@article{FussmannBlasius2005, author = {Fussmann, Gregor F. and Blasius, Bernd}, title = {Community response to enrichment is highly sensitive to model structure}, year = {2005}, abstract = {Biologists use mathematical functions to model, understand, and predict nature. For most biological processes, however, the exact analytical form is not known. This is also true for one of the most basic life processes, the uptake of food or resources. We show that the use of a number of nearly indistinguishable functions, which can serve as phenomenological descriptors of resource uptake, may lead to alarmingly different dynamical behaviour in a simple community model. More specifically, we demonstrate that the degree of resource enrichment needed to destabilize the community dynamics depends critically on the mathematical nature of the uptake function.}, language = {en} } @article{BetkeLokstein2019, author = {Betke, Alexander and Lokstein, Heiko}, title = {Two-photon excitation spectroscopy of photosynthetic light-harvesting complexes and pigments}, series = {Faraday discussions}, volume = {216}, journal = {Faraday discussions}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, address = {Cambridge}, issn = {1359-6640}, doi = {10.1039/c8fd00198g}, pages = {494 -- 506}, year = {2019}, abstract = {In addition to (bacterio)chlorophylls, (B)Chls, light-harvesting complexes (LHCs) bind carotenoids, and/or their oxygen derivatives, xanthophylls. Xanthophylls/carotenoids have pivotal functions in LHCs: in stabilization of the structure, as accessory light-harvesting pigments and, probably most importantly, in photoprotection. Xanthophylls are assumed to be involved in the not yet fully understood mechanism of energy-dependent (qE) non-photochemical quenching of Chl fluorescence (NPQ) in higher plants and algae. The so called "xanthophyll cycle" appears to be crucial in this regard. The molecular mechanism(s) of xanthophyll involvement in qE/NPQ have not been established, yet. Moreover, excitation energy transfer (EET) processes involving carotenoids are also difficult to study, due to the fact that transitions between the ground state (S-0, 1(1)A(g)(-)) and the lowest excited singlet state (S-1, 2(1)A(g)(-)) of carotenoids are optically one-photon forbidden ("dark"). Two-photon excitation spectroscopic techniques have been used for more than two decades to study one-photon forbidden states of carotenoids. In the current study, two-photon excitation profiles of LHCII samples containing different xanthophyll complements were measured in the presumed 1(1)A(g)(-) -> 2(1)A(g)(-) (S-0 -> S-1) transition spectral region of the xanthophylls, as well as for isolated chlorophylls a and b in solution. The results indicate that direct two-photon excitation of Chls in this spectral region is dominant over that by xanthophylls. Implications of the results for proposed mechanism(s) of qE/NPQ will be discussed.}, language = {en} } @article{BapolisiKielbBekiretal.2022, author = {Bapolisi, Alain Murhimalika and Kielb, Patrycja and Bekir, Marek and Lehnen, Anne-Catherine and Radon, Christin and Laroque, Sophie and Wendler, Petra and M{\"u}ller-Werkmeister, Henrike and Hartlieb, Matthias}, title = {Antimicrobial polymers of linear and bottlebrush architecture}, series = {Macromolecular rapid communications : publishing the newsletters of the European Polymer Federation}, volume = {43}, journal = {Macromolecular rapid communications : publishing the newsletters of the European Polymer Federation}, number = {19}, publisher = {Wiley-VCH}, address = {Weinheim}, issn = {1521-3927}, doi = {10.1002/marc.202200288}, pages = {14}, year = {2022}, abstract = {Polymeric antimicrobial peptide mimics are a promising alternative for the future management of the daunting problems associated with antimicrobial resistance. However, the development of successful antimicrobial polymers (APs) requires careful control of factors such as amphiphilic balance, molecular weight, dispersity, sequence, and architecture. While most of the earlier developed APs focus on random linear copolymers, the development of APs with advanced architectures proves to be more potent. It is recently developed multivalent bottlebrush APs with improved antibacterial and hemocompatibility profiles, outperforming their linear counterparts. Understanding the rationale behind the outstanding biological activity of these newly developed antimicrobials is vital to further improving their performance. This work investigates the physicochemical properties governing the differences in activity between linear and bottlebrush architectures using various spectroscopic and microscopic techniques. Linear copolymers are more solvated, thermo-responsive, and possess facial amphiphilicity resulting in random aggregations when interacting with liposomes mimicking Escheria coli membranes. The bottlebrush copolymers adopt a more stable secondary conformation in aqueous solution in comparison to linear copolymers, conferring rapid and more specific binding mechanism to membranes. The advantageous physicochemical properties of the bottlebrush topology seem to be a determinant factor in the activity of these promising APs.}, language = {en} }