4,928 research outputs found

    Development of a colorimetric assay for heparanase activity suitable for kinetic analysis and inhibitor screening

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    The role that heparanase plays during metastasis and angiogenesis in tumors makes it an attractive target for cancer therapeutics. Despite this enzyme’s significance, most of the assays developed to measure its activity are complex. Moreover, they usually rely on labeling variable preparations of the natural substrate heparan sulfate, making comparisons across studies precarious. To overcome these problems, we have developed a convenient assay based on the cleavage of the synthetic heparin oligosaccharide fondaparinux. The assay measures the appearance of the disaccharide product of heparanase-catalyzed fondaparinux cleavage colorimetrically using the tetrazolium salt WST-1. Because this assay has a homogeneous substrate with a single point of cleavage, the kinetics of the enzyme can be reliably characterized, giving a Km of 46 μM and a kcat of 3.5 s−1 with fondaparinux as substrate. The inhibition of heparanase by the published inhibitor, PI-88, was also studied, and a Ki of 7.9 nM was determined. The simplicity and robustness of this method, should, not only greatly assist routine assay of heparanase activity but also could be adapted for high-throughput screening of compound libraries, with the data generated being directly comparable across studies

    Determination of critical slip surfaces using mutative scale chaos optimization

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    Limit equilibrium is a common method used to analyze the stability of a slope, and minimization of the factor of safety or identification of critical slip surfaces is a classical geotechnical problem in the context of limit equilibrium methods for slope stability analyses. A mutative scale chaos optimization algorithm is employed in this study to locate the noncircular critical slip surface with Spencer’s method being employed to compute the factor of safety. Four examples from the literature—one homogeneous slope and three layered slopes—are employed to identify the efficiency and accuracy of this approach. Results indicate that the algorithm is flexible and that although it does not generally provide the minimum FS, it provides results that are close to the minimum, an improvement over other solutions proposed in the literature and with small relative errors with respect to other minimum factor of safety (FS) values reported in the literature

    Tetravalent edge-transitive Cayley graphs with odd number of vertices

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    AbstractA characterisation is given of edge-transitive Cayley graphs of valency 4 on odd number of vertices. The characterisation is then applied to solve several problems in the area of edge-transitive graphs: answering a question proposed by Xu [Automorphism groups and isomorphisms of Cayley graphs, Discrete Math. 182 (1998) 309–319] regarding normal Cayley graphs; providing a method for constructing edge-transitive graphs of valency 4 with arbitrarily large vertex-stabiliser; constructing and characterising a new family of half-transitive graphs. Also this study leads to a construction of the first family of arc-transitive graphs of valency 4 which are non-Cayley graphs and have a ‘nice’ isomorphic 2-factorisation
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