demonstrate that nanoindentation hardness increased with amino acid content, reaching values equivalent to their biogenic counterparts. A dislocation pinning model reveals that the enhanced hardness is determined by the force required to cut covalent bonds in the molecules.3 Biominerals such as bones, teeth and seashells are characterized by properties optimized for their functions. Despite being formed from brittle minerals and flexible polymers, nature demonstrates that it is possible to generate materials with strengths and toughnesses appropriate for structural applications 1 . At one level, the mechanical properties of these hierarchically structured materials are modelled as classical composites consisting of a mineral phase embedded in an organic matrix 2 . However, the single crystal mineral building blocks of biominerals are also composites 3 , containing both aggregates of biomacromolecules as large as 20 nm 4,5 and inorganic impurities 6,7 . While it should be entirely possible to employ this simple biogenic strategy in materials synthesis 8,9 , the strengthening and toughening mechanisms that result from these inclusions are still poorly understood 10,11 . This work addresses this challenge by analyzing hardening mechanisms in a simple model biomineral system: calcite single crystals containing known amounts of amino acids. We report synthetic calcite crystals with hardnesses equivalent to those of their biogenic counterparts, and offer a detailed explanation for the observed hardening.Since plastic deformation in single crystals occurs by the motion of dislocations, hardness is enhanced by features that inhibit dislocation motion. The mechanisms by which guest species may harden ionic single crystals generally fall into two categories. Second phase particles directly block dislocation motion, requiring a dislocation to either cut through (shear) a particle or bypass it by a diffusive process to keep going 12 . Solutes (point defects) do not directly block dislocation motion, but the stress fields of the dislocations interact with those associated with misfitting solutes, retarding dislocation motion 12 . Biominerals, notably calcite, often deform plastically by twinning 11 , but since twins grow by motion of "twinning dislocations" 13 , these concep...
We provide evidence that citrate anions bridge between mineral platelets in bone and hypothesize that their presence acts to maintain separate platelets with disordered regions between them rather than gradual transformations into larger, more ordered blocks of mineral. To assess this hypothesis, we take as a model for a citrate bridging between layers of calcium phosphate mineral a double salt octacalcium phosphate citrate (OCPcitrate). We use a combination of multinuclear solid-state NMR spectroscopy, powder X-ray diffraction, and first principles electronic structure calculations to propose a quantitative structure for this material, in which citrate anions reside in a hydrated layer, bridging between apatitic layers. To assess the relevance of such a structure in native bone mineral, we present for the first time, to our knowledge, 17 O NMR data on bone and compare them with 17 O NMR data for OCP-citrate and other calcium phosphate minerals relevant to bone. The proposed structural model that we deduce from this work for bone mineral is a layered structure with thin apatitic platelets sandwiched between OCP-citrate-like hydrated layers. Such a structure can explain a number of known structural features of bone mineral: the thin, plate-like morphology of mature bone mineral crystals, the presence of significant quantities of strongly bound water molecules, and the relatively high concentration of hydrogen phosphate as well as the maintenance of a disordered region between mineral platelets.NMR crystallography | biomineralization B one is a complex organic-inorganic composite material (1), in which calcium phosphate nanoparticles are held within a primarily collagen protein matrix. The mineral component is a poorly crystalline phase, closely related to hydroxyapatite. The currently accepted model of bone mineral is ∼50-to 150-nmthick stacks of very closely packed apatitic platelets, each of order 2.5-4 nm in thickness (1-4), arranged so that their large (100) faces are parallel to each other and their c axes are strongly ordered (parallel to collagen fibrils) (5). NMR studies show that, in addition to the largely ordered but nonstoichiometric apatitic phase, there is a substantial, highly hydrated, disordered phase containing up to 55% of the bone mineral phosphatic ions (6, 7) but in the form of hydrogen phosphate or phosphate strongly hydrogen-bonded to water rather than apatitic orthophosphate (8). This phase has been assigned as a surface phase, but whether the surface in question is that of individual mineral platelets or the surface of the overall structure formed by a stack of such platelets is not yet clear. There is, however, significant experimental evidence that is not explained by this model as it stands. First, there has never been any observation of an isolated mineral platelet in mature bone, even in preparations in which there have been attempts to disperse the mineral structures (9). This feature suggests that the mineral platelets are not independent structures-indeed, their ordered aggregati...
Using “3D-spacer” technology, we have knitted 80% β-phase PVDF with Ag/PA66 fibres to demonstrate all fibre piezoelectric power generators. The 3D structure provides a power density of 1.10–5.10 μW cm−2 at applied impacts of 0.02–0.10 MPa.
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