Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Edgar Meyhofer is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Edgar Meyhofer.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

Toxoplasma gondii myosin A and its light chain: a fast, single‐headed, plus‐end‐directed motor

Angelika Herm-Götz; Stefan Weiss; Rolf Stratmann; Setsuko Fujita-Becker; Christine Ruff; Edgar Meyhofer; Thierry Soldati; Dietmar J. Manstein; Michael A. Geeves; Dominique Soldati

Successful host cell invasion is a prerequisite for survival of the obligate intracellular apicomplexan parasites and establishment of infection. Toxoplasma gondii penetrates host cells by an active process involving its own actomyosin system and which is distinct from induced phagocytosis. Toxoplasma gondii myosin A (TgMyoA) is presumed to achieve power gliding motion and host cell penetration by the capping of apically released adhesins towards the rear of the parasite. We report here an extensive biochemical characterization of the functional TgMyoA motor complex. TgMyoA is anchored at the plasma membrane and binds a novel type of myosin light chain (TgMLC1). Despite some unusual features, the kinetic and mechanical properties of TgMyoA are unexpectedly similar to those of fast skeletal muscle myosins. Microneedle–laser trap and sliding velocity assays established that TgMyoA moves in unitary steps of 5.3 nm with a velocity of 5.2 μm/s towards the plus end of actin filaments. TgMyoA is the first fast, single‐headed myosin and fulfils all the requirements for power parasite gliding.


PLOS Biology | 2009

Single molecule imaging reveals differences in microtubule track selection between Kinesin motors.

Dawen Cai; Dyke P. McEwen; Jeffery R. Martens; Edgar Meyhofer; Kristen J. Verhey

Molecular motors differentially recognize and move cargo along discrete microtubule subpopulations in cells, resulting in preferential transport and targeting of subcellular cargoes.


ACS Nano | 2014

Enhancement of Photovoltaic Response in Multilayer MoS2 Induced by Plasma Doping

Sungjin Wi; Hyunsoo Kim; Mikai Chen; Hongsuk Nam; L. Jay Guo; Edgar Meyhofer; Xiaogan Liang

Layered transition-metal dichalcogenides hold promise for making ultrathin-film photovoltaic devices with a combination of excellent photovoltaic performance, superior flexibility, long lifetime, and low manufacturing cost. Engineering the proper band structures of such layered materials is essential to realize such potential. Here, we present a plasma-assisted doping approach for significantly improving the photovoltaic response in multilayer MoS2. In this work, we fabricated and characterized photovoltaic devices with a vertically stacked indium tin oxide electrode/multilayer MoS2/metal electrode structure. Utilizing a plasma-induced p-doping approach, we are able to form p-n junctions in MoS2 layers that facilitate the collection of photogenerated carriers, enhance the photovoltages, and decrease reverse dark currents. Using plasma-assisted doping processes, we have demonstrated MoS2-based photovoltaic devices exhibiting very high short-circuit photocurrent density values up to 20.9 mA/cm(2) and reasonably good power-conversion efficiencies up to 2.8% under AM1.5G illumination, as well as high external quantum efficiencies. We believe that this work provides important scientific insights for leveraging the optoelectronic properties of emerging atomically layered two-dimensional materials for photovoltaic and other optoelectronic applications.


PLOS Biology | 2009

Mammalian Kinesin-3 Motors Are Dimeric In Vivo and Move by Processive Motility upon Release of Autoinhibition

Jennetta W. Hammond; Dawen Cai; T. Lynne Blasius; Zhe Li; Yuyang Jiang; Gloria T. Jih; Edgar Meyhofer; Kristen J. Verhey

