73 research outputs found
Neutron-induced nucleosynthesis
Neutron--induced nucleosynthesis plays an important role in astrophysical
scenarios like in primordial nucleosynthesis in the early universe, in the
s--process occurring in Red Giants, and in the --rich freeze--out and
r--process taking place in supernovae of type II. A review of the three
important aspects of neutron--induced nucleosynthesis is given: astrophysical
background, experimental methods and theoretical models for determining
reaction cross sections and reaction rates at thermonuclear energies. Three
specific examples of neutron capture at thermal and thermonuclear energies are
discussed in some detail.Comment: 40 pages (uses kluwer.sty), 2 postscript figures (uses psfig),
accepted for publication in Surveys in Geophysics, uuencoded tex-files and
postscript-files available at ftp://is1.kph.tuwien.ac.at/pub/ohu/Geo.u
Tandem fusion of hepatitis B core antigen allows assembly of virus-like particles in bacteria and plants with enhanced capacity to accommodate foreign proteins
The core protein of the hepatitis B virus, HBcAg, assembles into highly immunogenic viruslike particles (HBc VLPs) when expressed in a variety of heterologous systems. Specifically, the major insertion region (MIR) on the HBcAg protein allows the insertion of foreign sequences, which are then exposed on the tips of surface spike structures on the outside of the assembled particle. Here, we present a novel strategy which aids the display of whole proteins on the surface of HBc particles. This strategy, named tandem core, is based on the production of the HBcAg dimer as a single polypeptide chain by tandem fusion of two HBcAg open reading frames. This allows the insertion of large heterologous sequences in only one of the two MIRs in each spike, without compromising VLP formation. We present the use of tandem core technology in both plant and bacterial expression systems. The results show that tandem core particles can be produced with unmodified MIRs, or with one MIR in each tandem dimer modified to contain the entire sequence of GFP or of a camelid nanobody. Both inserted proteins are correctly folded and the nanobody fused to the surface of the tandem core particle (which we name tandibody) retains the ability to bind to its cognate antigen. This technology paves the way for the display of natively folded proteins on the surface of HBc particles either through direct fusion or through non-covalent attachment via a nanobody
AI is a viable alternative to high throughput screening: a 318-target study
: High throughput screening (HTS) is routinely used to identify bioactive small molecules. This requires physical compounds, which limits coverage of accessible chemical space. Computational approaches combined with vast on-demand chemical libraries can access far greater chemical space, provided that the predictive accuracy is sufficient to identify useful molecules. Through the largest and most diverse virtual HTS campaign reported to date, comprising 318 individual projects, we demonstrate that our AtomNet® convolutional neural network successfully finds novel hits across every major therapeutic area and protein class. We address historical limitations of computational screening by demonstrating success for target proteins without known binders, high-quality X-ray crystal structures, or manual cherry-picking of compounds. We show that the molecules selected by the AtomNet® model are novel drug-like scaffolds rather than minor modifications to known bioactive compounds. Our empirical results suggest that computational methods can substantially replace HTS as the first step of small-molecule drug discovery
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