4,079 research outputs found
Are Protein Folds Atypical?
Protein structures are a very special class among all possible structures. It
was suggested that a ``designability principle'' plays a crucial role in
nature's selection of protein sequences and structures. Here we provide a
theoretical base for such a selection principle, using a novel formulation of
the protein folding problem based on hydrophobic interactions. A structure is
reduced to a string of 0's and 1's which represent the surface and core sites,
respectively, as the backbone is traced. Each structure is therefore associated
with one point in a high dimensional space. Sequences are represented by
strings of their hydrophobicities and thus can be mapped into the same space. A
sequence which lies closer to a particular structure in this space than to any
other structures will have that structure as its ground state. Atypical
structures, namely those far away from other structures in the high dimensional
space, have more sequences which fold into them, and are thermodynamically more
stable. We argue that the most common folds of proteins are the most atypical
in the space of possible structures.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figure
Timed Automata Semantics for Analyzing Creol
We give a real-time semantics for the concurrent, object-oriented modeling
language Creol, by mapping Creol processes to a network of timed automata. We
can use our semantics to verify real time properties of Creol objects, in
particular to see whether processes can be scheduled correctly and meet their
end-to-end deadlines. Real-time Creol can be useful for analyzing, for
instance, abstract models of multi-core embedded systems. We show how analysis
can be done in Uppaal.Comment: In Proceedings FOCLASA 2010, arXiv:1007.499
Types for Location and Data Security in Cloud Environments
Cloud service providers are often trusted to be genuine, the damage caused by
being discovered to be attacking their own customers outweighs any benefits
such attacks could reap. On the other hand, it is expected that some cloud
service users may be actively malicious. In such an open system, each location
may run code which has been developed independently of other locations (and
which may be secret). In this paper, we present a typed language which ensures
that the access restrictions put on data on a particular device will be
observed by all other devices running typed code. Untyped, compromised devices
can still interact with typed devices without being able to violate the
policies, except in the case when a policy directly places trust in untyped
locations. Importantly, our type system does not need a middleware layer or all
users to register with a preexisting PKI, and it allows for devices to
dynamically create new identities. The confidentiality property guaranteed by
the language is defined for any kind of intruder: we consider labeled
bisimilarity i.e. an attacker cannot distinguish two scenarios that differ by
the change of a protected value. This shows our main result that, for a device
that runs well typed code and only places trust in other well typed devices,
programming errors cannot cause a data leakage.Comment: Short version to appear in Computer Security Foundations Symposium
(CSF'17), August 201
Exploiting Homology Information in Nontemplate Based Prediction of Protein Structures
In this paper we describe a novel strategy for exploring the conformational space of proteins and show that this leads to better models for proteins the structure of which is not amenable to template based methods. Our strategy is based on the assumption that the energy global minimum of homologous proteins must correspond to similar conformations, while the precise profiles of their energy landscape, and consequently the positions of the local minima, are likely to be different. In line with this hypothesis, we apply a replica exchange Monte Carlo simulation protocol that, rather than using different parameters for each parallel simulation, uses the sequences of homologous proteins. We show that our results are competitive with respect to alternative methods, including those producing the best model for each of the analyzed targets in the CASP10 (10th Critical Assessment of techniques for protein Structure Prediction) experiment free modeling category
Visible Volume: a Robust Measure for Protein Structure Characterization
We propose a new characterization of protein structure based on the natural tetrahedral geometry of the β carbon and a new geometric measure of structural similarity, called visible volume. In our model, the side-chains are replaced by an ideal tetrahedron, the orientation of which is fixed with respect to the backbone and corresponds to the preferred rotamer directions. Visible volume is a measure of the non-occluded empty space surrounding each residue position after the side-chains have been removed. It is a robust, parameter-free, locally-computed quantity that accounts for many of the spatial constraints that are of relevance to the corresponding position in the native structure. When computing visible volume, we ignore the nature of both the residue observed at each site and the ones surrounding it. We focus instead on the space that, together, these residues could occupy. By doing so, we are able to quantify a new kind of invariance beyond the apparent variations in protein families, namely, the conservation of the physical space available at structurally equivalent positions for side-chain packing. Corresponding positions in native structures are likely to be of interest in protein structure prediction, protein design, and homology modeling.
