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Richard Sear University of Surrey Phase Transitions: From the Big Bang to Biology
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Richard Sear University of Surrey

Jan 31, 2016

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Phase Transitions: From the Big Bang to Biology. Richard Sear University of Surrey. Plan. Phase Transitions: Around us. In general. In the universe. In biology. Around us: Water. Water vapour transformed to liquid water. Phase transitions are universal. Annual rainfall (mm). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Richard Sear

University of Surrey

Phase Transitions: From the Big Bang to Biology

Page 2: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Phase Transitions:

Around us.

In general.

In the universe.

In biology.

Plan

Page 3: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Around us: Water

Water vapour transformed to liquid water.

Page 4: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Phase transitions

are universal

Annual rainfall (mm)

New Haven

London

Page 5: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Phase Transitions:

Symmetry

Crystals are not isotropic – here the snowflake (ice) has hexagonal symmetry

On freezing the isotropic symmetry of the liquid has been broken. Ice is less symmetric than water.

Page 6: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Phase Transitions:

Sudden

Phase transitions are sudden, dramatic, phenomena

On heating water, nothing happens until suddenly at 100 C it boils.

Page 7: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Phase Transitions:

Collective phenomena

One, or a few, molecules:

No phase transition.

A single molecule cannot boil, cannot freeze.

Page 8: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Phase Transitions:

Collective phenomena

Only with many molecules can water and ice exist.

Page 9: Richard Sear University of Surrey

The exception that

proves the rule

pdf for speed of Na atoms

Almost all phase transitions are driven by interactions between the molecules, quarks, etc.

The exception is Bose-Einstein condensation.

Page 10: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Quark-hadron transition from fluid of unconfined quarks and gluons to one where they are bound in hadrons.

Image from QCD conference in Adelaide – Wilton can explain?

Phase Transitions:

In the Early Universe

Page 11: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Universe expands and cools

10 μs

Phase Transitions:

In the Early Universe

Page 12: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Phase Transitions:

In Biology

Fluorescent image of cells – nuclei are blue.

Page 13: Richard Sear University of Surrey

A protein called

Dishevelled

Dictionary definition:

Dishevelled, adjective(of people or their appearance) very untidy

Page 14: Richard Sear University of Surrey

When Dvl is mutated cells can’t polarise – so hairs point randomly

Close up of part of wing of fruit fly (Axelrod)

Normally hairs point away from body

A protein called

Dishevelled

Page 15: Richard Sear University of Surrey

The protein dishevelled (Dvl) is essential for development in all animals.

A protein called

Dishevelled

Page 16: Richard Sear University of Surrey

A Phase Transition

in a cell

Nucleus Cytoplasm

Page 17: Richard Sear University of Surrey

A Phase Transition

in a cell

Dvl is NOT uniformly distributed in the cytoplasm of the cells.

It forms dynamic aggregates, called puncta.

Scale bar 15μm

Dale lab, JCS 2005

Page 18: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Defending against

HIV attack

The protein TRIM5α (green) & microtubules (red)

TRIM5α also forms dynamic aggregates. These defend the cell against HIV.

Hope & Stoye labs

Page 19: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Defending against

HIV attack

Movie

Hope & Stoye labs

Page 20: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Defending against

HIV attack

TRIM13 (green) & nucleus (red)

Ballabio lab

Page 21: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Measure of biological function

Bienz lab

No phase separation – no function

mutant

A Phase Transition

in a cellmutantnormal

Page 22: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Interactions

engineered

Molecular interactions set by laws of physics

Protein interactions optimised by evolution

Page 23: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Interactions

engineered

Molecular interactions set by laws of physics

Protein interactions optimised by evolution

Page 24: Richard Sear University of Surrey
Page 25: Richard Sear University of Surrey

In cells phase transitions

Perform a function

Melting of ice, formation of baryons just are – consequence of laws of physics

In biology they perform a function – consequence of evolution

Page 26: Richard Sear University of Surrey

Phase Transitions:

Symmetry

Water droplet in 0g (NASA)

Liquids are isotropic – droplets spherically symmetric

Page 27: Richard Sear University of Surrey

The cytoplasm is crowded

David Goodsell

30 to 40 % by volume protein and RNA