3,978 research outputs found
Elastic property of single double-stranded DNA molecules: Theoretical study and comparison with experiments
This paper aims at a comprehensive understanding on the novel elastic
property of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) discovered very recently through
single-molecule manipulation techniques. A general elastic model for
double-stranded biopolymers is proposed and a new structural parameter called
the folding angle is introduced to characterize their deformations. The
mechanical property of long dsDNA molecules is then studied based on this
model, where the base-stacking interactions between DNA adjacent nucleotide
basepairs, the steric effects of basepairs, and the electrostatic interactions
along DNA backbones are taken into account. Quantitative results are obtained
by using path integral method, and excellent agreement between theory and the
observations reported by five major experimental groups are attained. The
strong intensity of the base-stacking interactions ensures the structural
stability of DNA, while the short-ranged nature of such interactions makes
externally-stimulated large structural fluctuations possible. The entropic
elasticity, highly extensibility, and supercoiling property of DNA are all
closely related to this account. The present work also suggests the possibility
that negative torque can induce structural transitions in highly extended DNA
from right-handed B-form to left-handed configurations similar with Z-form
configuration. Some formulae concerned with the application of path integral
method to polymeric systems are listed in the Appendix.Comment: 19 pages in latex format, including 7 EPS figures and 1 table.
Submitted to PR
Entropic Elasticity, Cooperative Extensibility and Supercoiling Property of DNA: A Unified Viewpoint
A unified model is constructed to study the recently observed DNA entropic
elasticity, cooperative extensibility, and supercoiling property. With the
introduction of a new structural parameter (the folding angle ), bending
deformations of sugar-phosphate backbones, steric effects of nucleotide
basepairs, and short-range basestacking interactions are considered. The
comprehensive agreement of theoretical results with experimental observations
on both torsionally relaxed and negatively supercoiled DNAs strongly indicates
that, basestacking interactions, although short-ranged in nature, dominate the
elasticity of DNA and hence are of vital biological significance.Comment: 4 pages in Latex format, with 3 EPS figures included. A typographic
mistake in Eq. (7) is corrected in this version. A slightly different version
of this paper will appear in PR
Maximum matching on random graphs
The maximum matching problem on random graphs is studied analytically by the
cavity method of statistical physics. When the average vertex degree \mth{c} is
larger than \mth{2.7183}, groups of max-matching patterns which differ greatly
from each other {\em gradually} emerge. An analytical expression for the
max-matching size is also obtained, which agrees well with computer
simulations. Discussion is made on this {\em continuous} glassy phase
transition and the absence of such a glassy phase in the related minimum vertex
covering problem.Comment: 7 pages with 2 eps figures included. Use EPL style. Submitted to
Europhysics Letter
Nonequilibrium work equalities in isolated quantum systems
We briefly introduce the quantum Jarzynski and Bochkov-Kuzovlev equalities in
isolated quantum Hamiltonian systems, which includes the origin of the
equalities, their derivations using a quantum Feynman-Kac formula, the quantum
Crooks equality, the evolution equations governing the characteristic functions
of the probability density functions for the quantum work, the recent
experimental verifications. Some results are given here first time. We
particularly emphasize the formally structural consistence between these
quantum equalities and their classical counterparts, which shall be useful in
understanding the existing equalities and pursuing new fluctuation relations in
other complex quantum systems.Comment: 1 figur
Can pulling cause right- to left-handed structural transitions in negatively supercoiled DNA double-helix?
