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Dive into the research topics where Chiu Fan Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by Chiu Fan Lee.


Physical Review B | 2008

Efficiency of energy transfer in a light-harvesting system under quantum coherence

Alexandra Olaya-Castro; Chiu Fan Lee; Francesca Fassioli Olsen; Neil F. Johnson

We investigate the role of quantum coherence in the efficiency of excitation transfer in a ring-hub arrangement of interacting two-level systems, mimicking a light-harvesting antenna connected to a reaction center as it is found in natural photosynthetic systems. By using a quantum jump approach, we demonstrate that in the presence of quantum coherent energy transfer and energetic disorder, the efficiency of excitation transfer from the antenna to the reaction center depends intimately on the quantum superposition properties of the initial state. In particular, we find that efficiency is sensitive to symmetric and asymmetric superposition of states in the basis of localized excitations, indicating that initial-state properties can be used as an efficiency control parameter at low temperatures.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Defects in lamin B1 expression or processing affect interphase chromosome position and gene expression

Ashraf Malhas; Chiu Fan Lee; Rebecca Sanders; Nigel J. Saunders; David J. Vaux

Radial organization of nuclei with peripheral gene-poor chromosomes and central gene-rich chromosomes is common and could depend on the nuclear boundary as a scaffold or position marker. To test this, we studied the role of the ubiquitous nuclear envelope (NE) component lamin B1 in NE stability, chromosome territory position, and gene expression. The stability of the lamin B1 lamina is dependent on lamin endoproteolysis (by Rce1) but not carboxymethylation (by Icmt), whereas lamin C lamina stability is not affected by the loss of full-length lamin B1 or its processing. Comparison of wild-type murine fibroblasts with fibroblasts lacking full-length lamin B1, or defective in CAAX processing, identified genes that depend on a stable processed lamin B1 lamina for normal expression. We also demonstrate that the position of mouse chromosome 18 but not 19 is dependent on such a stable nuclear lamina. The results implicate processed lamin B1 in the control of gene expression as well as chromosome position.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

Lamin B1 controls oxidative stress responses via Oct-1

Ashraf Malhas; Chiu Fan Lee; David J. Vaux

Interaction of lamins with chromatin and transcription factors regulate transcription. Oct-1 has previously been shown to colocalize partly with B-type lamins and is essential for transcriptional regulation of oxidative stress response genes. Using sequential extraction, co-immunoprecipitation (IP), fluorescence loss in photobleaching, and fluorescence resonance energy transfer, we confirm Oct-1–lamin B1 association at the nuclear periphery and show that this association is lost in Lmnb1Δ/Δ cells. We show that several Oct-1–dependent genes, including a subset involved in oxidative stress response, are dysregulated in Lmnb1Δ/Δ cells. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay and chromatin IP reveal that Oct-1 binds to the putative octamer-binding sequences of the dysregulated genes and that this activity is increased in cells lacking functional lamin B1. Like Oct1−/− cells, Lmnb1Δ/Δ cells have elevated levels of reactive oxygen species and are more susceptible to oxidative stress. Sequestration of Oct-1 at the nuclear periphery by lamin B1 may be a mechanism by which the nuclear envelope can regulate gene expression and contribute to the cellular response to stress, development, and aging.


Physical Review A | 2003

Efficiency and formalism of quantum games

Chiu Fan Lee; Neil F. Johnson

We show that quantum games are more efficient than classical games and provide a saturated upper bound for this efficiency. We also demonstrate that the set of finite classical games is a strict subset of the set of finite quantum games. Our analysis is based on a rigorous formulation of quantum games, from which quantum versions of the minimax theorem and the Nash equilibrium theorem can be deduced.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2014