Kinesin-3 motors drive the transport of synaptic vesicles and other membrane-bound organelles in neuronal cells. In the absence of cargo, kinesin motors are kept inactive to prevent motility and ATP hydrolysis. Current models state that the Kinesin-3 motor KIF1A is monomeric in the inactive state and that activation results from concentration-driven dimerization on the cargo membrane. To test this model, we have examined the activity and dimerization state of KIF1A. Unexpectedly, we found that both native and expressed proteins are dimeric in the inactive state. Thus, KIF1A motors are not activated by cargo-induced dimerization. Rather, we show that KIF1A motors are autoinhibited by two distinct inhibitory mechanisms, suggesting a simple model for activation of dimeric KIF1A motors by cargo binding. Successive truncations result in monomeric and dimeric motors that can undergo one-dimensional diffusion along the microtubule lattice. However, only dimeric motors undergo ATP-dependent processive motility. Thus, KIF1A may be uniquely suited to use both diffuse and processive motility to drive long-distance transport in neuronal cells.


Nature | 2015

Radiative heat transfer in the extreme near field

Kyeongtae Kim; Bai Song; Víctor Fernández-Hurtado; Woochul Lee; Wonho Jeong; Longji Cui; Dakotah Thompson; Johannes Feist; M. T. Homer Reid; F. J. García-Vidal; J. Cuevas; Edgar Meyhofer; Pramod Reddy

Radiative transfer of energy at the nanometre length scale is of great importance to a variety of technologies including heat-assisted magnetic recording, near-field thermophotovoltaics and lithography. Although experimental advances have enabled elucidation of near-field radiative heat transfer in gaps as small as 20–30 nanometres (refs 4, 5, 6), quantitative analysis in the extreme near field (less than 10 nanometres) has been greatly limited by experimental challenges. Moreover, the results of pioneering measurements differed from theoretical predictions by orders of magnitude. Here we use custom-fabricated scanning probes with embedded thermocouples, in conjunction with new microdevices capable of periodic temperature modulation, to measure radiative heat transfer down to gaps as small as two nanometres. For our experiments we deposited suitably chosen metal or dielectric layers on the scanning probes and microdevices, enabling direct study of extreme near-field radiation between silica–silica, silicon nitride–silicon nitride and gold–gold surfaces to reveal marked, gap-size-dependent enhancements of radiative heat transfer. Furthermore, our state-of-the-art calculations of radiative heat transfer, performed within the theoretical framework of fluctuational electrodynamics, are in excellent agreement with our experimental results, providing unambiguous evidence that confirms the validity of this theory for modelling radiative heat transfer in gaps as small as a few nanometres. This work lays the foundations required for the rational design of novel technologies that leverage nanoscale radiative heat transfer.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2015

Enhancement of near-field radiative heat transfer using polar dielectric thin films

Bai Song; Yashar Ganjeh; Seid Sadat; Dakotah Thompson; Anthony Fiorino; Víctor Fernández-Hurtado; Johannes Feist; F. J. García-Vidal; J. Cuevas; Pramod Reddy; Edgar Meyhofer

Thermal radiative emission from a hot surface to a cold surface plays an important role in many applications, including energy conversion, thermal management, lithography, data storage and thermal microscopy. Recent studies on bulk materials have confirmed long-standing theoretical predictions indicating that when the gap between the surfaces is reduced to tens of nanometres, well below the peak wavelength of the blackbody emission spectrum, the radiative heat flux increases by orders of magnitude. However, despite recent attempts, whether such enhancements can be obtained in nanoscale dielectric films thinner than the penetration depth of thermal radiation, as suggested by theory, remains experimentally unknown. Here, using an experimental platform that comprises a heat-flow calorimeter with a resolution of about 100 pW (ref. 7), we experimentally demonstrate a dramatic increase in near-field radiative heat transfer, comparable to that obtained between bulk materials, even for very thin dielectric films (50-100 nm) when the spatial separation between the hot and cold surfaces is comparable to the film thickness. We explain these results by analysing the spectral characteristics and mode shapes of surface phonon polaritons, which dominate near-field radiative heat transport in polar dielectric thin films.


