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91探花
website contera

Prof Sonia Antoranz Contera

Professor of Biological Physics

Sub department

  • Condensed Matter Physics
Sonia.AntoranzContera@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72269
Clarendon Laboratory, room 208
  • About
  • Publications
Conversation on physics bioinspired materials and the future of architecture

Author Correction: How to probe the spin contribution to momentum relaxation in topological insulators.

Nature communications (2018)

Authors:

Moon-Sun Nam, BH Williams, Y Chen, S Contera, S Yao, M Lu, Y-F Chen, GA Timco, CA Muryn, Arzhang Ardavan

Abstract:

The original version of this Article contained an error in the spelling of the author Benjamin H. Williams, which was incorrectly given as Benjamin H. Willams. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.

Author Correction: How to probe the spin contribution to momentum relaxation in topological insulators.

Nature communications (2018)

Authors:

MOON-SUN Nam, Benjamin Williams, YULIN Chen, S Contera, S Yao, M Lu, YULIN Chen, GA Timco, CA Muryn, ARZHANG Ardavan

Abstract:

The original version of this Article contained an error in the spelling of the author Benjamin H. Williams, which was incorrectly given as Benjamin H. Willams. This has now been corrected in both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.

How to probe the spin contribution to momentum relaxation in topological insulators (vol 8, 2017)

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS 9 (2018) ARTN 729

Authors:

Moon-Sun Nam, Benjamin H Willams, Yulin Chen, Sonia Contera, Shuhua Yao, Minghui Lu, Yan-Feng Chen, Grigore A Timco, Christopher A Muryn, Richard EP Winpenny, Arzhang Ardavan

Amphiphilic DNA tiles for controlled insertion and 2D assembly on fluid lipid membranes: Effect on mechanical properties

Nanoscale Royal Society of Chemistry 9:9 (2017) 3051-3058

Authors:

Chikara Dohno, Shingo Makishi, Kzuhiko Nakatani, Sonia Antoranz Contera

Abstract:

Future lipid membrane-associated DNA nanostructures are expected to find applications ranging from synthetic biology to nanomedicine. Here we have designed and synthesized DNA tiles and modified them by amphiphilic covalent moieties. dod-DEG groups, which consist of a hydrophilic diethylene glycol (DEG) and a hydrophobic dodecyl group, are introduced at the phosphate backbone to create amphiphilic DNA strands which are subsequently introduced into one face of DNA tiles. In this way the tile becomes able to stably bind to lipid membranes by insertion of the hydrophobic groups inside the bilayer core. The functionalized tiles do not aggregate in solution. Our results show that these amphiphilic DNA tiles can bind and assemble into 2D lattices on both gel and fluid lipid bilayers. The binding of the DNA structures to membranes is dependent on the lipid phase of the membrane, the concentration of Mg2+ cation, the length of the amphiphilic modifications to the DNA as well as on the density of the modifications within the tile. Atomic force microscopy鈥揵ased force spectroscopy is used to investigate the effect of the inserted DNA tiles on the mechanical properties of the lipid membranes. The results indicate that the insertion of DNA tiles produces an approx. 20% increase of the bilayer breakthrough force.

Magneto-electrical orientation of lipid-coated graphitic micro-particles in solution

(2016)

Authors:

Johnny Nguyen, Sonia Contera, Isabel Llorente Garcia

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