Thermodynamic Costs of Information Processing in Sensory Adaptation

Pablo Sartori; Léo Granger; Chiu Fan Lee; Jordan M. Horowitz

Biological sensory systems react to changes in their surroundings. They are characterized by fast response and slow adaptation to varying environmental cues. Insofar as sensory adaptive systems map environmental changes to changes of their internal degrees of freedom, they can be regarded as computational devices manipulating information. Landauer established that information is ultimately physical, and its manipulation subject to the entropic and energetic bounds of thermodynamics. Thus the fundamental costs of biological sensory adaptation can be elucidated by tracking how the information the system has about its environment is altered. These bounds are particularly relevant for small organisms, which unlike everyday computers, operate at very low energies. In this paper, we establish a general framework for the thermodynamics of information processing in sensing. With it, we quantify how during sensory adaptation information about the past is erased, while information about the present is gathered. This process produces entropy larger than the amount of old information erased and has an energetic cost bounded by the amount of new information written to memory. We apply these principles to the E. colis chemotaxis pathway during binary ligand concentration changes. In this regime, we quantify the amount of information stored by each methyl group and show that receptors consume energy in the range of the information-theoretic minimum. Our work provides a basis for further inquiries into more complex phenomena, such as gradient sensing and frequency response.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Combined effects of agitation, macromolecular crowding and interfaces on amyloidogenesis

Chiu Fan Lee; Sarah Bird; Michael Shaw; Létitia Jean; David J. Vaux

Background: Macromolecular crowding and hydrophobic-hydrophilic interfaces promote amyloidogenesis. Results: The outcome of macromolecular crowding on Aβ amyloidogenesis depends on the spatial heterogeneity of the system. Conclusion: Viscosity dominates over the excluded volume effect only when the system contains a hydrophobic-hydrophilic interface. Significance: Studying both interfacial and macromolecular crowding effects together is crucial to understand amyloid systems in a physiological context. Amyloid formation and accumulation is a hallmark of protein misfolding diseases and is associated with diverse pathologies including type II diabetes and Alzheimers disease (AD). In vitro, amyloidogenesis is widely studied in conditions that do not simulate the crowded and viscous in vivo environment. A high volume fraction of most biological fluids is occupied by various macromolecules, a phenomenon known as macromolecular crowding. For some amyloid systems (e.g. α-synuclein) and under shaking condition, the excluded volume effect of macromolecular crowding favors aggregation, whereas increased viscosity reduces the kinetics of these reactions. Amyloidogenesis can also be catalyzed by hydrophobic-hydrophilic interfaces, represented by the air-water interface in vitro and diverse heterogeneous interfaces in vivo (e.g. membranes). In this study, we investigated the effects of two different crowding polymers (dextran and Ficoll) and two different experimental conditions (with and without shaking) on the fibrilization of amyloid-β peptide, a major player in AD pathogenesis. Specifically, we demonstrate that, during macromolecular crowding, viscosity dominates over the excluded volume effect only when the system is spatially non homogeneous (i.e. an air-water interface is present). We also show that the surfactant activity of the crowding agents can critically influence the outcome of macromolecular crowding and that the structure of the amyloid species formed may depend on the polymer used. This suggests that, in vivo, the outcome of amyloidogenesis may be affected by both macromolecular crowding and spatial heterogeneity (e.g. membrane turn-over). More generally, our work suggests that any factors causing changes in crowding may be susceptibility factors in AD.