The folding angle distribution of stretched and negatively supercoiled DNA
double-helix is investigated based on a theoretical model we proposed earlier
[H. Zhou et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 82, 4560 (1999)]. It is shown that pulling
can transit a negatively supercoiled DNA double-helix from the right-handed
B-form to a left-handed configuration which resembles DNA Z-form in some
important respects. The energetics of this possible transition is calculated
and the comparison with recent experimental observations are qualitatively
discussed.Comment: 3 pages. A new paragraph as well as two figures are added in the
revised paper. A new reference (Ref. 7) is include
Prediction analysis for microbiome sequencing data
One primary goal of human microbiome studies is to predict host traits based
on human microbiota. However, microbial community sequencing data present
significant challenges to the development of statistical methods. In
particular, the samples have different library sizes, the data contain many
zeros and are often over-dispersed. To address these challenges, we introduce a
new statistical framework, called predictive analysis in metagenomics via
inverse regression (PAMIR). An inverse regression model is developed for
over-dispersed microbiota counts given the trait, and then a prediction rule is
constructed by taking advantage of the dimension-reduction structure in the
model. An efficient Monte Carlo expectation-maximization algorithm is designed
for carrying out maximum likelihood estimation. We demonstrate the advantages
of PAMIR through simulations and a real data example
Attributes Coupling based Item Enhanced Matrix Factorization Technique for Recommender Systems
Recommender system has attracted lots of attentions since it helps users
alleviate the information overload problem. Matrix factorization technique is
one of the most widely employed collaborative filtering techniques in the
research of recommender systems due to its effectiveness and efficiency in
dealing with very large user-item rating matrices. Recently, based on the
intuition that additional information provides useful insights for matrix
factorization techniques, several recommendation algorithms have utilized
additional information to improve the performance of matrix factorization
methods. However, the majority focus on dealing with the cold start user
problem and ignore the cold start item problem. In addition, there are few
suitable similarity measures for these content enhanced matrix factorization
approaches to compute the similarity between categorical items. In this paper,
we propose attributes coupling based item enhanced matrix factorization method
by incorporating item attribute information into matrix factorization technique
as well as adapting the coupled object similarity to capture the relationship
between items. Item attribute information is formed as an item relationship
regularization term to regularize the process of matrix factorization.
Specifically, the similarity between items is measured by the Coupled Object
Similarity considering coupling between items. Experimental results on two real
data sets show that our proposed method outperforms state-of-the-art
recommendation algorithms and can effectively cope with the cold start item
problem when more item attribute information is available.Comment: 15 page
Bell Rate Model with Dynamic Disorder: Model and Its Application in the Receptor-ligand Forced Dissociation Experiments
We extend the Bell forced dissociation rate model to take account into
dynamic disorder. The motivation of the present work is from the recent forced
dissociation experiments of the adhesive receptor-ligand complexes, in which
some complexes were found to increase their mean lifetimes (catch bonds) when
they are stretched by mechanical force, while the force increases beyond some
thresholds their lifetimes decrease (slip bonds). Different from our previous
model of force modulating dynamic disorder, in present work we allow that the
projection of force onto the direction from the bound to the transition state
of complex could be negative. Our quantitative description is based on a
one-dimension diffusion-assisted reaction model. We find that, although the
model can well describe the catch-slip transitions observed in the single bond
P-selctin glycoprotein ligand 1(PSGL-1)-P- and L-selectin forced dissociation
experiments, it might be physically unacceptable because the model predicts a
slip-catch bond transitions when the conformational diffusion coefficient tends
to zero.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Transceiver Design for Multi-user Multi-antenna Two-way Relay Cellular Systems
In this paper, we design interference free transceivers for multi-user
two-way relay systems, where a multi-antenna base station (BS) simultaneously
exchanges information with multiple single-antenna users via a multi-antenna
amplify-and-forward relay station (RS). To offer a performance benchmark and
provide useful insight into the transceiver structure, we employ alternating
optimization to find optimal transceivers at the BS and RS that maximizes the
bidirectional sum rate. We then propose a low complexity scheme, where the BS
transceiver is the zero-forcing precoder and detector, and the RS transceiver
is designed to balance the uplink and downlink sum rates. Simulation results
demonstrate that the proposed scheme is superior to the existing zero forcing
and signal alignment schemes, and the performance gap between the proposed
scheme and the alternating optimization is minor.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, accepted by IEEE Trans. on Commu
On Joint Estimation of Gaussian Graphical Models for Spatial and Temporal Data
In this paper, we first propose a Bayesian neighborhood selection method to
estimate Gaussian Graphical Models (GGMs). We show the graph selection
consistency of this method in the sense that the posterior probability of the
true model converges to one. When there are multiple groups of data available,
instead of estimating the networks independently for each group, joint
estimation of the networks may utilize the shared information among groups and
lead to improved estimation for each individual network. Our method is extended
to jointly estimate GGMs in multiple groups of data with complex structures,
including spatial data, temporal data and data with both spatial and temporal
structures. Markov random field (MRF) models are used to efficiently
incorporate the complex data structures. We develop and implement an efficient
algorithm for statistical inference that enables parallel computing. Simulation
studies suggest that our approach achieves better accuracy in network
estimation compared with methods not incorporating spatial and temporal
dependencies when there are shared structures among the networks, and that it
performs comparably well otherwise. Finally, we illustrate our method using the
human brain gene expression microarray dataset, where the expression levels of
genes are measured in different brain regions across multiple time periods
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