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Featured researches published by Julius T. Su.


Current Biology | 2002

Drosophila Bruce can potently suppress Rpr- and Grim-dependent but not Hid-dependent cell death.

Stephanie Y. Vernooy; Vivian Chow; Julius T. Su; Koen Verbrugghe; Jennifer Yang; Susannah Cole; Michael Olson; Bruce A. Hay

Bruce is a large protein (530 kDa) that contains an N-terminal baculovirus IAP repeat (BIR) and a C-terminal ubiquitin conjugation domain (E2). BRUCE upregulation occurs in some cancers and contributes to the resistance of these cells to DNA-damaging chemotherapeutic drugs. However, it is still unknown whether Bruce inhibits apoptosis directly or instead plays some other more indirect role in mediating chemoresistance, perhaps by promoting drug export, decreasing the efficacy of DNA damage-dependent cell death signaling, or by promoting DNA repair. Here, we demonstrate, using gain-of-function and deletion alleles, that Drosophila Bruce (dBruce) can potently inhibit cell death induced by the essential Drosophila cell death activators Reaper (Rpr) and Grim but not Head involution defective (Hid). The dBruce BIR domain is not sufficient for this activity, and the E2 domain is likely required. dBruce does not promote Rpr or Grim degradation directly, but its antiapoptotic actions do require that their N termini, required for interaction with DIAP1 BIR2, be intact. dBruce does not block the activity of the apical cell death caspase Dronc or the proapoptotic Bcl-2 family member Debcl/Drob-1/dBorg-1/Dbok. Together, these results argue that dBruce can regulate cell death at a novel point.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2009

The dynamics of highly excited electronic systems: Applications of the electron force field

Julius T. Su; William A. Goddard

Highly excited heterogeneous complex materials are essential elements of important processes, ranging from inertial confinement fusion to semiconductor device fabrication. Understanding the dynamics of these systems has been challenging because of the difficulty in extracting mechanistic information from either experiment or theory. We describe here the electron force field (eFF) approximation to quantum mechanics which provides a practical approach to simulating the dynamics of such systems. eFF includes all the normal electrostatic interactions between electrons and nuclei and the normal quantum mechanical description of kinetic energy for the electrons, but contains two severe approximations: first, the individual electrons are represented as floating Gaussian wave packets whose position and size respond instantaneously to various forces during the dynamics; and second, these wave packets are combined into a many-body wave function as a Hartree product without explicit antisymmetrization. The Pauli principle is accounted for by adding an extra spin-dependent term to the Hamiltonian. These approximations are a logical extension of existing approaches to simulate the dynamics of fermions, which we review. In this paper, we discuss the details of the equations of motion and potentials that form eFF, and evaluate the ability of eFF to describe ground-state systems containing covalent, ionic, multicenter, and/or metallic bonds. We also summarize two eFF calculations previously reported on electronically excited systems: (1) the thermodynamics of hydrogen compressed up to ten times liquid density and heated up to 200,000 K; and (2) the dynamics of Auger fragmentation in a diamond nanoparticle, where hundreds of electron volts of excitation energy are dissipated over tens of femtoseconds. These cases represent the first steps toward using eFF to model highly excited electronic processes in complex materials.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Mechanisms of Auger-induced chemistry derived from wave packet dynamics.

Julius T. Su; William A. Goddard

To understand how core ionization and subsequent Auger decay lead to bond breaking in large systems, we simulate the wave packet dynamics of electrons in the hydrogenated diamond nanoparticle C197H112. We find that surface core ionizations cause emission of carbon fragments and protons through a direct Auger mechanism, whereas deeper core ionizations cause hydrides to be emitted from the surface via remote heating, consistent with results from photon-stimulated desorption experiments [Hoffman A, Laikhtman A, (2006) J Phys Condens Mater 18:S1517–S1546]. This demonstrates that it is feasible to study the chemistry of highly excited large-scale systems using simulation and analysis tools comparable in simplicity to those used for classical molecular dynamics.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

High-temperature high-pressure phases of lithium from electron force field (eFF) quantum electron dynamics simulations