The FASEB Journal | 2010

Competing discrete interfacial effects are critical for amyloidogenesis

Létitia Jean; Chiu Fan Lee; Chongsoo Lee; Michael Shaw; David J. Vaux

Amyloid accumulation is associated with pathological conditions, including type II diabetes and Alzheimers disease. Lipids influence amyloidogenesis and are themselves targets for amyloid‐mediated cell membrane disruption. Amyloid precursors are surface‐active, accumulating at hydrophobic‐hydrophilic interfaces (e.g., air‐water), where their biophysical and kinetic behaviors differ from those in the bulk solution with significant and underappreciated consequences. Biophysical modeling predicted the probability and rate of β‐sheet amyloid dimer formation to be higher and faster at the air‐water interface (AWI) than in the bulk (by 14 and ~1500 times, respectively). Time‐course staining experiments with a typical amyloid dye verified our predictions by demonstrating that without AWI, islet amyloid polypeptide (IAPP) fibrilization was abolished or slowed, depending on the conditions. Our controls included undisturbed IAPP reactions, and we ascertained that the AWI removal process (technical or material) did not itself affect the reaction. Furthermore, we showed that the role of membranes in amy‐loidogenesis has been previously underestimated;in an in vivo‐lke situation (with no AWI), anionic liposomes (containing dioleoylphosphatidylglycerol) enhanced IAPP fibrilogenesis far more than described previously in conventional assay conditions (in the presence of an AWI). These findings have implications for the protein misfolding field and in assay design to target toxic protein aggregation.—Jean, L., Lee, C. F., Lee, C., Shaw, M., Vaux, D. J. Competing discrete interfacial effects are critical for amyloidogenesis. FASEB J. 24, 309–317 (2010). www.fasebj.org


adaptive agents and multi-agents systems | 2004

Product Distribution Theory for Control of Multi-Agent Systems

Chiu Fan Lee; David H. Wolpert

Product Distribution (PD) theory is a new framework for controlling Multi-Agent Systems (MASýs). First we review one motivation of PD theory, as the information-theoretic extension of conventional full-rationality game theory to the case of bounded rational agents. In this extension the equilibrium of the game is the optimizer of a Lagrangian of the (probability distribution of) the joint state of the agents. Accordingly we can consider a team game havbing a shared utility which is a performance measure of the behavior of the MAS. For such a scenario the game is at equilibrium ¿ the Lagrangian is optimized ¿ when the joint distribution of the agents optimizes the systemýs expected performance. One common way to find that equilibrium is to have each agent run a reinforcement learning algorithm. Here we investigate the alternative of exploiting PD theory to run gradient descent on the Lagrangian. We present computer experiments validating some of the predictions of PD theory for how best to do that gradient descent. We also demonstrate how PD theory can improve performance even when we are not allowed to rerun the MAS from different initial conditions, a requirement implicit in some previous work.


Physical Review E | 2009

Self-assembly of protein amyloids: a competition between amorphous and ordered aggregation.

Chiu Fan Lee

Protein aggregation in the form of amyloid fibrils has important biological and technological implications. Although the self-assembly process is highly efficient, aggregates not in the fibrillar form would also occur and it is important to include these disordered species when discussing the thermodynamic equilibrium behavior of the system. Here, we initiate such a task by considering a mixture of monomeric proteins and the corresponding aggregates in the disordered form (micelles) and in the fibrillar form (amyloid fibrils). Starting with a model on the respective binding free energies for these species, we calculate their concentrations at thermal equilibrium. We then discuss how the incorporation of the disordered structure furthers our understanding on the various amyloid promoting factors observed empirically, and on the kinetics of fibrilization.


Biophysical Journal | 2012

Enrichment of Amyloidogenesis at an Air-Water Interface

Létitia Jean; Chiu Fan Lee; David J. Vaux

The aggregation of proteins or peptides into amyloid fibrils is a hallmark of protein misfolding diseases (e.g., Alzheimers disease) and is under intense investigation. Many of the experiments performed are in vitro in nature and the samples under study are ordinarily exposed to diverse interfaces, e.g., the container wall and air. This naturally raises the question of how important interfacial effects are to amyloidogenesis. Indeed, it has already been recognized that many amyloid-forming peptides are surface-active. Moreover, it has recently been demonstrated that the presence of a hydrophobic interface can promote amyloid fibrillization, although the underlying mechanism is still unclear. Here, we combine theory, surface property measurements, and amyloid fibrillogenesis assays on islet amyloid polypeptide and amyloid-β peptide to demonstrate why, at experimentally relevant concentrations, the surface activity of the amyloid-forming peptides leads to enriched fibrillization at an air-water interface. Our findings indicate that the key that links these two seemingly different phenomena is the surface-active nature of the amyloid-forming species, which renders the surface concentration much higher than the corresponding critical fibrillar concentration. This subsequently leads to a substantial increase in fibrillization.

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Leiming Chen

China University of Mining and Technology

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