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1.
Nature ; 559(7714): 370-376, 2018 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29973727

RESUMEN

From bacteria following simple chemical gradients1 to the brain distinguishing complex odour information2, the ability to recognize molecular patterns is essential for biological organisms. This type of information-processing function has been implemented using DNA-based neural networks3, but has been limited to the recognition of a set of no more than four patterns, each composed of four distinct DNA molecules. Winner-take-all computation4 has been suggested5,6 as a potential strategy for enhancing the capability of DNA-based neural networks. Compared to the linear-threshold circuits7 and Hopfield networks8 used previously3, winner-take-all circuits are computationally more powerful4, allow simpler molecular implementation and are not constrained by the number of patterns and their complexity, so both a large number of simple patterns and a small number of complex patterns can be recognized. Here we report a systematic implementation of winner-take-all neural networks based on DNA-strand-displacement9,10 reactions. We use a previously developed seesaw DNA gate motif3,11,12, extended to include a simple and robust component that facilitates the cooperative hybridization13 that is involved in the process of selecting a 'winner'. We show that with this extended seesaw motif DNA-based neural networks can classify patterns into up to nine categories. Each of these patterns consists of 20 distinct DNA molecules chosen from the set of 100 that represents the 100 bits in 10 × 10 patterns, with the 20 DNA molecules selected tracing one of the handwritten digits '1' to '9'. The network successfully classified test patterns with up to 30 of the 100 bits flipped relative to the digit patterns 'remembered' during training, suggesting that molecular circuits can robustly accomplish the sophisticated task of classifying highly complex and noisy information on the basis of similarity to a memory.


Asunto(s)
ADN/química , Modelos Neurológicos , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Reconocimiento de Normas Patrones Automatizadas/métodos , Memoria , Neuronas/fisiología
2.
Nat Commun ; 8: 14373, 2017 02 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28230154

RESUMEN

Biochemical circuits made of rationally designed DNA molecules are proofs of concept for embedding control within complex molecular environments. They hold promise for transforming the current technologies in chemistry, biology, medicine and material science by introducing programmable and responsive behaviour to diverse molecular systems. As the transformative power of a technology depends on its accessibility, two main challenges are an automated design process and simple experimental procedures. Here we demonstrate the use of circuit design software, combined with the use of unpurified strands and simplified experimental procedures, for creating a complex DNA strand displacement circuit that consists of 78 distinct species. We develop a systematic procedure for overcoming the challenges involved in using unpurified DNA strands. We also develop a model that takes synthesis errors into consideration and semi-quantitatively reproduces the experimental data. Our methods now enable even novice researchers to successfully design and construct complex DNA strand displacement circuits.


Asunto(s)
ADN/química , Programas Informáticos , Calibración , Simulación por Computador , Lógica , Modelos Teóricos
3.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 35(5): 1170-81, 2016 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26441412

RESUMEN

Automated computer-aided detection (CADe) has been an important tool in clinical practice and research. State-of-the-art methods often show high sensitivities at the cost of high false-positives (FP) per patient rates. We design a two-tiered coarse-to-fine cascade framework that first operates a candidate generation system at sensitivities  âˆ¼ 100% of but at high FP levels. By leveraging existing CADe systems, coordinates of regions or volumes of interest (ROI or VOI) are generated and function as input for a second tier, which is our focus in this study. In this second stage, we generate 2D (two-dimensional) or 2.5D views via sampling through scale transformations, random translations and rotations. These random views are used to train deep convolutional neural network (ConvNet) classifiers. In testing, the ConvNets assign class (e.g., lesion, pathology) probabilities for a new set of random views that are then averaged to compute a final per-candidate classification probability. This second tier behaves as a highly selective process to reject difficult false positives while preserving high sensitivities. The methods are evaluated on three data sets: 59 patients for sclerotic metastasis detection, 176 patients for lymph node detection, and 1,186 patients for colonic polyp detection. Experimental results show the ability of ConvNets to generalize well to different medical imaging CADe applications and scale elegantly to various data sets. Our proposed methods improve performance markedly in all cases. Sensitivities improved from 57% to 70%, 43% to 77%, and 58% to 75% at 3 FPs per patient for sclerotic metastases, lymph nodes and colonic polyps, respectively.


