From seashells to DNA, chirality is expressed at every level of biological structures. In self-assembled structures it may emerge cooperatively from chirality at the molecular scale. Amphiphilic molecules, for example, can form a variety of aggregates and mesophases that express the chirality of their constituent molecules at a supramolecular scale of micrometres. Quantitative prediction of the large-scale chirality based on that at the molecular scale remains a largely unsolved problem. Furthermore, experimental control over the expression of chirality at the supramolecular level is difficult to achieve: mixing of different enantiomers usually results in phase separation. Here we present an experimental and theoretical description of a system in which chirality can be varied continuously and controllably ('tuned') in micrometre-scale structures. We observe the formation of twisted ribbons consisting of bilayers of gemini surfactants (two surfactant molecules covalently linked at their charged head groups). We find that the degree of twist and the pitch of the ribbons can be tuned by the introduction of opposite-handed chiral counterions in various proportions. This degree of control might be of practical value; for example, in the use of the helical structures as templates for helical crystallization of macromolecules.
In this work, we
investigate whether stiffening in compression
is a feature of single cells and whether the intracellular polymer
networks that comprise the cytoskeleton (all of which stiffen with
increasing shear strain) stiffen or soften when subjected to compressive
strains. We find that individual cells, such as fibroblasts, stiffen
at physiologically relevant compressive strains, but genetic ablation
of vimentin diminishes this effect. Further, we show that unlike networks
of purified F-actin or microtubules, which soften in compression,
vimentin intermediate filament networks stiffen in both compression
and extension, and we present a theoretical model to explain this
response based on the flexibility of vimentin filaments and their
surface charge, which resists volume changes of the network under
compression. These results provide a new framework by which to understand
the mechanical responses of cells and point to a central role of intermediate
filaments in response to compression.
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