Condensed Matter and CAM Seminars

Our condensed matter seminars are held on Tuesdays at 3:30pm in CP-179, unless otherwise noted below. Please contact the organizers if you would like to meet with a visitor. The CM and CAM seminar series are organized by Doug Strachan and Joe Straley (Spring 2018).

Schedule for Fall 2017 - Spring 2018

November 14 Chris Richards (Department of Chemistry, UK). Host: Strachan
" Single molecule imaging in physiological environments "

Single molecule measurements of membrane receptor assembly, trafficking, and function are complicated by the inherent properties of the native cellular environment. We utilize a combination of nanoscale plasmonic devices and cell-derived vesicles to isolate single membrane receptors in their native lipid bilayer membrane. This provides a method to extend single molecule studies to proteins that cannot be purified from the cell. This approach also allows us to compare populations of the same protein residing in different organelles such as the endoplasmic reticulum and the plasma membrane. We applied these methods to determine how nicotinic receptor ligands alter the assembly of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Exposure to nicotine led to increased fractions of the high sensitivity stoichiometry of alpha4beta2 during synthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum showing that nicotine alters the assembly of nascent receptor subunits. The use of nanoscale plasmonic devices and cell derived nanovesicles serves to defeat the concentration barrier associated with single molecule imaging extending these methods to physiological environments.

Jan 23 Julia Wildeboer (Dept. Physics, U. Kentucky). Host: Straley
" Quantum Phase Transitions "

Abstract: Not very

Jan 30 Julia Bursten (Dept. Philosophy, U. Kentucky). Host: Straley
"Surfaces, Scales, and Synthesis: Scientific Reasoning at the Nanoscale "

I examine the theories, models, reasoning strategies, and other conceptual tools that nanoscientists use to accomplish their goals, and how these conceptual tools can in turn reveal new information about the character of scientific knowledge.
Seminar schedules from past semesters are archived here