Asunto(s)
Redes Neurales de la Computación , Interpretación de Imagen Radiográfica Asistida por Computador/métodos , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Niño , Pólipos del Colon/diagnóstico por imagen , Bases de Datos Factuales , Femenino , Humanos , Ganglios Linfáticos/diagnóstico por imagen , Aprendizaje Automático , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Neoplasias de la Columna Vertebral/diagnóstico por imagen , Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X , Adulto Joven
4.
Med Image Anal ; 19(1): 164-75, 2015 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25461335

RESUMEN

Given the potential importance of marginal artery localization in automated registration in computed tomography colonography (CTC), we have devised a semi-automated method of marginal vessel detection employing sequential Monte Carlo tracking (also known as particle filtering tracking) by multiple cue fusion based on intensity, vesselness, organ detection, and minimum spanning tree information for poorly enhanced vessel segments. We then employed a random forest algorithm for intelligent cue fusion and decision making which achieved high sensitivity and robustness. After applying a vessel pruning procedure to the tracking results, we achieved statistically significantly improved precision compared to a baseline Hessian detection method (2.7% versus 75.2%, p<0.001). This method also showed statistically significantly improved recall rate compared to a 2-cue baseline method using fewer vessel cues (30.7% versus 67.7%, p<0.001). These results demonstrate that marginal artery localization on CTC is feasible by combining a discriminative classifier (i.e., random forest) with a sequential Monte Carlo tracking mechanism. In so doing, we present the effective application of an anatomical probability map to vessel pruning as well as a supplementary spatial coordinate system for colonic segmentation and registration when this task has been confounded by colon lumen collapse.


Asunto(s)
Puntos Anatómicos de Referencia/diagnóstico por imagen , Angiografía/métodos , Colon/irrigación sanguínea , Colon/diagnóstico por imagen , Colonografía Tomográfica Computarizada/métodos , Reconocimiento de Normas Patrones Automatizadas/métodos , Algoritmos , Inteligencia Artificial , Simulación por Computador , Interpretación Estadística de Datos , Humanos , Aumento de la Imagen/métodos , Imagenología Tridimensional/métodos , Modelos Estadísticos , Método de Montecarlo , Interpretación de Imagen Radiográfica Asistida por Computador/métodos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , Técnica de Sustracción
5.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25333158

RESUMEN

Automated Lymph Node (LN) detection is an important clinical diagnostic task but very challenging due to the low contrast of surrounding structures in Computed Tomography (CT) and to their varying sizes, poses, shapes and sparsely distributed locations. State-of-the-art studies show the performance range of 52.9% sensitivity at 3.1 false-positives per volume (FP/vol.), or 60.9% at 6.1 FP/vol. for mediastinal LN, by one-shot boosting on 3D HAAR features. In this paper, we first operate a preliminary candidate generation stage, towards -100% sensitivity at the cost of high FP levels (-40 per patient), to harvest volumes of interest (VOI). Our 2.5D approach consequently decomposes any 3D VOI by resampling 2D reformatted orthogonal views N times, via scale, random translations, and rotations with respect to the VOI centroid coordinates. These random views are then used to train a deep Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) classifier. In testing, the CNN is employed to assign LN probabilities for all N random views that can be simply averaged (as a set) to compute the final classification probability per VOI. We validate the approach on two datasets: 90 CT volumes with 388 mediastinal LNs and 86 patients with 595 abdominal LNs. We achieve sensitivities of 70%/83% at 3 FP/vol. and 84%/90% at 6 FP/vol. in mediastinum and abdomen respectively, which drastically improves over the previous state-of-the-art work.


