58 research outputs found

    1,2,3-Trimethoxypropane: A Glycerol-Derived Physical Solvent for CO<inf>2</inf> Absorption

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    © 2016 American Chemical Society.1,2,3-Trimethoxypropane (1,2,3-TMP) is the trimethyl ether of propane-1,2,3-triol, better known as glycerol, which can be derived from triglycerides originating from either plant or animal sources. Despite its simple structure and the ubiquity of its glycerol precursor, successful synthesis of 1,2,3-TMP was only recently reported in the literature, with studies suggesting it may be a "green" and nontoxic alternative to solvents such as diglyme, a constitutional isomer. However, no thermophysical properties of 1,2,3-TMP have yet been reported. Furthermore, the structure of 1,2,3-TMP is also analogous to polyether solvents used in the Selexol process for removal of CO2 and other "acid" gases from CH4, H2, etc. As such, examining the solubility of CO2 in 1,2,3-TMP is also of interest. This work details our initial studies and characterization of 1,2,3-TMP as a physical solvent for CO2 absorption, as well as the characterization of its density, viscosity, and vapor pressure with respect to temperature. 1,2,3-TMP exhibits favorable properties, and glycerol-derived triethers warrant deeper consideration as new solvents for CO2 absorption and other gas treating applications

    Minimizing the Two-Round Even-Mansour Cipher

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    The rr-round (iterated) \emph{Even-Mansour cipher} (also known as \emph{key-alternating cipher}) defines a block cipher from rr fixed public nn-bit permutations P1,…,PrP_1,\ldots,P_r as follows: given a sequence of nn-bit round keys k0,…,krk_0,\ldots,k_r, an nn-bit plaintext xx is encrypted by xoring round key k0k_0, applying permutation P1P_1, xoring round key k1k_1, etc. The (strong) pseudorandomness of this construction in the random permutation model (i.e., when the permutations P1,…,PrP_1,\ldots,P_r are public random permutation oracles that the adversary can query in a black-box way) was studied in a number of recent papers, culminating with the work of Chen and Steinberger (EUROCRYPT~2014), who proved that the rr-round Even-Mansour cipher is indistinguishable from a truly random permutation up to O(2rnr+1)O(2^{\frac{rn}{r+1}}) queries of any adaptive adversary (which is an optimal security bound since it matches a simple distinguishing attack). All results in this entire line of work share the common restriction that they only hold under the assumption that \emph{the round keys k0,…,krk_0,\ldots,k_r and the permutations P1,…,PrP_1,\ldots,P_r are independent}. In particular, for two rounds, the current state of knowledge is that the block cipher E(x)=k2⊕P2(k1⊕P1(k0⊕x))E(x)=k_2\oplus P_2(k_1\oplus P_1(k_0\oplus x)) is provably secure up to O(22n/3)O(2^{2n/3}) queries of the adversary, when k0k_0, k1k_1, and k2k_2 are three independent nn-bit keys, and P1P_1 and P2P_2 are two independent random nn-bit permutations. In this paper, we ask whether one can obtain a similar bound for the two-round Even-Mansour cipher \emph{from just one nn-bit key and one nn-bit permutation}. Our answer is positive: when the three nn-bit round keys k0k_0, k1k_1, and k2k_2 are adequately derived from an nn-bit master key kk, and the same permutation PP is used in place of P1P_1 and P2P_2, we prove a qualitatively similar O~(22n/3)\tilde{O}(2^{2n/3}) security bound (in the random permutation model). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first ``beyond the birthday bound\u27\u27 security result for AES-like ciphers that does not assume independent round keys

    Modeling Planarian Regeneration: A Primer for Reverse-Engineering the Worm

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    A mechanistic understanding of robust self-assembly and repair capabilities of complex systems would have enormous implications for basic evolutionary developmental biology as well as for transformative applications in regenerative biomedicine and the engineering of highly fault-tolerant cybernetic systems. Molecular biologists are working to identify the pathways underlying the remarkable regenerative abilities of model species that perfectly regenerate limbs, brains, and other complex body parts. However, a profound disconnect remains between the deluge of high-resolution genetic and protein data on pathways required for regeneration, and the desired spatial, algorithmic models that show how self-monitoring and growth control arise from the synthesis of cellular activities. This barrier to progress in the understanding of morphogenetic controls may be breached by powerful techniques from the computational sciences—using non-traditional modeling approaches to reverse-engineer systems such as planaria: flatworms with a complex bodyplan and nervous system that are able to regenerate any body part after traumatic injury. Currently, the involvement of experts from outside of molecular genetics is hampered by the specialist literature of molecular developmental biology: impactful collaborations across such different fields require that review literature be available that presents the key functional capabilities of important biological model systems while abstracting away from the often irrelevant and confusing details of specific genes and proteins. To facilitate modeling efforts by computer scientists, physicists, engineers, and mathematicians, we present a different kind of review of planarian regeneration. Focusing on the main patterning properties of this system, we review what is known about the signal exchanges that occur during regenerative repair in planaria and the cellular mechanisms that are thought to underlie them. By establishing an engineering-like style for reviews of the molecular developmental biology of biomedically important model systems, significant fresh insights and quantitative computational models will be developed by new collaborations between biology and the information sciences

    Lower glycolysis carries a higher flux than any biochemically possible alternative

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    The universality of many pathways of core metabolism suggests a strong role for evolutionary selection, but it remains unclear whether existing pathways have been selected from a large or small set of biochemical possibilities. To address this question, we construct "in silico" all possible biochemically feasible alternatives to the trunk pathway of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis, one of the most highly conserved pathways in metabolism. We show that, even though a large number of alternative pathways exist, the alternatives carry lower flux than the real pathway under typical physiological conditions. Alternative pathways that could potentially carry higher flux often lead to infeasible intermediate metabolite concentrations. We also find that if physiological conditions were different, different pathways could outperform those found in nature. Our results demonstrate how the rules of biochemistry restrict the alternatives that are open to evolution, and suggest that the existing trunk pathway of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis represents a maximal flux solution.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure

    Modularity and reliability in the organization of organisms

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    An extremal criterion for epimorphic regeneration

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