Hyungjun Kim; Julius T. Su; William A. Goddard

We recently developed the electron force field (eFF) method for practical nonadiabatic electron dynamics simulations of materials under extreme conditions and showed that it gave an excellent description of the shock thermodynamics of hydrogen from molecules to atoms to plasma, as well as the electron dynamics of the Auger decay in diamondoids following core electron ionization. Here we apply eFF to the shock thermodynamics of lithium metal, where we find two distinct consecutive phase changes that manifest themselves as a kink in the shock Hugoniot, previously observed experimentally, but not explained. Analyzing the atomic distribution functions, we establish that the first phase transition corresponds to (i) an fcc-to-cI16 phase transition that was observed previously in diamond anvil cell experiments at low temperature and (ii) a second phase transition that corresponds to the formation of a new amorphous phase (amor) of lithium that is distinct from normal molten lithium. The amorphous phase has enhanced valence electron-nucleus interactions due to localization of electrons into interstitial locations, along with a random connectivity distribution function. This indicates that eFF can characterize and compute the relative stability of states of matter under extreme conditions (e.g., warm dense matter).


Topics in Current Chemistry | 2011

First-Principles-Based Multiscale, Multiparadigm Molecular Mechanics and Dynamics Methods for Describing Complex Chemical Processes

Andres Jaramillo-Botero; Robert J. Nielsen; Ravi Abrol; Julius T. Su; Tod A. Pascal; Jonathan E. Mueller; William A. Goddard

We expect that systematic and seamless computational upscaling and downscaling for modeling, predicting, or optimizing material and system properties and behavior with atomistic resolution will eventually be sufficiently accurate and practical that it will transform the mode of development in the materials, chemical, catalysis, and Pharma industries. However, despite truly dramatic progress in methods, software, and hardware, this goal remains elusive, particularly for systems that exhibit inherently complex chemistry under normal or extreme conditions of temperature, pressure, radiation, and others. We describe here some of the significant progress towards solving these problems via a general multiscale, multiparadigm strategy based on first-principles quantum mechanics (QM), and the development of breakthrough methods for treating reaction processes, excited electronic states, and weak bonding effects on the conformational dynamics of large-scale molecular systems. These methods have resulted directly from filling in the physical and chemical gaps in existing theoretical and computational models, within the multiscale, multiparadigm strategy. To illustrate the procedure we demonstrate the application and transferability of such methods on an ample set of challenging problems that span multiple fields, system length- and timescales, and that lay beyond the realm of existing computational or, in some case, experimental approaches, including understanding the solvation effects on the reactivity of organic and organometallic structures, predicting transmembrane protein structures, understanding carbon nanotube nucleation and growth, understanding the effects of electronic excitations in materials subjected to extreme conditions of temperature and pressure, following the dynamics and energetics of long-term conformational evolution of DNA macromolecules, and predicting the long-term mechanisms involved in enhancing the mechanical response of polymer-based hydrogels.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2004

Accurate Energies and Structures for Large Water Clusters Using the X3LYP Hybrid Density Functional

Julius T. Su; Xin Xu; William A. Goddard


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005

Enhancing 2-Iodoxybenzoic Acid Reactivity by Exploiting a Hypervalent Twist

Julius T. Su; William A. Goddard


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2003

The development of a facile tandem Wolff/Cope rearrangement for the synthesis of fused carbocyclic skeletons.

Richmond Sarpong; Julius T. Su; Brian M. Stoltz


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Excited Electron Dynamics Modeling of Warm Dense Matter

Julius T. Su; William A. Goddard


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 1998

Solvation Ultrafast Dynamics of Reactions. 14. Molecular Dynamics and ab Initio Studies of Charge-Transfer Reactions of Iodine in Benzene Clusters

Julius T. Su; Ahmed H. Zewail

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William A. Goddard

California Institute of Technology

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Andres Jaramillo-Botero

California Institute of Technology

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Brian M. Stoltz

California Institute of Technology

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Richmond Sarpong

California Institute of Technology

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Si-Ping Han

California Institute of Technology

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Ahmed H. Zewail

California Institute of Technology

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Bruce A. Hay

California Institute of Technology

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Jennifer Yang

California Institute of Technology

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Koen Verbrugghe

California Institute of Technology

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Michael Olson

California Institute of Technology

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