123 research outputs found
Structural elucidation of o-linked glycopeptides by high energy collision-induced dissociation
O-linked glycopeptides that bear a GalNAc core with and without the presence of sialic acid have been analyzed by high energy collision-induced dissociation (CID). We show that the CID spectra from the glycosylated precursor ions contain sufficient information to identify the peptide sequence and to determine the glycosylated site(s). Asialo O-linked glycopeptides, previously prepared from a tryptic digest of bovine fetuin were studied. One of the glycopeptides contained only a single Hex (hexose)-HexNAc (N-acetylhexosamine) substitution at Thr262, whereas the other exhibited Hex-HexNAc moieties at both Thr262 and Ser264. In addition, sialo and asialo fetuin glycopeptides from a pronase digest were derivatized with t-butoxycarbonyl-tyrosine, and characterized by high energy CID analysis. The presence of a Galβ(1,3)GalNAc core structure at Ser264 was confirmed by using the substrate specificity of endo-α-N-acetylgalactosaminidase. These studies revealed the presence of a β-galactosidase specific for β(1,4) linkages in the endo-α-N-acetylgalactosaminidase preparation employed. Finally, the relative stability of N-and O-glycosyl bonds to high energy CID is addressed based upon comparison of the behavior of a synthetic N-linked glycopeptide with analogous O-linked structures
Electronic structure of periodic curved surfaces -- topological band structure
Electronic band structure for electrons bound on periodic minimal surfaces is
differential-geometrically formulated and numerically calculated. We focus on
minimal surfaces because they are not only mathematically elegant (with the
surface characterized completely in terms of "navels") but represent the
topology of real systems such as zeolites and negative-curvature fullerene. The
band structure turns out to be primarily determined by the topology of the
surface, i.e., how the wavefunction interferes on a multiply-connected surface,
so that the bands are little affected by the way in which we confine the
electrons on the surface (thin-slab limit or zero thickness from the outset).
Another curiosity is that different minimal surfaces connected by the Bonnet
transformation (such as Schwarz's P- and D-surfaces) possess one-to-one
correspondence in their band energies at Brillouin zone boundaries.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, eps files will be sent on request to
[email protected]
Oxidised cosmic acceleration
We give detailed proofs of several new no-go theorems for constructing flat
four-dimensional accelerating universes from warped dimensional reduction.
These new theorems improve upon previous ones by weakening the energy
conditions, by including time-dependent compactifications, and by treating
accelerated expansion that is not precisely de Sitter. We show that de Sitter
expansion violates the higher-dimensional null energy condition (NEC) if the
compactification manifold M is one-dimensional, if its intrinsic Ricci scalar R
vanishes everywhere, or if R and the warp function satisfy a simple limit
condition. If expansion is not de Sitter, we establish threshold
equation-of-state parameters w below which accelerated expansion must be
transient. Below the threshold w there are bounds on the number of e-foldings
of expansion. If M is one-dimensional or R everywhere vanishing, exceeding the
bound implies the NEC is violated. If R does not vanish everywhere on M,
exceeding the bound implies the strong energy condition (SEC) is violated.
Observationally, the w thresholds indicate that experiments with finite
resolution in w can cleanly discriminate between different models which satisfy
or violate the relevant energy conditions.Comment: v2: corrections, references adde
The Public Repository of Xenografts enables discovery and randomized phase II-like trials in mice
More than 90% of drugs with preclinical activity fail in human trials, largely due to insufficient efficacy. We hypothesized that adequately powered trials of patient-derived xenografts (PDX) in mice could efficiently define therapeutic activity across heterogeneous tumors. To address this hypothesis, we established a large, publicly available repository of well-characterized leukemia and lymphoma PDXs that undergo orthotopic engraftment, called the Public Repository of Xenografts (PRoXe). PRoXe includes all de-identified information relevant to the primary specimens and the PDXs derived from them. Using this repository, we demonstrate that large studies of acute leukemia PDXs that mimic human randomized clinical trials can characterize drug efficacy and generate transcriptional, functional, and proteomic biomarkers in both treatment-naive and relapsed/refractory disease
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