3,145 research outputs found
Inferring User Knowledge Level from Eye Movement Patterns
The acquisition of information and the search interaction process is influenced strongly by a personâs use of their knowledge of the domain and the task. In this paper we show that a userâs level of domain knowledge can be inferred from their interactive search behaviors without considering the content of queries or documents. A technique is presented to model a userâs information acquisition process during search using only measurements of eye movement patterns. In a user study (n=40) of search in the domain of genomics, a representation of the participantâs domain knowledge was constructed using self-ratings of knowledge of genomics-related terms (n=409). Cognitive effort features associated with reading eye movement patterns were calculated for each reading instance during the search tasks. The results show correlations between the cognitive effort due to reading and an individualâs level of domain knowledge. We construct exploratory regression models that suggest it is possible to build models that can make predictions of the userâs level of knowledge based on real-time measurements of eye movement patterns during a task session
Filaggrin-stratified transcriptomic analysis of pediatric skin identifies mechanistic pathways in patients with atopic dermatitis
BackgroundAtopic dermatitis (AD; eczema) is characterized by a widespread abnormality in cutaneous barrier function and propensity to inflammation. Filaggrin is a multifunctional protein and plays a key role in skin barrier formation. Loss-of-function mutations in the gene encoding filaggrin (FLG) are a highly significant risk factor for atopic disease, but the molecular mechanisms leading to dermatitis remain unclear.ObjectiveWe sought to interrogate tissue-specific variations in the expressed genome in the skin of children with AD and to investigate underlying pathomechanisms in atopic skin.MethodsWe applied single-molecule direct RNA sequencing to analyze the whole transcriptome using minimal tissue samples. Uninvolved skin biopsy specimens from 26 pediatric patients with AD were compared with site-matched samples from 10 nonatopic teenage control subjects. Cases and control subjects were screened for FLG genotype to stratify the data set.ResultsTwo thousand four hundred thirty differentially expressed genes (false discovery rate, P < .05) were identified, of which 211 were significantly upregulated and 490 downregulated by greater than 2-fold. Gene ontology terms for âextracellular spaceâ and âdefense responseâ were enriched, whereas âlipid metabolic processesâ were downregulated. The subset of FLG wild-type cases showed dysregulation of genes involved with lipid metabolism, whereas filaggrin haploinsufficiency affected global gene expression and was characterized by a type 1 interferonâmediated stress response.ConclusionThese analyses demonstrate the importance of extracellular space and lipid metabolism in atopic skin pathology independent of FLG genotype, whereas an aberrant defense response is seen in subjects with FLG mutations. Genotype stratification of the large data set has facilitated functional interpretation and might guide future therapy development
Electrostatic considerations affecting the calculated HOMO-LUMO gap in protein molecules.
A detailed study of energy differences between the highest occupied and
lowest unoccupied molecular orbitals (HOMO-LUMO gaps) in protein systems and
water clusters is presented. Recent work questioning the applicability of
Kohn-Sham density-functional theory to proteins and large water clusters (E.
Rudberg, J. Phys.: Condens. Mat. 2012, 24, 072202) has demonstrated vanishing
HOMO-LUMO gaps for these systems, which is generally attributed to the
treatment of exchange in the functional used. The present work shows that the
vanishing gap is, in fact, an electrostatic artefact of the method used to
prepare the system. Practical solutions for ensuring the gap is maintained when
the system size is increased are demonstrated. This work has important
implications for the use of large-scale density-functional theory in
biomolecular systems, particularly in the simulation of photoemission, optical
absorption and electronic transport, all of which depend critically on
differences between energies of molecular orbitals.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Toward ab initio optical spectroscopy of the Fenna-Matthews-Olson complex
We present progress toward a first-principles parametrization of the Hamiltonian of the FennaâMatthewsâOlson pigmentâprotein complex, a molecule that has become key to understanding the role of quantum dynamics in photosynthetic exciton energy transfer. To this end, we have performed fully quantum mechanical calculations on each of the seven bacteriochlorophyll pigments that make up the complex, including a significant proportion of their protein environment (more than 2000 atoms), using linear-scaling density functional theory exploiting a recent development for the computation of excited states. Local pigment transition energies and interpigment coupling between optical transitions have been calculated and are in good agreement with the literature consensus. Comparisons between simulated and experimental optical spectra point toward future work that may help to elucidate important design principles in these nanoscale devices
ONETEP + TOSCAM: uniting dynamical mean field theory and linear-scaling density functional theory
We introduce the unification of dynamical mean field theory (DMFT) and
linear-scaling density functional theory (DFT), as recently implemented in
ONETEP, a linear-scaling DFT package, and TOSCAM, a DMFT toolbox. This code can
account for strongly correlated electronic behavior while simultaneously
