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1 e week, months of the year or letters of the alphabet).
2 ords, alternating between two letters of the alphabet).
3 s into distinct nucleosome types (nucleosome alphabet).
4 alphabet (DNA, RNA, protein and user-defined alphabets).
5 use as part of an in vitro expanded genetic alphabet.
6 aring protein sequences written in a reduced alphabet.
7 cornerstone of efforts to expand the genetic alphabet.
8 algorithms by developing a so-called reduced alphabet.
9 useful for the effort to expand the genetic alphabet.
10 fold degenerate with respect to the 64 codon alphabet.
11 a third base pair and expanding the genetic alphabet.
12 y 98% in trial PCRs with this six-letter DNA alphabet.
13 ing approach to the expansion of the genetic alphabet.
14 of molecules that expand on Nature's genetic alphabet.
15 x RNA molecule can be represented by a small alphabet.
16 d extended, resulting in an expanded genetic alphabet.
17 upersymmetric ring of brackets over a signed alphabet.
18 fragment dynamics encoded with a structural alphabet.
19 5'-GNN-3' subset of a 64-member zinc finger alphabet.
20 with the fMRI as they read words in the new alphabet.
21 unsolved riddles still hidden in the floral alphabet.
22 vely forming what we now describe as the XNA alphabet.
23 raries built from a standard four-nucleotide alphabet.
24 mplement a reduced, ancestral genetic coding alphabet.
25 factor binding affinity to this expanded DNA alphabet.
26 protein sequences translated using a reduced alphabet.
27 otoxic side effects of expanding the genetic alphabet.
28 would be quantum communication with a large alphabet.
29 he early evolution of the natural amino acid alphabet.
30 nism to propagate stably an expanded genetic alphabet.
31 to communicate by pointing to letters of the alphabet.
32 ups, thereby forming a simplified amino acid alphabet.
33 motions in proteins by means of a structural alphabet.
34 , C and G instead of the standard T, A, C, G alphabet.
35 ovides a fully functional six-letter genetic alphabet.
36 uced alphabets in many cases outperform full alphabets.
37 ctions for several different local-structure alphabets.
38 g to proteins comprising selected amino acid alphabets.
39 th effective and simple to compute for large alphabets.
40 n LASSO were less biased than other Bayesian alphabets.
41 s speak languages that are not written using alphabets.
42 d from libraries built from expanded genetic alphabets.
43 Suite, adding the capacity to handle custom alphabets.
44 ations in running time, especially for large alphabets.
45 pts: handwritten characters from the world's alphabets.
46 pace of potential energy functions of binary alphabets.
47 hm to find motif stems for inputs from large alphabets.
48 contact energies for an expanded 60-residue alphabet (20 aa x three secondary structural states) are
56 er/Thr phosphatase of the PP2C family, named Alphabet (Alph), which acts as a negative regulator of t
57 cal work shows that PLMs trained on the full alphabet and a large number of sequences capture fine de
59 ere conducted on two benchmark datasets, ASL Alphabet and ASL MNIST to validate the model's effective
61 d the ribosome, we have expanded the genetic alphabet and enabled in vitro and in vivo production of
62 search benchmark task, a combination of our alphabet and Foldseek's 3Di alphabet, outperforms each a
63 e in vivo expansion of an organism's genetic alphabet and for a variety of in vitro biotechnology app
64 {m,n}+m+n) space, where s is the size of the alphabet and m and n are, respectively, the lengths of t
65 airs may function within an expanded genetic alphabet and make possible many in vitro applications.
66 rent conditions: rest, visual imagery of the alphabet and planning an artwork to be executed immediat
67 es and functionality of defining a chromatin alphabet and provide a unique and novel framework for ex
68 n = 32) completed training in the artificial alphabet and ten reading sessions over the course of sev
69 e tools that enable the exploration of novel alphabets and combinations of alphabets for protein stru
71 hat identification of sequences with limited alphabets and/or regular structures such as nucleic acid
72 into a monocentromere written in the monomer alphabet) and the HOR decomposition (representing a mono
73 he origin and evolution of life's amino acid alphabet, and advocate the progress that would add valua
74 20 to 25 dimensions, a three or four letter alphabet, and balls of stimulation of radius five or six
75 double encoding method that uses the braille alphabet, and by incorporation into photocurable inks pa
76 d to compare or combine different simplified alphabets, and apply it to 34 simplified alphabets from
77 ry space better than the genetically encoded alphabet are extremely rare and energetically costly.
