Matteo Gori
Aix-Marseille University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Matteo Gori.
Physical Review E | 2016
Irene Donato; Matteo Gori; Marco Pettini; Giovanni Petri; Sarah De Nigris; Roberto Franzosi; Francesco Vaccarino
Persistent homology analysis, a recently developed computational method in algebraic topology, is applied to the study of the phase transitions undergone by the so-called mean-field XY model and by the ϕ^{4} lattice model, respectively. For both models the relationship between phase transitions and the topological properties of certain submanifolds of configuration space are exactly known. It turns out that these a priori known facts are clearly retrieved by persistent homology analysis of dynamically sampled submanifolds of configuration space.
Physical Review E | 2014
Ilaria Nardecchia; Lionel Spinelli; Jordane Preto; Matteo Gori; Elena Floriani; Sébastien Jaeger; Pierre Ferrier; Marco Pettini
The dynamical properties and diffusive behavior of a collection of mutually interacting particles are numerically investigated for two types of long-range interparticle interactions: Coulomb-electrostatic and dipole-electrodynamic. It is shown that when the particles are uniformly distributed throughout the accessible space, the self-diffusion coefficient is always lowered by the considered interparticle interactions, irrespective of their attractive or repulsive character. This fact is also confirmed by a simple model to compute the correction to the Brownian diffusion coefficient due to the interactions among the particles. These interactions are also responsible for the onset of dynamical chaos and an associated chaotic diffusion which still follows an Einstein-Fick-like law for the mean-square displacement as a function of time. Transitional phenomena are observed for Coulomb-electrostatic (repulsive) and dipole-electrodynamic (attractive) interactions considered both separately and in competition. The outcomes reported in this paper clearly indicate a feasible experimental method to probe the activation of resonant electrodynamic interactions among biomolecules.
Physical Review E | 2017
Ilaria Nardecchia; Mathias Lechelon; Matteo Gori; Irene Donato; Jordane Preto; Elena Floriani; Sébastien Jaeger; Sébastien Mailfert; Didier Marguet; Pierre Ferrier; Marco Pettini
In the present paper, an experimental feasibility study on the detection of long-range intermolecular interactions through three-dimensional molecular diffusion in solution is performed. This follows recent theoretical and numerical analyses reporting that long-range electrodynamic forces between biomolecules could be identified through deviations from Brownian diffusion. The suggested experimental technique was fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS). By considering two oppositely charged molecular species in aqueous solution, namely, lysozymes and fluorescent dye molecules (Alexa488), the diffusion coefficient of the dyes has been measured for different values of the concentration of lysozyme, that is, for different average distances between the oppositely charged molecules. For our model, long-range interactions are of electrostatic origin, suggesting that their action radius can be varied by changing the ionic strength of the solution. The experimental outcomes clearly prove the detectability of long-range intermolecular interactions by means of the FCS technique. Molecular dynamics simulations provide a clear and unambiguous interpretation of the experimental results.
Theoretical Biology and Medical Modelling | 2016
Matteo Gori; Irene Donato; Elena Floriani; Ilaria Nardecchia; Marco Pettini
BackgroundThis study is mainly motivated by the need of understanding how the diffusion behavior of a biomolecule (or even of a larger object) is affected by other moving macromolecules, organelles, and so on, inside a living cell, whence the possibility of understanding whether or not a randomly walking biomolecule is also subject to a long-range force field driving it to its target.MethodBy means of the Continuous Time Random Walk (CTRW) technique the topic of random walk in random environment is here considered in the case of a passively diffusing particle among randomly moving and interacting obstacles.ResultsThe relevant physical quantity which is worked out is the diffusion coefficient of the passive tracer which is computed as a function of the average inter-obstacles distance.ConclusionsThe results reported here suggest that if a biomolecule, let us call it a test molecule, moves towards its target in the presence of other independently interacting molecules, its motion can be considerably slowed down.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Simona Olmi; Matteo Gori; Irene Donato; Marco Pettini
We investigate the dynamics of a population of identical biomolecules mimicked as electric dipoles with random orientations and positions in space and oscillating with their intrinsic frequencies. The biomolecules, beyond being coupled among themselves via the dipolar interaction, are also driven by a common external energy supply. A collective mode emerges by decreasing the average distance among the molecules as testified by the emergence of a clear peak in the power spectrum of the total dipole moment. This is due to a coherent vibration of the most part of the molecules at a frequency definitely larger than their own frequencies corresponding to a partial cluster synchronization of the biomolecules. These results can be verified experimentally via spectroscopic investigations of the strength of the intermolecular electrodynamic interactions, thus being able to test the possible biological relevance of the observed macroscopic mode.
international conference on noise and fluctuations | 2015
Matteo Gori; Ilaria Nardecchia; Marco Pettini; J. Torres; L. Varani
The dynamical properties and diffusive behavior of a collection of mutually interacting particles are numerically investigated for two types of long-range interparticle interactions: Coulomb-electrostatic and dipole-electrodynamic. It is shown that when the particles are uniformly distributed throughout the accessible space, the self-diffusion coefficient is always lowered by the considered interparticle interactions, irrespective of their attractive or repulsive character. Transitional phenomena are observed for Coulomb-electrostatic (repulsive) and dipole-electrodynamic (attractive) interactions considered both separately and in competition. The outcomes reported in this paper clearly indicate a feasible experimental method to probe the activation of resonant electrodynamic interactions among biomolecules.
arXiv: Statistical Mechanics | 2014
Matteo Gori; Roberto Franzosi; Marco Pettini
Physical Review X | 2018
Ilaria Nardecchia; J. Torres; Mathias Lechelon; Valeria Giliberti; M. Ortolani; P. Nouvel; Matteo Gori; Yoann Meriguet; Irene Donato; Jordane Preto; L. Varani; James Sturgis; Marco Pettini
Physica A-statistical Mechanics and Its Applications | 2018
Giulio Pettini; Matteo Gori; Roberto Franzosi; Cecilia Clementi; Marco Pettini
Archive | 2018
Simona Olmi; Matteo Gori; Irene Donato; Marco Pettini