38 research outputs found
International chemical identifier for reactions (RInChI).
The Reaction InChI (RInChI) extends the idea of the InChI, which provides a unique descriptor of molecular structures, towards reactions. Prototype versions of the RInChI have been available since 2011. The first official release (RInChI-V1.00), funded by the InChI Trust, is now available for download ( http://www.inchi-trust.org/downloads/ ). This release defines the format and generates hashed representations (RInChIKeys) suitable for database and web operations. The RInChI provides a concise description of the key data in chemical processes, and facilitates the manipulation and analysis of reaction data
Telophase Correction Refines Division Orientation in Stratified Epithelia
During organogenesis, precise control of spindle orientation balances proliferation and differentiation. In the developing murine epidermis, planar and perpendicular divisions yield symmetric and asymmetric fate outcomes, respectively. Classically, division axis specification involves centrosome migration and spindle rotation, events occurring early in mitosis. Here, we identify a novel orientation mechanism which corrects erroneous anaphase orientations during telophase. The directionality of reorientation correlates with the maintenance or loss of basal contact by the apical daughter. While the scaffolding protein LGN is known to determine initial spindle positioning, we show that LGN also functions during telophase to reorient oblique divisions toward perpendicular. The fidelity of telophase correction also relies on the tension-sensitive adherens junction proteins vinculin, α-E-catenin, and afadin. Failure of this corrective mechanism impacts tissue architecture, as persistent oblique divisions induce precocious, sustained differentiation. The division orientation plasticity provided by telophase correction may enable progenitors to adapt to local tissue needs
The Pathway to Detangle a Scrambled Gene
Programmed DNA elimination and reorganization frequently occur during cellular differentiation. Development of the somatic macronucleus in some ciliates presents an extreme case, involving excision of internal eliminated sequences (IESs) that interrupt coding DNA segments (macronuclear destined sequences, MDSs), as well as removal of transposon-like elements and extensive genome fragmentation, leading to 98% genome reduction in Stylonychia lemnae. Approximately 20-30% of the genes are estimated to be scrambled in the germline micronucleus, with coding segment order permuted and present in either orientation on micronuclear chromosomes. Massive genome rearrangements are therefore critical for development.To understand the process of DNA deletion and reorganization during macronuclear development, we examined the population of DNA molecules during assembly of different scrambled genes in two related organisms in a developmental time-course by PCR. The data suggest that removal of conventional IESs usually occurs first, accompanied by a surprising level of error at this step. The complex events of inversion and translocation seem to occur after repair and excision of all conventional IESs and via multiple pathways.This study reveals a temporal order of DNA rearrangements during the processing of a scrambled gene, with simpler events usually preceding more complex ones. The surprising observation of a hidden layer of errors, absent from the mature macronucleus but present during development, also underscores the need for repair or screening of incorrectly-assembled DNA molecules
A História da Alimentação: balizas historiográficas
Os M. pretenderam traçar um quadro da História da Alimentação, não como um novo ramo epistemológico da disciplina, mas como um campo em desenvolvimento de práticas e atividades especializadas, incluindo pesquisa, formação, publicações, associações, encontros acadêmicos, etc. Um breve relato das condições em que tal campo se assentou faz-se preceder de um panorama dos estudos de alimentação e temas correia tos, em geral, segundo cinco abardagens Ia biológica, a econômica, a social, a cultural e a filosófica!, assim como da identificação das contribuições mais relevantes da Antropologia, Arqueologia, Sociologia e Geografia. A fim de comentar a multiforme e volumosa bibliografia histórica, foi ela organizada segundo critérios morfológicos. A seguir, alguns tópicos importantes mereceram tratamento à parte: a fome, o alimento e o domÃnio religioso, as descobertas européias e a difusão mundial de alimentos, gosto e gastronomia. O artigo se encerra com um rápido balanço crÃtico da historiografia brasileira sobre o tema
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International chemical identifier for reactions (RInChI)
The Reaction InChI (RInChI) extends the idea of the InChI, which provides a unique descriptor of molecular structures, towards reactions. Prototype versions of the RInChI have been available since 2011. The first official release (RInChI-V1.00), funded by the InChI Trust, is now available for download (http://www.inchi-trust.org/downloads/). This release defines the format and generates hashed representations (RInChIKeys) suitable for database and web operations. The RInChI provides a concise description of the key data in chemical processes, and facilitates the manipulation and analysis of reaction data.InChI Trus
Recommended from our members
International chemical identifier for reactions (RInChI).
The Reaction InChI (RInChI) extends the idea of the InChI, which provides a unique descriptor of molecular structures, towards reactions. Prototype versions of the RInChI have been available since 2011. The first official release (RInChI-V1.00), funded by the InChI Trust, is now available for download ( http://www.inchi-trust.org/downloads/ ). This release defines the format and generates hashed representations (RInChIKeys) suitable for database and web operations. The RInChI provides a concise description of the key data in chemical processes, and facilitates the manipulation and analysis of reaction data
Algorithm for Reaction Classification
Reaction
classification has important applications, and many approaches
to classification have been applied. Our own algorithm tests all maximum
common substructures (MCS) between all reactant and product molecules
in order to find an atom mapping containing the minimum chemical distance
(MCD). Recent publications have concluded that new MCS algorithms
need to be compared with existing methods in a reproducible environment,
preferably on a generalized test set, yet the number of test sets
available is small, and they are not truly representative of the range
of reactions that occur in real reaction databases. We have designed
a challenging test set of reactions and are making it publicly available
and usable with InfoChem’s software or other classification
algorithms. We supply a representative set of example reactions, grouped
into different levels of difficulty, from a large number of reaction
databases that chemists actually encounter in practice, in order to
demonstrate the basic requirements for a mapping algorithm to detect
the reaction centers in a consistent way. We invite the scientific
community to contribute to the future extension and improvement of
this data set, to achieve the goal of a common standard
Algorithm for Reaction Classification
Reaction
classification has important applications, and many approaches
to classification have been applied. Our own algorithm tests all maximum
common substructures (MCS) between all reactant and product molecules
in order to find an atom mapping containing the minimum chemical distance
(MCD). Recent publications have concluded that new MCS algorithms
need to be compared with existing methods in a reproducible environment,
preferably on a generalized test set, yet the number of test sets
available is small, and they are not truly representative of the range
of reactions that occur in real reaction databases. We have designed
a challenging test set of reactions and are making it publicly available
and usable with InfoChem’s software or other classification
algorithms. We supply a representative set of example reactions, grouped
into different levels of difficulty, from a large number of reaction
databases that chemists actually encounter in practice, in order to
demonstrate the basic requirements for a mapping algorithm to detect
the reaction centers in a consistent way. We invite the scientific
community to contribute to the future extension and improvement of
this data set, to achieve the goal of a common standard