4,036 research outputs found
Role of N-glycosylation in oral cancer
Oral squamous cell carcinoma represents more than 90% head and neck cancers with high incidence rate and morbidity. To date, little is known about the molecular mechanisms responsible for OSCC initiation and progression to advanced disease. Thus, identifying key pathways involved in OSCC pathobiology is likely to lead to the identification of new druggable targets and future anti-cancer therapies.
Work from our laboratory has linked the metabolic pathway of protein N-glycosylation with OSCC biology. Specifically, overexpression of the first N-glycosylation gene, DPAGT1, in human OSCC tumor specimens was shown to be associated with aberrant activation of canonical Wnt signaling and inhibition of mature E-cadherin junctions. The purpose of this study was to examine how increased N-glycosylation was associated with OSCC growth and metastatic properties in cellular and murine models. We show that high level of DPAGT1 expression correlates with increased cell surface modification of malignant OSCC HSC-3 cells with complex N-glycans. Further, HSC-3 cells are hypersenitive to the N-glycosylation inhibitor, tunicamycin, suggesting that aggressive properties of OSCC cells depend, in part, on the N-glycosylation pathway. Lastly, we show that orthotopic HSC-3 cell-derived tumor xenografts are inhibited by tunicamycin both in overall growth and metastases, indicating that targeting DPAGT1 and N-glycosylation may represent a new strategy for the treatment of OSCC in human patients
Network Coding: Connections Between Information Theory And Estimation Theory
In this paper, we prove the existence of fundamental relations between
information theory and estimation theory for network-coded flows. When the
network is represented by a directed graph G=(V, E) and under the assumption of
uncorrelated noise over information flows between the directed links connecting
transmitters, switches (relays), and receivers. We unveil that there yet exist
closed-form relations for the gradient of the mutual information with respect
to different components of the system matrix M. On the one hand, this result
opens a new class of problems casting further insights into effects of the
network topology, topological changes when nodes are mobile, and the impact of
errors and delays in certain links into the network capacity which can be
further studied in scenarios where one source multi-sinks multicasts and
multi-source multicast where the invertibility and the rank of matrix M plays a
significant role in the decoding process and therefore, on the network
capacity. On the other hand, it opens further research questions of finding
precoding solutions adapted to the network level.Comment: IEEE Wireless Communications and Networking Conference (WCNC), April,
201
Piggybacking Codes for Network Coding: The High/Low SNR Regime
We propose a piggybacking scheme for network coding where strong source
inputs piggyback the weaker ones, a scheme necessary and sufficient to achieve
the cut-set upper bound at high/low-snr regime, a new asymptotically optimal
operational regime for the multihop Amplify and Forward (AF) networks
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