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We study a multi-stage model for the development of colorectal cancer from initially healthy tissue. The model incorporates a complex sequence of driver gene alterations, some of which result in immediate growth advantage, while others have initially neutral effects. We derive analytic estimates for the sizes of premalignant subpopulations, and use these results to compute the waiting times to premalignant and malignant genotypes. This work contributes to the quantitative understanding of colorectal tumor evolution and the lifetime risk of colorectal cancer.more » « less
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Reversible, tunable epigenetic silencing of TCF1 generates flexibility in the T cell memory decisionAbadie, Kathleen; Clark, Elisa C; Valanparambil, Rajesh M; Ukogu, Obinna; Yang, Wei; Daza, Riza M; Ng, Kenneth KH; Fathima, Jumana; Wang, Allan L; Lee, Judong; et al (, Immunity)
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Ukogu, Obinna A; Smith, Adam D; Devenica, Luka M; Bediako, Hilary; McMillan, Ryan B; Ma, Yuxing; Balaji, Ashwin; Schwab, Robert D; Anwar, Shahzad; Dasgupta, Moumita; et al (, Nucleic Acids Research)null (Ed.)Abstract Protamine proteins dramatically condense DNA in sperm to almost crystalline packing levels. Here, we measure the first step in the in vitro pathway, the folding of DNA into a single loop. Current models for DNA loop formation are one-step, all-or-nothing models with a looped state and an unlooped state. However, when we use a Tethered Particle Motion (TPM) assay to measure the dynamic, real-time looping of DNA by protamine, we observe the presence of multiple folded states that are long-lived (∼100 s) and reversible. In addition, we measure folding on DNA molecules that are too short to form loops. This suggests that protamine is using a multi-step process to loop the DNA rather than a one-step process. To visualize the DNA structures, we used an Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) assay. We see that some folded DNA molecules are loops with a ∼10-nm radius and some of the folded molecules are partial loops—c-shapes or s-shapes—that have a radius of curvature of ∼10 nm. Further analysis of these structures suggest that protamine is bending the DNA to achieve this curvature rather than increasing the flexibility of the DNA. We therefore conclude that protamine loops DNA in multiple steps, bending it into a loop.more » « less
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Smith, Adam D.; Ukogu, Obinna A.; Devenica, Luka M.; White, Elizabeth D.; Carter, Ashley R. (, Modern Physics Letters B)
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