80 this scalability generalized for non-genomic alphabets as well as an interest in its use for graphic
81 et, but one that sharply limits the chemical alphabet available to a nascent all-quadruplet code.
83 ng all minimal absent words on a fixed-sized alphabet based on the construction of suffix automata.
86 and accuracy of Bayesian GBLUP and Bayesian alphabet (BayesA, BayesB, BayesC) models for total and i
87 sted performance of models from the Bayesian alphabet (Bayesian Lasso) as well machine learning appro
88 the 26 letters of both a conventional and VO alphabet, both in the fovea and at 10 degrees in the hor
89 gene expression not by altering the genetic alphabet but rather by the addition of chemical modifica
90 cing of an 8-letter "hachimoji" expanded DNA alphabet by assessing its nanopore signal range using th
93 he ability to exploit an expanded amino acid alphabet can thus heighten the ambitions of protein engi
95 r both writing and reading DNA with expanded alphabets composed of up to 12 letters (A, T, G, C, B, S
98 {m,n}+m+n) space, where s is the size of the alphabet comprising the strings, to compute the DL dista
100 life on Earth, has been encoded by a genetic alphabet consisting of only four nucleotides that form t
101 sibility of a potentially primordial genetic alphabet consisting of s(2)U, s(2)C, I, and A and offers
102 e canonical A:U base pair, so that a genetic alphabet consisting of s(2)U, s(2)C, I, and A generates
103 es were then built from a six-letter genetic alphabet containing the standard nucleobases and two add
104 f an organism containing an expanded genetic alphabet could recognize and properly repair a site cont
107 find motifs in sequences over virtually any alphabet (DNA, RNA, protein and user-defined alphabets).
110 : it supports the use of selected amino acid alphabets, eliminates redundant sequences and locally co
111 zyme-assisted sequencing of expanded genetic alphabet (ESEGA) method to sequence six-letter AEGIS DNA
114 NA aptamers generated by SELEX using genetic alphabet expansion, without reducing their high affinity
115 ic synthesis of TNA with an expanded genetic alphabet (exTNA), opening promising opportunities in nuc
116 t of an ongoing effort to expand the genetic alphabet for in vitro and eventually in vivo application
118 ting probability distributions over discrete alphabets from observations using a mixture model of com
120 is the number of distinct "letters" in the "alphabet" from which sequences are constructed, it is sh
124 sical-chemical properties to achieve reduced alphabets has been of interest in past research, but the
127 r 10 proteins out of the 50 targets, reduced alphabets improve structural predictions with LDDT-Calph
128 trajectories tracing characters of the Latin alphabet in 3D space, together with muscle activities ob
130 are able to manipulate this expanded genetic alphabet in vitro, provides some structural insights int
132 ficacy of PLMs trained on reduced amino acid alphabets in capturing evolutionary information, and we
133 ts can perform at a level comparable to full alphabets in correct pairwise alignment of sequences and
136 nd Foldseek's 3Di alphabet, outperforms each alphabet individually and ranks best among local search
139 ng centromeres from reads (in the nucleotide alphabet) into a more tractable problem of assembling ce
142 ng a read from a centromere into the monomer alphabet is modeled as the String Decomposition Problem.