including the effects of the environment, making it ideally suited for studying
complex and heterogeneous systems containing transition metals and lanthanides,
such as metalloproteins. We systematically introduce the necessary formalism,
which must account for the non-orthogonal basis set used by ONETEP. In order to
demonstrate the capabilities of this code, we apply it to carbon
monoxide-ligated iron porphyrin and explore the distinctly quantum-mechanical
character of the iron electrons during the process of photodissociation.Comment: Contains 46 pages and 12 figures, including 5 pages of supplementary
materia
Avidin cooperative allosterism upon binding biotin observed by differential changes in intrinsic fluorescence
Similar to streptavidin, the binding of biotin by avidin does not appear to be cooperative in the traditional sense of altered binding strength, though it appears to be cooperative in terms of ligand induced structural communication across subunits in the protein as previously shown for streptavidin. In this work we provide data from intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence as evidence of a cooperative structural change. The technique involves examination of the changes in fluorescence emission corresponding to the various tryptophan populations accompanying avidin-biotin binding. We note that the 335 nm emission population (i.e. more hydrophobic local environment) saturates prior to full ligation and the saturation of the 350 nm emission population commonly used in standard binding activity assays. We also note that total integrated fluorescence emission and peak height during the titration of ligand into streptavidin also reach saturation prior to the 4:1 stoichiometric end point. Unique to avidin and distinct from the behavior of streptavidin described in our prior work, the wavelength of maximum emission and full width at half maximum (FWHM) data do not saturate prior to the 4:1 stoichiometric end point. Avidin also exhibited larger FWHM for both apo and holo forms suggesting greater heterogeneity in local tryptophan environments, as compared to streptavidin. Taken together, the data suggests that the binding of the first 3 biotins effect greater structural changes in the protein than the final ligand in a similar way for avidin and streptavidin
Bone Blood Perfusion Increases with Diet-Induced Obesity, Associated with Trabecular Deterioration in Mice [abstract]
Introduction: In addition to cardiovascular problems (e.g., peripheral artery disease, ischemic stroke), individuals with obesity and metabolic disease experience higher bone fracture rates, despite having greater bone mass than healthy individuals. We hypothesized that vascular changes with obesity are systemic and, because vascular function is critical for bone development and repair, changes to vasculature within bone contribute to decreases in bone health with obesity. Further, exercise stimulates vascular growth and performance and may be an effective intervention to ameliorate chronic changes in bone vasculature [1]. We aim to correlate changes in trabecular architecture with changes in bone vasculature due to obesity and exercise
A Proteomic Approach to Analyze the Aspirin-mediated Lysine Acetylome
This work is supported by Cancer Research UK Grant C434/A13067 (M.H.T & R.T.H) and Wellcome Trust Grant 098391/Z/12/7 (R.T.H.).Aspirin, or acetylsalicylic acid is widely used to control pain, inflammation and fever. Important to this function is its ability to irreversibly acetylate cyclooxygenases at active site serines. Aspirin has the potential to acetylate other amino-acid side-chains, leading to the possibility that aspirin-mediated lysine acetylation could explain some of its as-yet unexplained drug actions or side-effects. Using isotopically labeled aspirin-d3, in combination with acetylated lysine purification and LC-MS/MS, we identified over 12000 sites of lysine acetylation from cultured human cells. Although aspirin amplifies endogenous acetylation signals at the majority of detectable endogenous sites, cells tolerate aspirin mediated acetylation very well unless cellular deacetylases are inhibited. Although most endogenous acetylations are amplified by orders of magnitude, lysine acetylation site occupancies remain very low even after high doses of aspirin. This work shows that while aspirin has enormous potential to alter protein function, in the majority of cases aspirin-mediated acetylations do not accumulate to levels likely to elicit biological effects. These findings are consistent with an emerging model for cellular acetylation whereby stoichiometry correlates with biological relevance, and deacetylases act to minimize the biological consequences non-specific chemical acetylations.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
Supervoid Origin of the Cold Spot in the Cosmic Microwave Background
We use a WISE-2MASS-Pan-STARRS1 galaxy catalog to search for a supervoid in
the direction of the Cosmic Microwave Background Cold Spot. We obtain
photometric redshifts using our multicolor data set to create a tomographic map
of the galaxy distribution. The radial density profile centred on the Cold Spot
shows a large low density region, extending over 10's of degrees. Motivated by
previous Cosmic Microwave Background results, we test for underdensities within
two angular radii, , and . Our data, combined with an
earlier measurement by Granett et al 2010, are consistent with a large supervoid with centered at . Such a supervoid, constituting a
fluctuation in the model, is a plausible cause
for the Cold Spot.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Proceedings of IAU 306 Symposium: Statistical
Challenges in 21st Century Cosmolog
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