Asunto(s)
Algoritmos , Imagenología Tridimensional/métodos , Ganglios Linfáticos/diagnóstico por imagen , Enfermedades Linfáticas/diagnóstico por imagen , Modelos Estadísticos , Reconocimiento de Normas Patrones Automatizadas/métodos , Interpretación de Imagen Radiográfica Asistida por Computador/métodos , Simulación por Computador , Interpretación Estadística de Datos , Humanos , Redes Neurales de la Computación , Intensificación de Imagen Radiográfica/métodos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Sensibilidad y Especificidad
6.
Med Image Comput Comput Assist Interv ; 17(Pt 1): 544-52, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25333161

RESUMEN

Enlarged lymph nodes (LNs) can provide important information for cancer diagnosis, staging, and measuring treatment reactions, making automated detection a highly sought goal. In this paper, we propose a new algorithm representation of decomposing the LN detection problem into a set of 2D object detection subtasks on sampled CT slices, largely alleviating the curse of dimensionality issue. Our 2D detection can be effectively formulated as linear classification on a single image feature type of Histogram of Oriented Gradients (HOG), covering a moderate field-of-view of 45 by 45 voxels. We exploit both max-pooling and sparse linear fusion schemes to aggregate these 2D detection scores for the final 3D LN detection. In this manner, detection is more tractable and does not need to perform perfectly at instance level (as weak hypotheses) since our aggregation process will robustly harness collective information for LN detection. Two datasets (90 patients with 389 mediastinal LNs and 86 patients with 595 abdominal LNs) are used for validation. Cross-validation demonstrates 78.0% sensitivity at 6 false positives/volume (FP/vol.) (86.1% at 10 FP/vol.) and 73.1% sensitivity at 6 FP/vol. (87.2% at 10 FP/vol.), for the mediastinal and abdominal datasets respectively. Our results compare favorably to previous state-of-the-art methods.


Asunto(s)
Inteligencia Artificial , Imagenología Tridimensional/métodos , Ganglios Linfáticos/diagnóstico por imagen , Metástasis Linfática/diagnóstico por imagen , Reconocimiento de Normas Patrones Automatizadas/métodos , Interpretación de Imagen Radiográfica Asistida por Computador/métodos , Tomografía Computarizada por Rayos X/métodos , Algoritmos , Simulación por Computador , Humanos , Modelos Lineales , Intensificación de Imagen Radiográfica/métodos , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Sensibilidad y Especificidad
7.
J Med Chem ; 56(17): 6819-28, 2013 Sep 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23919824

RESUMEN

Casein kinase 1δ (CK1δ) and 1ε (CK1ε) are believed to be necessary enzymes for the regulation of circadian rhythms in all mammals. On the basis of our previously published work demonstrating a CK1ε-preferring compound to be an ineffective circadian clock modulator, we have synthesized a series of pyrazole-substitued pyridine inhibitors, selective for the CK1δ isoform. Additionally, using structure-based drug design, we have been able to exploit differences in the hinge region between CK1δ and p38 to find selective inhibitors that have minimal p38 activity. The SAR, brain exposure, and the effect of these inhibitors on mouse circadian rhythms are described. The in vivo evaluation of these inhibitors demonstrates that selective inhibition of CK1δ at sufficient central exposure levels is capable of modulating circadian rhythms.


Asunto(s)
Quinasa Idelta de la Caseína/antagonistas & inhibidores , Inhibidores de Proteínas Quinasas/química , Proteínas/química , Ligandos , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Espectrometría de Masas , Modelos Moleculares
8.
Biomacromolecules ; 13(11): 3678-85, 2012 Nov 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23057410

RESUMEN

Modular proteins have emerged as powerful tools in tissue engineering because both the mechanical and biochemical properties can be precisely controlled through amino acid sequence. Resilin is an attractive candidate for use in modular proteins because it is well-known for having low stiffness, high fatigue lifetime, and high resilience. However, no studies have been conducted to assess resilin's compressive properties, cytocompatibility with clinically relevant cells, or effect on cell spreading. We designed a modular protein containing repeating sequences of a motif derived from Anopheles gambiae and cell-binding domains derived from fibronectin. Rapid cross-linking with tris(hydroxymethyl)phosphine was observed. The hydrogels had a complex modulus of 22 ± 1 kPa and yield strain of 63%. The elastic modulus in compression, or unconfined compressive modulus, was 2.4 ± 0.2 MPa, which is on the same order as human cartilage. A LIVE/DEAD assay demonstrated that human mesenchymal stem cells cultured on the resilin-based protein had a viability of 95% after three days. A cell-spreading assay revealed that the cells interacted with the fibronectin-derived domain in a sequence-specific manner and resulted in a mean cell area ~1.4-fold larger than when cells were seeded on a sequence-scrambled negative control protein. These results demonstrate that our resilin-based biomaterial is a promising biomaterial for cartilage tissue engineering.


