2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fangjie Zhu ◽  
Lucas Farnung ◽  
Eevi Kaasinen ◽  
Biswajyoti Sahu ◽  
Yimeng Yin ◽  
...  

Nucleosomes cover most of the genome and are thought to be displaced by transcription factors (TFs) in regions that direct gene expression. However, the modes of interaction between TFs and nucleosomal DNA remain largely unknown. Here, we use nucleosome consecutive affinity-purification systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (NCAP-SELEX) to systematically explore interactions between the nucleosome and 220 TFs representing diverse structural families. Consistently with earlier observations, we find that the vast majority of TFs have less access to nucleosomal DNA than to free DNA. The motifs recovered from TFs bound to nucleosomal and free DNA are generally similar; however, steric hindrance and scaffolding by the nucleosome result in specific positioning and orientation of the motifs. Many TFs preferentially bind close to the end of nucleosomal DNA, or to periodic positions at its solvent-exposed side. TFs often also bind nucleosomal DNA in a particular orientation, because the nucleosome breaks the local rotational symmetry of DNA. Some TFs also specifically interact with DNA located at the dyad position where only one DNA gyre is wound, whereas other TFs prefer sites spanning two DNA gyres and bind specifically to each of them. Our work reveals striking differences in TF binding to free and nucleosomal DNA, and uncovers a rich interaction landscape between the TFs and the nucleosome.


The Prostate ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wataru Ikeuchi ◽  
Yuriko Wakita ◽  
Guoxiang Zhang ◽  
Chun Li ◽  
Keiichi Itakura ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulysses Bernardet ◽  
Jaume Subirats Aleixandri ◽  
Paul F.M.J. Verschure

Interacting with an animal is a highly immersing and satisfactory experience. How can interaction with an artifact can be imbued with the quality of an interaction with a living being? The authors propose a theoretical relationship that puts the predictability of the human-artifact interaction at the center of the attribution of agency and experience of “flow.” They empirically explored three modes of interaction that differed in the level of predictability of the interactive space's behavior. The results of the authors' study give support to the notion that there is a sweet spot of predictability in the reactions of the space that leads users to perceive the space as a creature. Flow factors discriminated between the different modes of interaction and showed the expected nonlinear relationship with the predictability of the interaction. The authors' results show that predictability is a key factor to induce an attribution of agency, and they hope that their study can contribute to a more systematic approach to designing satisfactory and rich interaction between humans and machines.


Author(s):  
Gustavo Rossi ◽  
Matias Urbieta ◽  
Jeronimo Ginzburg

In this chapter, we present a design approach for the interface of rich Internet applications, that is, those Web applications in which the conventional hypermedia paradigm has been improved with rich interaction styles. Our approach combines well-known techniques for advanced separation of concerns such as aspect-oriented software design, with the object oriented hypermedia design method (OOHDM) design model allowing to express in a high level way the structure and behaviours of the user interface as oblivious compositions of simpler interface atoms. Using simple illustrative examples we present the rationale of our approach, its core stages and the way it is integrated into the OOHDM. Some implementation issues are finally analyzed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (22) ◽  
pp. 4187-4196 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuan Wang ◽  
Weiping Chang ◽  
Wanli Chang ◽  
Xiaowei Chang ◽  
Song Zhai ◽  
...  

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