RESUMO
Using low-energy electron microscopy, we find that the mechanisms of graphene growth on Ir(111) depend sensitively on island orientation with respect to Ir. In the temperature range of 750-900 °C, we observe that growing rotated islands are more faceted than islands aligned with the substrate. Further, the growth velocity of rotated islands depends not only on the C adatom supersaturation but also on the geometry of the island edge. We deduce that the growth of rotated islands is kink-nucleation-limited, whereas aligned islands are kink-advancement-limited. These different growth mechanisms are attributed to differences in the graphene edge binding strength to the substrate.
RESUMO
Weibel-Palade bodies (WPB) are endothelial vesicles that store von Willebrand factor (vWF), involved in the early phase of hemostasis. In the present study we investigated the morphodynamics of single WPB plasma membrane fusion events upon hypoxic stimulation by using atomic force microscopy (AFM). Simultaneously, we measured vWF release from endothelial cells to functionally confirm WPB exocytosis. Exposing human endothelial cells to hypoxia (pO2 = 5 mm Hg) we found an acute (within minutes) release of vWF. Despite acute vWF release, potential cellular modulators of secretion, such as intracellular pH and cell volume, remained unchanged. We only detected a slight instantaneous increase of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration. Although overall cell morphology remained virtually unchanged, high resolution AFM images of hypoxic endothelial cells disclosed secretion pores, most likely the loci of WPB exocytosis on luminal plasma membrane. We conclude that short-term hypoxia barely alters overall cell morphology and intracellular milieu. However, at nanometer scale, hypoxia instantaneously switches the smooth luminal plasma membrane to a rough activated cell surface, covered with secretion pores that release vWF to the luminal cell surface.