10 research outputs found

    Constraint-based probabilistic learning of metabolic pathways from tomato volatiles

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    Clustering and correlation analysis techniques have become popular tools for the analysis of data produced by metabolomics experiments. The results obtained from these approaches provide an overview of the interactions between objects of interest. Often in these experiments, one is more interested in information about the nature of these relationships, e.g., cause-effect relationships, than in the actual strength of the interactions. Finding such relationships is of crucial importance as most biological processes can only be understood in this way. Bayesian networks allow representation of these cause-effect relationships among variables of interest in terms of whether and how they influence each other given that a third, possibly empty, group of variables is known. This technique also allows the incorporation of prior knowledge as established from the literature or from biologists. The representation as a directed graph of these relationship is highly intuitive and helps to understand these processes. This paper describes how constraint-based Bayesian networks can be applied to metabolomics data and can be used to uncover the important pathways which play a significant role in the ripening of fresh tomatoes. We also show here how this methods of reconstructing pathways is intuitive and performs better than classical techniques. Methods for learning Bayesian network models are powerful tools for the analysis of data of the magnitude as generated by metabolomics experiments. It allows one to model cause-effect relationships and helps in understanding the underlying processes

    On the stability of the organic dication of the bisquaternary ammonium salt decamethoxinum under liquid secondary ion mass spectrometry

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    In the course of a liquid secondary ion mass spectrometric (SIMS) investigation on a bisquaternary ammonium antimicrobial agent, decamethoxinum, unusual pathways of fragmentation of the organic dication M2+ of this bisquaternary salt, with preservation of the doubly charged state of the fragments, were observed. To reveal the structural and electronic parameters of decamethoxinum, which are responsible for the stabilization of its organic dication in the gas phase, a comprehensive SIMS study using metastable decay, collision-induced dissociation and kinetic energy release techniques complemented by ab initio quantum chemical calculations was performed. Pathways of fragmentation of two main precursors originating from decamethoxinum - organic dication M2+ and its cluster with a Cl- counterion [M center dot Cl](+) - and a number of their primary fragments were established and systematized. Differences in the pathways of fragmentation of M2+ and [M center dot Cl](+) were revealed: the main directions of [M center dot Cl](+) decay involve dequaternization similar to thermal degradation of this compound, while in M2+ fragmentation via loss of one and two terminal radicals with preservation of the doubly charged state of the fragments dominates over charge separation processes. It was shown that pairing of the dication with a Cl- anion does not preserve the complex from fragmentation via separation of two positively charged centers or neutralization (dequaternization) of one such center. At the same time the low abundance of M2+ in the SIMS spectra is to a larger extent controlled by a probability of M2+ association with an anion than by the decay of the dication per se. Quantum chemical calculations of the structural and electronic parameters of the decamethoxinum dication have revealed at least three features which can provide stabilization of the doubly charged state. Firstly, in the most energetically favorable stretch conformation the distance between the quaternary nitrogens (r(NI-N2) - 1.39 nm) is relatively large. Secondly, an intramolecular solvation of quaternary groups by carbonyl oxygens of the adjacent groups of the dication occurs, which contribute to structural stabilization. Thirdly, an important feature of the electronic structure of the dication is the presence of a partial negative charge on the nitrogen atoms and smearing of a positive charge mainly over the hydrogens of alkyl groups attached to the quaternary nitrogens, which reduces the net repulsion between the quaternary groups. The possible influence of charge smearing on the kinetic energy released on the dication fragmentation is discussed
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