RESUMEN
All-solid-state lithium batteries have received extensive attention due to their high safety and promising energy density and are considered as the next-generation electrochemical energy storage system. However, exploring solid-state electrolytes in customized geometries without sacrificing the ionic transport is significant yet challenging. Herein, various 3D printable Li1.3 Al0.3 Ti1.7 (PO4 )3 (LATP)-based inks are developed to construct ceramic and hybrid solid-state electrolytes with arbitrary shapes as well as high conductivities. The obtained inks show suitable rheological behaviors and can be successfully extruded into solid-state electrolytes using the direct ink writing (DIW) method. As-printed free-standing LATP ceramic solid-state electrolytes deliver high ionic conductivity up to 4.24 × 10-4 S cm-1 and different shapes such as "L", "T," and "+" can be easily realized without sacrificing high ionic transport properties. Moreover, using this printing method, LATP-based hybrid solid-state electrolytes can be directly printed on LiFePO4 cathodes for solid-state lithium batteries, where a high discharge capacity of 150 mAh g-1 at 0.5 C is obtained. The DIW strategy for solid-state electrolytes demonstrates a new way toward advanced solid-state energy storage with the high ionic transport and customized manufacturing ability.
RESUMEN
Oncogenic Ras induces cell-cycle arrest in mammalian cells and in fertilized Xenopus eggs. How oncogenic Ras induces cell-cycle arrest remains unclear. We previously showed that oncogenic Ras induces cell-cycle arrest in activated Xenopus egg extracts (cycling extracts) and that the induced cell-cycle arrest correlates with hyperphosphorylation of a 32 kDa protein. However, the identity of the 32 kDa protein was not known. By using a sucrose density-gradient centrifugation, Triton X-100-acetic acid-urea (TAU)-gel electrophoresis, composite agarose-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (CAPAGE), SDS-PAGE, and partial tryptic peptide sequence analysis, the 32 kDa protein has now been identified as S6, a 40S subunit ribosomal protein. Hence, our results indicate that the oncogenic Ras-induced cell-cycle arrest is correlated with hyperphosphorylation of S6, suggesting that phosphorylation of S6 plays an important role in the induced cell-cycle arrest. It has been shown that conditional deletion of gene encoding S6 in mammalian cells prevents proliferation, demonstrating the importance of S6 in cell proliferation. The exact role S6 plays in cell proliferation is unclear. However, phosphorylation of S6 has been implicated in the regulation of protein synthesis. Thus, our results are consistent with the concept that oncogenic Ras induces S6 phosphorylation to influence protein synthesis, thereby contributing to the cell-cycle arrest. In addition, our results also demonstrate that composite agarose-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis is suitable for the separation of large molecular complexes.