Asunto(s)
Materiales Biocompatibles/química , Proteínas de Insectos/química , Ingeniería de Tejidos , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Anopheles/química , Cartílago/fisiología , Supervivencia Celular , Células Cultivadas , Módulo de Elasticidad , Fibronectinas/química , Humanos , Hidrogeles , Células Madre Mesenquimatosas/fisiología , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Fosfinas/química
9.
Am J Public Health ; 102(10): 1842-7, 2012 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22897524

RESUMEN

Latina adolescent parents are at increased risk for rapid repeat births (second birth ≤ 24 months after the first), sexually transmitted infections, and negative educational and social outcomes. Although several effective parent-based interventions have been developed to prevent Latino youths' sexual risk taking, little research has explored the development of interventions to prevent repeat births that involve the parents of these adolescents. Existing preventative interventions involving parents suffer from important methodological limitations. Additional research is needed to advance theories of behavior, identify the causal pathways of parental influence, and specify appropriate behavioral targets. Future parent-based interventions to prevent repeat births should target pregnancy intentions, age of partners, contraceptive use, integrated prevention of pregnancies and sexually transmitted infections, educational attainment, and future orientations.


Asunto(s)
Tasa de Natalidad/etnología , Hispánicos o Latinos , Relaciones Padres-Hijo , Índice de Embarazo/etnología , Embarazo en Adolescencia/prevención & control , Adolescente , Femenino , Humanos , Embarazo , Embarazo en Adolescencia/etnología , Conducta de Reducción del Riesgo
10.
Protein Expr Purif ; 82(1): 90-6, 2012 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22173203

RESUMEN

Resilin has emerged as a promising new biomaterial possessing attractive properties for tissue engineering applications. To date, proteins with repeating resilin motifs have been expressed with molecular weights less than 30 kDa. This work describes the development of resilin-based proteins (repeating motif derived from Anopheles gambiae) 50 kDa in size. A modular cloning scheme was utilized and features a recursive cloning technique that can seamlessly and precisely tune the number of resilin repeats. Previously-established resilin expression protocols (based on the Studier auto-induction method) were employed to express the proteins in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3)pLysS. Western blot and densitometry results demonstrated that only ~50% of expressed proteins were the desired molecular weight. This finding suggested that either protein truncation or degradation occurred during protein expression. Preventing leaky expression, lowering the culture temperature, and harvesting during exponential phase resulted in up to 94% of the expressed proteins having the desired molecular weight. These expression conditions differ from previously-published resilin expression methods and are recommended when expressing proteins with a larger number of repetitive resilin sequences.


Asunto(s)
Anopheles/genética , Clonación Molecular/métodos , Proteínas de Insectos/genética , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Animales , Anopheles/química , Materiales Biocompatibles/química , Materiales Biocompatibles/aislamiento & purificación , Materiales Biocompatibles/metabolismo , Escherichia coli/genética , Proteínas de Insectos/química , Proteínas de Insectos/aislamiento & purificación , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Proteínas Recombinantes/química , Proteínas Recombinantes/genética , Proteínas Recombinantes/aislamiento & purificación
11.
Bioorg Med Chem Lett ; 17(20): 5518-22, 2007 Oct 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17764937

RESUMEN

The thiazole-diamide series (1) has been identified as highly potent gamma-secretase inhibitors. Several representative compounds showed IC(50) values of <0.3 nM. The synthesis and SAR, as well as a radiolabeled synthesis of [(3)H]-2a, are described.


Asunto(s)
Secretasas de la Proteína Precursora del Amiloide/antagonistas & inhibidores , Diamida/química , Diamida/farmacología , Tiazoles/química , Alquilación , Aminación , Secretasas de la Proteína Precursora del Amiloide/metabolismo , Sistema Libre de Células , Diamida/síntesis química , Espectroscopía de Resonancia Magnética , Estructura Molecular , Relación Estructura-Actividad
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