Visible volume is related to the degree of exposure of a residue position and to the actual rotamers in native proteins. In this article, we discuss the properties of this new measure, namely, its robustness with respect to both crystallographic uncertainties and naturally occurring variations in atomic coordinates, and the remarkable fact that it is essentially independent of the choice of the parameters used in calculating it. We also show how visible volume can be used to align protein structures, to identify structurally equivalent positions that are conserved in a family of proteins, and to single out positions in a protein that are likely to be of biological interest. These properties qualify visible volume as a powerful tool in a variety of applications, from the detailed analysis of protein structure to homology modeling, protein structural alignment, and the definition of better scoring functions for threading purposes.National Library of Medicine (LM05205-13
Local area [pye]-calculus
All computers on the Internet are connected, but not all connections are
equal. Hosts are grouped into islands of local communication. It is the agreed
conventions and shared knowledge that connect these islands, just as much as the
switches and wires that run between them.
The power and limitation of these conventions and shared knowledge and
hence their effectiveness can be investigated by an appropriate calculus. In this
thesis I describe a development of the 7r-calculus that is particularly well suited to
express such systems. The process calculus, which I call the local area n-calculus
or Ian, extends the 7r-calculus so that a channel name can have within its scope
several disjoint local areas. Such a channel name may be used for communication
within an area or it may be sent between areas, but it cannot itself be used to
transmit information from one area to another. Areas are arranged in a hierarchy
of levels which distinguish, for example, between a single application, a machine,
or a whole network. I present a semantics for this calculus that relies on several
side-conditions which are essentially runtime level checks. I show that a suitable
type system can provide enough static information to make most of these checks
unnecessary.
I examine the descriptive power of the /a7r-calculus by comparing it to the
7r-calculus. I find that, perhaps surprisingly, local area communication can be
encoded into the 7T-calculus with conditional matching. The encoding works by
replacing communication inside an area with communication on a new channel
created just for that area. This is analogous to replacing direct communication
between two points with a system that broadcasts packets over a background
ether. I show a form of operational correspondence between the behaviour of a
process in lan and its 7r-calculus translation.
One of my aims in developing this calculus is to provide a convenient and ex¬
pressive framework with which to examine convention-laden, distributed systems.
I offer evidence that the calculus has achieved this by way of an extended case
study. I present a model of Internet communication based on Sockets and TCP
over IP and then extend this system with Network Address Translation. I then
4
give a model of the File Transfer Protocol that uses TCP/IP to communicate
between networks.
Traces of the model show that FTP, run in its normal mode, will fail when
the client is using Network Address Translation, whereas, an alternative mode of
FTP will succeed. Moreover a normal run of the model over NAT fails in the
same way as the real life system would, demonstrating that the model can pick
up this failure and correctly highlight the reasons behind it
Geometrical model for the native-state folds of proteins
We recently introduced a physical model [Hoang et al., P. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA (2004), Banavar et al., Phys. Rev. E (2004)] for proteins which
incorporates, in an approximate manner, several key features such as the
inherent anisotropy of a chain molecule, the geometrical and energetic
constraints placed by the hydrogen bonds and sterics, and the role played by
hydrophobicity. Within this framework, marginally compact conformations
resembling the native state folds of proteins emerge as broad competing minima
in the free energy landscape even for a homopolymer. Here we show how the
introduction of sequence heterogeneity using a simple scheme of just two types
of amino acids, hydrophobic (H) and polar (P), and sequence design allows a
selected putative native fold to become the free energy minimum at low
temperature. The folding transition exhibits thermodynamic cooperativity, if
one neglects the degeneracy between two different low energy conformations
sharing the same fold topology.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Geometry and symmetry presculpt the free-energy landscape of proteins
We present a simple physical model which demonstrates that the native state
folds of proteins can emerge on the basis of considerations of geometry and
symmetry. We show that the inherent anisotropy of a chain molecule, the
geometrical and energetic constraints placed by the hydrogen bonds and sterics,
and hydrophobicity are sufficient to yield a free energy landscape with broad
minima even for a homopolymer. These minima correspond to marginally compact
structures comprising the menu of folds that proteins choose from to house
their native-states in. Our results provide a general framework for
understanding the common characteristics of globular proteins.Comment: 23 pages, 5 figure
Encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis presenting with haemorrhagic ascites after transfer from peritoneal dialysis to haemodialysis
A patient with end-stage kidney disease due to chronic glomerulonephritis was initiated on continuous ambulatoryperitoneal dialysis. After three years he was transferred to haemodialysis following recurrent episodes of peritonitis.After the commencement of haemodialysis the patient developed progressive abdominal distension; paracentesisrevealed bloody ascites. Radiographic imaging revealed features of small bowel obstruction with bowel loops matted tothe posterior abdominal wall. A diagnosis of encapsulating peritoneal sclerosis was made. Treatment with prednisonewas initiated but the patients condition steadily worsened and he demised a year later due to severe malnutrition andsepsis
- …