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Synthesis of Fijiolide A via an Atropselective Paracyclophane Formation

Journal of American Chemical Society - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 23:25

Journal of the American Chemical SocietyDOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b07964
Categories: Journal Articles

Determination of in Vivo Enzyme Occupancy Utilizing Inhibitor Dissociation Kinetics

Journal of American Chemical Society - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 23:25

Journal of the American Chemical SocietyDOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b06518
Categories: Journal Articles

Paramagnetic Ligand Tagging To Identify Protein Binding Sites

Journal of American Chemical Society - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 23:14

Journal of the American Chemical SocietyDOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b06220
Categories: Journal Articles

Intermediates Involved in the 2e–/2H+ Reduction of CO2 to CO by Iron(0) Porphyrin

Journal of American Chemical Society - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 23:04

Journal of the American Chemical SocietyDOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b05992
Categories: Journal Articles

Asymmetric Evolutionary Games

PLoS Computational Biology - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 16:00

by Alex McAvoy, Christoph Hauert

Evolutionary game theory is a powerful framework for studying evolution in populations of interacting individuals. A common assumption in evolutionary game theory is that interactions are symmetric, which means that the players are distinguished by only their strategies. In nature, however, the microscopic interactions between players are nearly always asymmetric due to environmental effects, differing baseline characteristics, and other possible sources of heterogeneity. To model these phenomena, we introduce into evolutionary game theory two broad classes of asymmetric interactions: ecological and genotypic. Ecological asymmetry results from variation in the environments of the players, while genotypic asymmetry is a consequence of the players having differing baseline genotypes. We develop a theory of these forms of asymmetry for games in structured populations and use the classical social dilemmas, the Prisoner’s Dilemma and the Snowdrift Game, for illustrations. Interestingly, asymmetric games reveal essential differences between models of genetic evolution based on reproduction and models of cultural evolution based on imitation that are not apparent in symmetric games.
Categories: Journal Articles

Mechanism for Collective Cell Alignment in Myxococcus xanthus Bacteria

PLoS Computational Biology - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 16:00

by Rajesh Balagam, Oleg A. Igoshin

Myxococcus xanthus cells self-organize into aligned groups, clusters, at various stages of their lifecycle. Formation of these clusters is crucial for the complex dynamic multi-cellular behavior of these bacteria. However, the mechanism underlying the cell alignment and clustering is not fully understood. Motivated by studies of clustering in self-propelled rods, we hypothesized that M. xanthus cells can align and form clusters through pure mechanical interactions among cells and between cells and substrate. We test this hypothesis using an agent-based simulation framework in which each agent is based on the biophysical model of an individual M. xanthus cell. We show that model agents, under realistic cell flexibility values, can align and form cell clusters but only when periodic reversals of cell directions are suppressed. However, by extending our model to introduce the observed ability of cells to deposit and follow slime trails, we show that effective trail-following leads to clusters in reversing cells. Furthermore, we conclude that mechanical cell alignment combined with slime-trail-following is sufficient to explain the distinct clustering behaviors observed for wild-type and non-reversing M. xanthus mutants in recent experiments. Our results are robust to variation in model parameters, match the experimentally observed trends and can be applied to understand surface motility patterns of other bacterial species.
Categories: Journal Articles

Refinement and Pattern Formation in Neural Circuits by the Interaction of Traveling Waves with Spike-Timing Dependent Plasticity

PLoS Computational Biology - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 16:00

by James E. M. Bennett, Wyeth Bair

Traveling waves in the developing brain are a prominent source of highly correlated spiking activity that may instruct the refinement of neural circuits. A candidate mechanism for mediating such refinement is spike-timing dependent plasticity (STDP), which translates correlated activity patterns into changes in synaptic strength. To assess the potential of these phenomena to build useful structure in developing neural circuits, we examined the interaction of wave activity with STDP rules in simple, biologically plausible models of spiking neurons. We derive an expression for the synaptic strength dynamics showing that, by mapping the time dependence of STDP into spatial interactions, traveling waves can build periodic synaptic connectivity patterns into feedforward circuits with a broad class of experimentally observed STDP rules. The spatial scale of the connectivity patterns increases with wave speed and STDP time constants. We verify these results with simulations and demonstrate their robustness to likely sources of noise. We show how this pattern formation ability, which is analogous to solutions of reaction-diffusion systems that have been widely applied to biological pattern formation, can be harnessed to instruct the refinement of postsynaptic receptive fields. Our results hold for rich, complex wave patterns in two dimensions and over several orders of magnitude in wave speeds and STDP time constants, and they provide predictions that can be tested under existing experimental paradigms. Our model generalizes across brain areas and STDP rules, allowing broad application to the ubiquitous occurrence of traveling waves and to wave-like activity patterns induced by moving stimuli.
Categories: Journal Articles

Pluripotency, Differentiation, and Reprogramming: A Gene Expression Dynamics Model with Epigenetic Feedback Regulation

PLoS Computational Biology - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 16:00

by Tadashi Miyamoto, Chikara Furusawa, Kunihiko Kaneko

Embryonic stem cells exhibit pluripotency: they can differentiate into all types of somatic cells. Pluripotent genes such as Oct4 and Nanog are activated in the pluripotent state, and their expression decreases during cell differentiation. Inversely, expression of differentiation genes such as Gata6 and Gata4 is promoted during differentiation. The gene regulatory network controlling the expression of these genes has been described, and slower-scale epigenetic modifications have been uncovered. Although the differentiation of pluripotent stem cells is normally irreversible, reprogramming of cells can be experimentally manipulated to regain pluripotency via overexpression of certain genes. Despite these experimental advances, the dynamics and mechanisms of differentiation and reprogramming are not yet fully understood. Based on recent experimental findings, we constructed a simple gene regulatory network including pluripotent and differentiation genes, and we demonstrated the existence of pluripotent and differentiated states from the resultant dynamical-systems model. Two differentiation mechanisms, interaction-induced switching from an expression oscillatory state and noise-assisted transition between bistable stationary states, were tested in the model. The former was found to be relevant to the differentiation process. We also introduced variables representing epigenetic modifications, which controlled the threshold for gene expression. By assuming positive feedback between expression levels and the epigenetic variables, we observed differentiation in expression dynamics. Additionally, with numerical reprogramming experiments for differentiated cells, we showed that pluripotency was recovered in cells by imposing overexpression of two pluripotent genes and external factors to control expression of differentiation genes. Interestingly, these factors were consistent with the four Yamanaka factors, Oct4, Sox2, Klf4, and Myc, which were necessary for the establishment of induced pluripotent stem cells. These results, based on a gene regulatory network and expression dynamics, contribute to our wider understanding of pluripotency, differentiation, and reprogramming of cells, and they provide a fresh viewpoint on robustness and control during development.
Categories: Journal Articles

Nature of Rutile Nuclei in Anatase-to-Rutile Phase Transition

Journal of American Chemical Society - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 15:05

Journal of the American Chemical SocietyDOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b07734
Categories: Journal Articles

Valence Band Modification and High Thermoelectric Performance in SnTe Heavily Alloyed with MnTe

Journal of American Chemical Society - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 15:03

Journal of the American Chemical SocietyDOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b07284
Categories: Journal Articles

Ultrathin Black Phosphorus Nanosheets for Efficient Singlet Oxygen Generation

Journal of American Chemical Society - Wed, 08/26/2015 - 14:12

Journal of the American Chemical SocietyDOI: 10.1021/jacs.5b06025
Categories: Journal Articles
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