scholarly journals Non-Linear Dynamics Analysis of Protein Sequences. Application to CYP450

Entropy ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 852 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xavier F. Cadet ◽  
Reda Dehak ◽  
Sang Peter Chin ◽  
Miloud Bessafi

The nature of changes involved in crossed-sequence scale and inner-sequence scale is very challenging in protein biology. This study is a new attempt to assess with a phenomenological approach the non-stationary and nonlinear fluctuation of changes encountered in protein sequence. We have computed fluctuations from an encoded amino acid index dataset using cumulative sum technique and extracted the departure from the linear trend found in each protein sequence. For inner-sequence analysis, we found that the fluctuations of changes statistically follow a −5/3 Kolmogorov power and behave like an incremental Brownian process. The pattern of the changes in the inner sequence seems to be monofractal in essence and to be bounded between Hurst exponent [1/3,1/2] range, which respectively corresponds to the Kolmogorov and Brownian monofractal process. In addition, the changes in the inner sequence exhibit moderate complexity and chaos, which seems to be coherent with the monofractal and stochastic process highlighted previously in the study. The crossed-sequence changes analysis was achieved using an external parameter, which is the activity available for each protein sequence, and some results obtained for the inner sequence, specifically the drift and Kolmogorov complexity spectrum. We found a significant linear relationship between activity changes and drift changes, and also between activity and Kolmogorov complexity. An analysis of the mean square displacement of trajectories in the bivariate space (drift, activity) and (Kolmogorov complexity spectrum, activity) seems to present a superdiffusive law with a 1.6 power law value.

1992 ◽  
Vol 06 (07) ◽  
pp. 359-366
Author(s):  
PEI-HSI TSAO ◽  
WEI-CHIH LIU

A phenomenological approach is adopted for investigating the critical behavior related to optical bistability (OB). This method is similar to Landau theory of critical phenomena and is applied to find the critical exponents and to analyze critical slowing down. It is shown in general that critical exponents for OB are classical ones and the relaxation time of critical slowing down varies with the external parameter p as (p − pc)−1/2 around the transition point p = pc.


2011 ◽  
Vol 25 (01) ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
MOONGYU PARK ◽  
JOHN H. CUSHMAN

Anomalous diffusion occurs in many branches of physics. Examples include diffusion in confined nanofilms, Richardson turbulence in the atmosphere, near-surface ocean currents, fracture flow in porous formations and vortex arrays in rotating flows. Classically, anomalous diffusion is characterized by a power law exponent related to the mean-square displacement of a particle or squared separation of pairs of particles: 〈|X(t)|2〉 ~tγ. The exponent γ is often thought to relate to the fractal dimension of the underlying process. If γ > 1 the flow is super-diffusive, if it equals 1 it is classical, otherwise it is sub-diffusive. In this work we illustrate how time-changed Brownian position processes can be employed to model sub-, super-, and classical diffusion, while time-changed Brownian velocity processes can be used to model super-diffusion alone. Specific examples presented include transport in turbulent fluids and renormalized transport in porous media. Intuitively, a time-changed Brownian process is a classical Brownian motion running with a nonlinear clock (Bm-nlc). The major difference between classical and Bm-nlc is that the time-changed case has nonstationary increments. An important novelty of this approach is that, unlike fractional Brownian motion, the fractal dimension of the process (space filling character) driving anomalous diffusion as modeled by Bm-nlc positions or velocities does not change with the scaling exponent, γ.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Yazdannik ◽  
M. F. Yazdani ◽  
M. Moghadam ◽  
M. Nasiri

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document