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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-11-28
    Description: This work addresses the problem of determining the number of components from sequential spectroscopic data analyzed by non-negative matrix factorization without separability assumption (SepFree NMF). These data are stored in a matrix M of dimension “measured times” versus “measured wavenumbers” and can be decomposed to obtain the spectral fingerprints of the states and their evolution over time. SepFree NMF assumes a memoryless (Markovian) process to underline the dynamics and decomposes M so that M=WH, with W representing the components’ fingerprints and H their kinetics. However, the rank of this decomposition (i.e., the number of physical states in the process) has to be guessed from pre-existing knowledge on the observed process. We propose a measure for determining the number of components with the computation of the minimal memory effect resulting from the decomposition; by quantifying how much the obtained factorization is deviating from the Markovian property, we are able to score factorizations of a different number of components. In this way, we estimate the number of different entities which contribute to the observed system, and we can extract kinetic information without knowing the characteristic spectra of the single components. This manuscript provides the mathematical background as well as an analysis of computer generated and experimental sequentially measured Raman spectra.
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-10-24
    Description: Crystallization is a complex phenomenon with far-reaching implications for the production and formulation of active pharmaceutical ingredients. Understanding this process is critical for achieving control over key physicochemical properties that can affect, for example, the bioavailability and stability of a drug. In this study, we were able to reveal intricate and diverse dynamics of the formation of metastable intermediates of paracetamol crystallization varying with the choice of solvent. We demonstrate the efficacy of our novel approach utilizing an objective function-based non-negative matrix factorization technique for the analysis of time-resolved Raman spectroscopy data, in conjunction with time-lapse photography. Furthermore, we emphasize the crucial importance of integrating Raman spectroscopy with supplementary experimental instrumentation for the mathematical analysis of the obtained spectra.
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-11-03
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-11-03
    Description: Markov state models are to date the gold standard for modeling molecular kinetics since they enable the identification and analysis of metastable states and related kinetics in a very instructive manner. The state-of-the-art Markov state modeling methods and tools are very well developed for the modeling of reversible processes in closed equilibrium systems. On the contrary, they are largely not well suited to deal with nonreversible or even nonautonomous processes of nonequilibrium systems. Thus, we generalized the common Robust Perron Cluster Cluster Analysis (PCCA+) method to enable straightforward modeling of nonequilibrium systems as well. The resulting Generalized PCCA (G-PCCA) method readily handles equilibrium as well as nonequilibrium data by utilizing real Schur vectors instead of eigenvectors. This is implemented in the G-PCCA algorithm that enables the semiautomatic coarse graining of molecular kinetics. G-PCCA is not limited to the detection of metastable states but also enables the identification and modeling of cyclic processes. This is demonstrated by three typical examples of nonreversible systems.
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In this paper, we explore the relationship patterns between Ancient Egyptian texts of the corpus ``Synodal decrees'', which are originating between 243 and 185 BCE, during the Ptolemaic period. Particularly, we are interested in analyzing the grammatical features of the different texts. Conventional data analysis methods such as correspondence Analysis are very useful to explore the patterns of statistical interdependence between categories of variables. However, it is based on a PCA-like dimension-reduction method and turned out to be unsuitable for our dataset due to the high dimensionality of our data representations. Additionally, the similarity between pairs of texts and pairs of grammatical features is observed through the distance between their representation, but the degree of association between a particular grammatical feature and a text is not. Here, we applied a qualitative Euclidean embedding method that provides a new Euclidean representation of the categories of variables. This new representation of the categories is constructed in such a way that all the patterns of statistical interdependence, similarity, and association, are seen through the Euclidean distance between them. Nevertheless, the PCA-like dimension-reduction method also performed poorly on our new representation. Therefore, we obtained a two-dimensional visualization using non-linear methods such UMAP or t-SNE. Although these dimension-reduction methods reduced the interpretability of interpoint distances, we were still able to identify important similarity patterns between the Synodal text as well as their association patterns with the grammatical features.
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: We consider two disjoint sets of points with a distance metric, or a proximity function, associated with each set. If each set can be separately embedded into separate Euclidean spaces, then we provide sufficient conditions for the two sets to be jointly embedded in one Euclidean space. In this joint Euclidean embedding, the distances between the points are generated by a specific relation-preserving function. Consequently, the mutual distances between two points of the same set are specific qualitative transformations of their mutual distances in their original space; the pairwise distances between the points of different sets can be constructed from an arbitrary proximity function (might require scaling).
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-02-09
    Description: Molecular simulations of ligand-receptor interactions are a computational challenge, especially when their association- (``on''-rate) and dissociation- (``off''-rate) mechanisms are working on vastly differing timescales. In addition, the timescale of the simulations themselves is, in practice, orders of magnitudes smaller than that of the mechanisms; which further adds to the complexity of observing these mechanisms, and of drawing meaningful and significant biological insights from the simulation. One way of tackling this multiscale problem is to compute the free-energy landscapes, where molecular dynamics (MD) trajectories are used to only produce certain statistical ensembles. The approach allows for deriving the transition rates between energy states as a function of the height of the activation-energy barriers. In this article, we derive the association rates of the opioids fentanyl and N-(3-fluoro-1-phenethylpiperidin-4-yl)- N-phenyl propionamide (NFEPP) in a $\mu$-opioid receptor by combining the free-energy landscape approach with the square-root-approximation method (SQRA), which is a particularly robust version of Markov modelling. The novelty of this work is that we derive the association rates as a function of the pH level using only an ensemble of MD simulations. We also verify our MD-derived insights by reproducing the in vitro study performed by the Stein Lab, who investigated the influence of pH on the inhibitory constant of fentanyl and NFEPP (Spahn et al. 2017). MD simulations are far more accessible and cost-effective than in vitro and in vivo studies. Especially in the context of the current opioid crisis, MD simulations can aid in unravelling molecular functionality and assist in clinical decision-making; the approaches presented in this paper are a pertinent step forward in this direction.
    Language: English
    Type: reportzib , doc-type:preprint
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-03-19
    Description: Docking is a fundamental problem in computational biology and drug discovery that seeks to predict a ligand’s binding mode and affinity to a target protein. However, the large search space size and the complexity of the underlying physical interactions make docking a challenging task. Here, we review a docking method, based on the ant colony optimization algorithm, that ranks a set of candidate ligands by solving a minimization problem for each ligand individually. In addition, we propose an augmented version that takes into account all energy functions collectively, allowing only one minimization problem to be solved. The results show that our modification outperforms in accuracy and efficiency.
    Language: English
    Type: article , doc-type:article
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