145 architecture, built with an expanded genetic alphabet, is reminiscent of antibodies conjugated to dru
147 s (listening comprehension, print knowledge, alphabet knowledge, vocabulary, and phonological awarene
148 e to the earthquake than their male peers in alphabet knowledge; contrarily, males were more affected
149 ts were asked to solve symbolic subtraction, alphabet letter transformation, and novel artificial gra
152 nucleobase analogues with which the genetic alphabet may be expanded to include five-membered-ring h
153 n these results, we hypothesize that reduced alphabets may also show performance gains with more soph
155 respiratory viruses uses an expanded genetic alphabet, multiplex PCR chemistry, and microsphere flow
156 ion, and has been used to expand the genetic alphabet of a living organism, recent efforts have ident
160 Here, we demonstrate that expansion of the alphabet of amino acids can also enable the properties o
161 anations for the origin and emergence of the alphabet of amino acids encoded by the standard genetic
162 full contact energy matrix to a four-flavor alphabet of amino acids, automatically determined by our
163 more general idea that there is a molecular alphabet of basic components that can be combined in var
165 sition (representing a monocentromere in the alphabet of HORs) are currently viewed as two separate p
166 graph with sequence-to-graph alignment on an alphabet of informative alleles to provide a fast assemb
167 or the identity and relative position-in-the-alphabet of items in five-letter memory sets (to identif
169 ums of Western civilization, whereas the DNA alphabet of only four letters will launch and dominate t
171 ns to Zionists and Zapatistas, the expansive alphabet of politics demands an equally expansive psycho
172 the 4-letter code of RNA into the 22-letter alphabet of proteins is a central feature of cellular li
175 of d documents, [Formula: see text] over an alphabet of size sigma, we extend the r-index with [Form
179 s as evolving sequences constructed from an "alphabet" of 12 scale degrees(16) allows us to quantitat
181 n tools, finding that, while using the same "alphabet" of elementary actions, Acheulean sequences are
182 ences directly into the 3D interaction (3Di) alphabet or amino acid profiles and use these embeddings
183 odifications to proteins associated with the alphabet or of methyl marks to the alphabet itself.
184 mbination of our alphabet and Foldseek's 3Di alphabet, outperforms each alphabet individually and ran
186 However, expansion of an organism's genetic alphabet presents new and unprecedented challenges: the
187 one amino acid of a seven-letter amino acid alphabet produces a triosephosphate isomerase with wild-
189 ons in random sequence pools: a three-letter alphabet, protection of toeholds by intramolecular secon
194 and two different biased four-letter genetic alphabets replicate in vitro with high efficiency and hi
196 odels of molecular conformations and reduced alphabet sequences to determine the relative resolving p
197 Our in silico simulations using a two-letter alphabet show that template-directed ligation and high c
199 etric deconstruction, resulting in a reduced alphabet size of 12 or 13 amino acids and a percentage o
201 p sequences (namely, sequence regularity and alphabet size) along the auditory processing stream.
202 's interpretable parameters-sequence length, alphabet size, and assumed interactions between sequence
203 NA and lattice proteins of a reduced monomer alphabet size, to make exhaustive analysis and direct co
207 re are different gap penalties for different alphabet sizes and that the gap penalties can depend on
209 esulting data serve to empirically define an alphabet summarizing relative protein flexibility, terme
213 thetic biology based on a six-letter genetic alphabet that includes the two non-standard nucleobases
214 information has been stored in a four-letter alphabet that is propagated and retrieved by the formati
215 nuous signal of blood glucose levels into an alphabet that then can be used to build a de Bruijn, wit
216 d IgMAT, which utilises a reduced amino acid alphabet, that incorporates multiple HMM alignments into
218 acilitate the use of a simplified amino acid alphabet to design beta-structure forming L2 peptides wi
221 a de Bruijn graph, defined on an amino acid alphabet, to identify probable paths that correspond to
222 have applied it to numerous local structure alphabets, tuning network parameters such as the number
223 curate translation of reads into the monomer alphabet turns the notoriously difficult problem of asse
224 trying to recognize handwritten numerals and alphabets (upper and lowercase) from images via sequenti
225 " denotes a growing number of letters of the alphabet used to denote various Bayesian linear regressi
227 ng the genetic code is to expand the genetic alphabet via the development of unnatural nucleotides th
229 As part of an effort to expand the genetic alphabet, we examined the synthesis of DNA with six diff
230 As part of an effort to expand the genetic alphabet, we have been examining the ability of predomin
231 As part of our efforts to expand the genetic alphabet, we have developed a class of unnatural base pa
232 As part of an effort to expand the genetic alphabet, we have evaluated a large number of predominan
233 the design rules derived from this expanded alphabet, we successfully predicted the acylation of 6 a
234 pread idea that many members of the standard alphabet were recruited in this way), then the genetical
235 ntative libraries comprising four amino acid alphabets were fused in-frame to the lambda repressor DN
236 tions is the concept of a reduced amino acid alphabet, wherein similar amino acids are clustered toge
237 aromyces cerevisiae, generating a nucleosome alphabet, which forms chromatin motifs when mapped back
239 owever, the in vivo expansion of the genetic alphabet will require that the unnatural nucleoside trip
243 al-net predictions for three local structure alphabets within a comparative genomic approach using a
244 e (G), and cytosine (C), forming the genetic alphabet ZTGC, which violates Watson-Crick base pairing