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Table 1: The 20 amino acids: abbreviation codes, side chains, and hydropho- bicities of the side chains, h, as measured by the free-energy of transfer from cyclohexane to water [7]. The solid line indicates the binary division into hy- drophobic and polar amino acids done in paper III, with W, M, F, V, I and L as hydrophobic.
"... In PAGE 9: ...Introduction Protein Chains As mentioned in the previous section, the 20 naturally occurring amino acids are the building blocks of proteins. All 20 amino acids, except proline, have the same general form: H2N? Rj C H?CO2H The amino acids di er in the chemical composition of the side chain R (see Table1 ), which contains between 1 (glycine) and 18 (arginine) atoms. Amino acids are linked into polypeptide chains by the formation of peptide bonds.... In PAGE 10: ... they will associate since the number of ordered water molecules will be reduced, and hence the entropy will increase, compared to if the molecules are separated. The 20 amino acids show varying degrees of hydrophobicity (see Table1 ), and this has important consequences for protein structures. Due to the e ective attraction between hydrophobic amino acids, induced by the hydrophobic ef- fect, proteins fold into compact structures with highly hydrophobic cores and surfaces consisting mainly of polar amino acids.... In PAGE 109: ...6: Design results for six N = 20 o -lattice target structures. The cor- responding sequences are those from Table1 in [11] but here ordered according to decreasing h 2i.... ..."
Table Il. Comparison 01the physicochemical composition between the cheese model and some typi- cal cheeses (mean values).
1995
Table 1. Platelet cholesterol and cholestatrienol fluorescence following treatment with bovine serum albumin Platelet [cholesterol] Fluorescence Treatment (molmol-1 Pi) Total fluorescence after TNBS Percentage quenched
"... In PAGE 4: ...rom the inner to the outer monolayer; i.e. in the opposite direction. To detect reverse cholesterol translocation from the inner to the outer monolayer, platelets were labeled with C-3 as described above and then incubated with fatty-acid-free bovine serum albumin to remove the fluorescent sterol from the outer monolayer (see Table1 ). When albumin-treated platelets were reincubated, the percentage of TNBS- quenchable fluorescence gradually increased from less than 10 % to more than 50 % after 30 min of incubation (Fig.... ..."
Table 1.1: SN and DN for di erent N for the HP model ( = 0) on the square and triangular lattices. Also shown are the total numbers of conformations for di erent N.
"... In PAGE 8: ...92 L Leucine ?CH2CH(CH3)2 4.92 Table1 : The 20 amino acids: abbreviation codes, side chains, and hydropho- bicities of the side chains, h, as measured by the free-energy of transfer from cyclohexane to water [7]. The solid line indicates the binary division into hy- drophobic and polar amino acids done in paper III, with W, M, F, V, I and L as hydrophobic.... In PAGE 9: ...Introduction Protein Chains As mentioned in the previous section, the 20 naturally occurring amino acids are the building blocks of proteins. All 20 amino acids, except proline, have the same general form: H2N? Rj C H?CO2H The amino acids di er in the chemical composition of the side chain R (see Table1 ), which contains between 1 (glycine) and 18 (arginine) atoms. Amino acids are linked into polypeptide chains by the formation of peptide bonds.... In PAGE 10: ... they will associate since the number of ordered water molecules will be reduced, and hence the entropy will increase, compared to if the molecules are separated. The 20 amino acids show varying degrees of hydrophobicity (see Table1 ), and this has important consequences for protein structures. Due to the e ective attraction between hydrophobic amino acids, induced by the hydrophobic ef- fect, proteins fold into compact structures with highly hydrophobic cores and surfaces consisting mainly of polar amino acids.... In PAGE 109: ...6: Design results for six N = 20 o -lattice target structures. The cor- responding sequences are those from Table1 in [11] but here ordered according to decreasing h 2i.... ..."
Table 5.5 Performance on small test problems.
1998
Cited by 44
Table 6: Comparison with aperture photometry
"... In PAGE 13: ...perture data for 5 of our galaxies. On the average, our magnitudes are 0.145 mag brighter in J and 0.061 in K. Table6 gives the di erences (literature magnitudes minus ours) for the 5 galaxies. The di erences are larger than expected from the scatter in the standard stars, and consistent with the surface brightness comparisons.... ..."
TABLE I ABBREVIATIONSUSED IN THE PAPER
1998
Cited by 66
Table 1: Summary of papers
"... In PAGE 3: ...Table 1: Summary of papers 2 Review of accepted papers Table1 summarizes the different methods used in the six papers presented in the workshop and the problem for which they have been applied. As one can notice, there is a interesting selection of graphical models, as there is a wide variety of them.... ..."
TABLE III NOTATIONS IN THIS PAPER
2003
Cited by 29
Table 1: Paper Notation
"... In PAGE 2: ... Once a CAC policy has been de#0Cned the hando#0B calls can be separated and treated di#0Berently if desired. In Table1 , the notation is speci#0Ced for the rest of the paper. 4 Proposal 4.... In PAGE 2: ... 4 Proposal 4.1 Call Admission Policies Call admission policies can be categorized using the notation of Table1 . The policies described belowhave been based on... ..."
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