10 research outputs found
Reducing Interconnect Cost in NoC through Serialized Asynchronous Links
This work investigates the application of serialization as a means of reducing the number of wires in NoC combined with asynchronous links in order to simplify the clocking of the link. Throughput is reduced but savings in routing area and reduction in power could make this attractiv
ON THE UNDECIDABILITY OF THE IDENTITY CORRESPONDENCE PROBLEM AND ITS APPLICATIONS FOR WORD AND MATRIX SEMIGROUPS
Electronic version of an article published as in the International Journal of Foundations of Computer Science [© World Scientific Publishing Company]: http://www.worldscientific.com/doi/abs/10.1142/S0129054110007660In this paper we study several closely related fundamental
problems for words and matrices. First, we introduce the Identity Correspondence
Problem (ICP): whether a nite set of pairs of words (over
a group alphabet) can generate an identity pair by a sequence of concatenations.
We prove that ICP is undecidable by a reduction of Post's
Correspondence Problem via several new encoding techniques. In the
second part of the paper we use ICP to answer a long standing open
problem concerning matrix semigroups: \Is it decidable for a nitely
generated semigroup S of integral square matrices whether or not the
identity matrix belongs to S?". We show that the problem is undecidable
starting from dimension four even when the number of matrices
in the generator is 48. From this fact, we can immediately derive that
the fundamental problem of whether a nite set of matrices generates a
group is also undecidable. We also answer several questions for matrices
over di erent number elds. Apart from the application to matrix
problems, we believe that the Identity Correspondence Problem will also
be useful in identifying new areas of undecidable problems in abstract
algebra, computational questions in logic and combinatorics on words
Superoxide-mediated Formation of Tyrosine Hydroperoxides and Methionine Sulfoxide in Peptides through Radical Addition and Intramolecular Oxygen Transfer*Sâ
The chemistry underlying superoxide toxicity is not fully understood. A
potential mechanism for superoxide-mediated injury involves addition to
tyrosyl radicals, to give peptide or protein hydroperoxides. The rate constant
for the reaction of tyrosyl radicals with superoxide is higher than for
dimerization, but the efficiency of superoxide addition to peptides depends on
the position of the Tyr residue. We have examined the requirements for
superoxide addition and structurally characterized the products for a range of
tyrosyl peptides exposed to a
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system. These included enkephalins as examples of the numerous proteins and
physiological peptides with N-terminal tyrosines. The importance of amino
groups in promoting hydroperoxide formation and effect of methionine residues
on the reaction were investigated. When tyrosine was N-terminal, the major
products were hydroperoxides that had undergone cyclization through conjugate
addition of the terminal amine. With non-N-terminal tyrosine, electron
transfer from
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to the peptide radical prevailed. Peptides containing methionine revealed a
novel and efficient intramolecular oxygen transfer mechanism from an initial
tyrosine hydroperoxide to give a dioxygenated derivative with one oxygen on
the tyrosine and the other forming methionine sulfoxide. Exogenous amines
promoted hydroperoxide formation on tyrosyl peptides lacking a terminal amine,
without forming an adduct. These findings, plus the high hydroperoxide yields
with N-terminal tyrosine, can be explained by a mechanism in which hydrogen
bonding of
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to the amine increases is oxidizing potential and alters its reactivity. If
this amine effect occurred more generally, it could increase the biological
reactivity of
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and have major implications
Determination of alpha-S from hadronic event shapes measured on the Z0 resonance
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