AIP Advances | 2015

Near-field radiative thermal transport: From theory to experiment

Bai Song; Anthony Fiorino; Edgar Meyhofer; Pramod Reddy

Radiative thermal transport via the fluctuating electromagnetic near-field has recently attracted increasing attention due to its fundamental importance and its impact on a range of applications from data storage to thermal management and energy conversion. After a brief historical account of radiative thermal transport, we summarize the basics of fluctuational electrodynamics, a theoretical framework for the study of radiative heat transfer in terms of thermally excited propagating and evanescent electromagnetic waves. Various approaches to modeling near-field thermal transport are briefly discussed, together with key results and proposals for manipulation and utilization of radiative heat flow. Subsequently, we review the experimental advances in the characterization of both near-field heat flow and energy density. We conclude with remarks on the opportunities and challenges for future explorations of radiative heat transfer at the nanoscale.


Nature Nanotechnology | 2016

Radiative heat conductances between dielectric and metallic parallel plates with nanoscale gaps

Bai Song; Dakotah Thompson; Anthony Fiorino; Yashar Ganjeh; Pramod Reddy; Edgar Meyhofer

Recent experiments have demonstrated that radiative heat transfer between objects separated by nanometre-scale gaps considerably exceeds the predictions of far-field radiation theories. Exploiting this near-field enhancement is of great interest for emerging technologies such as near-field thermophotovoltaics and nano-lithography because of the expected increases in efficiency, power conversion or resolution in these applications. Past measurements, however, were performed using tip-plate or sphere-plate configurations and failed to realize the orders of magnitude increases in radiative heat currents predicted from near-field radiative heat transfer theory. Here, we report 100- to 1,000-fold enhancements (at room temperature) in the radiative conductance between parallel-planar surfaces at gap sizes below 100 nm, in agreement with the predictions of near-field theories. Our measurements were performed in vacuum gaps between prototypical materials (SiO2-SiO2, Au-Au, SiO2-Au and Au-Si) using two microdevices and a custom-built nanopositioning platform, which allows precise control over a broad range of gap sizes (from <100 nm to 10 μm). Our experimental set-up will enable systematic studies of a variety of near-field-based thermal phenomena, with important implications for thermophotovoltaic applications, that have been predicted but have defied experimental verification.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Room temperature picowatt-resolution calorimetry

Seid Sadat; Yi Jie Chua; Woochul Lee; Yashar Ganjeh; Katsuo Kurabayashi; Edgar Meyhofer; Pramod Reddy

Picowatt-resolution calorimetry is necessary for fundamental studies of nanoscale energy transport. Here, we report a microfabricated device capable of <4 pW resolution—an order of magnitude improvement over state-of-the-art room temperature calorimeters. This is achieved by the incorporation of two important features. First, the active area of the device is thermally isolated by thin and long beams with a total thermal conductance (G) of ∼600 nW/K. Further, a bimaterial cantilever thermometer capable of a temperature resolution (ΔTres) of ∼4 μK is integrated into the microdevice. The small thermal conductance and excellent temperature resolution enable measurements of heat currents (q = G × ΔTres) with a resolution <4 pW.


Lab on a Chip | 2009

Biomolecular motor-driven molecular sorter

Taesung Kim; Li-Jing Cheng; Ming Tse Kao; Ernest F. Hasselbrink; Lingjie Guo; Edgar Meyhofer

We have developed a novel, microfabricated, stand-alone microfluidic device that can efficiently sort and concentrate (bio-)analyte molecules by using kinesin motors and microtubules as a chemo-mechanical transduction machine. The device removes hundreds of targeted molecules per second from an analyte stream by translocating functionalized microtubules with kinesin across the stream and concentrating them at a horseshoe-shaped collector. Target biomolecule concentrations increase up to three orders of magnitude within one hour of operation.

Collaboration


Dive into the Edgar Meyhofer's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Longji Cui

University of Michigan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bai Song

University of Michigan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chang Jiang

University of Michigan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Seid Sadat

University of Michigan

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wonho Jeong

University of Michigan

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge