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Institution

Agency for Science, Technology and Research

GovernmentSingapore, Singapore
About: Agency for Science, Technology and Research is a government organization based out in Singapore, Singapore. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Catalysis & Population. The organization has 16013 authors who have published 24427 publications receiving 832302 citations. The organization is also known as: A*STAR & A-Star.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although all of these attempts were successful in principle, there were significant limitations associated with the use of high-intensity UV or visible light in the photo-activation process.
Abstract: Although all of these attempts were successfulin principle, there were significant limitations associated withthe use of high-intensity UV or visible light in the photo-activation process. Excessive exposure to UV light can causephotoreactions in nucleic acids and result in cellular damage.Furthermore, short-wavelength UV or visible light does notpenetrate into tissue very far, which limits its utility for deep-tissue imaging by photoactivation of the caged compounds.Alternatively, multiphoton photolysis with long-wavelengthexcitation has been used to enable deep-tissue imaging and totarget gene expression

428 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This critical review first introduces the fundamental electronic structure of Kekulé diradicals within the concepts of anti-aromaticity and pro-Aromaticity in the context of Hückel aromaticity and diradical character.
Abstract: Aromaticity is an important concept to understand the stability and physical properties of π-conjugated molecules. Recent studies on pro-aromatic and anti-aromatic molecules revealed their irresistible tendency to become diradicals in the ground state. Diradical character thus becomes another very important concept and it is fundamentally correlated to the physical (optical, electronic and magnetic) properties and chemical reactivity of most of the organic optoelectronic materials. Molecules with distinctive diradical character show unique properties which are very different from those of traditional closed-shell π-conjugated systems, and thus they have many potential applications in organic electronics, spintronics, non-linear optics and energy storage. This critical review first introduces the fundamental electronic structure of Kekule diradicals within the concepts of anti-aromaticity and pro-aromaticity in the context of Huckel aromaticity and diradical character. Then recent research studies on various stable/persistent diradicaloids based on pro-aromatic and anti-aromatic compounds are summarized and discussed with regard to their synthetic chemistry, physical properties, structure-property relationships and potential material applications. A summary and personal perspective is given at the end.

427 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
09 Jun 2017-Science
TL;DR: Two unbiased high-dimensional technologies are employed to characterize the human DC lineage from bone marrow to blood and provide new markers that can be used to identify unambiguously pre-DC from pDC, including CD33, CX3CR1, CD2, CD5, and CD327.
Abstract: INTRODUCTION Dendritic cells (DC) are professional antigen-presenting cells that orchestrate immune responses. The human DC population comprises multiple subsets, including plasmacytoid DC (pDC) and two functionally specialized lineages of conventional DC (cDC1 and cDC2), whose origins and differentiation pathways remain incompletely defined. RATIONALE As DC are essential regulators of the immune response in health and disease, potential intervention strategies aiming at manipulation of these cells will require in-depth insights of their origins, the mechanisms that govern their homeostasis, and their functional properties. Here, we employed two unbiased high-dimensional technologies to characterize the human DC lineage from bone marrow to blood. RESULTS We isolated the DC-containing population (Lineage − HLA − DR + CD135 + cells) from human blood and defined the transcriptomes of 710 individual cells using massively parallel single-cell mRNA sequencing. By combining complementary bioinformatic approaches, we identified a small cluster of cells within this population as putative DC precursors (pre-DC). We then confirmed this finding using cytometry by time-of-flight (CyTOF) to simultaneously measure the expression of a panel of 38 different proteins at the single-cell level on Lineage − HLA − DR + cells and found that pre-DC possessed a CD123 + CD33 + CD45RA + phenotype. We confirmed the precursor potential of pre-DC by establishing their potential to differentiate in vitro into cDC1 and cDC2, but not pDC, in the known proportions found in vivo . Interestingly, pre-DC also express classical pDC markers, including CD123, CD303, and CD304. Thus, any previous studies using these markers to identify or isolate pDC will have inadvertently included CD123 + CD33 + pre-DC. We provide here new markers that can be used to identify unambiguously pre-DC from pDC, including CD33, CX3CR1, CD2, CD5, and CD327. When CD123 + CD33 + pre-DC and CD123 + CD33 − pDC were isolated separately, we observed that pre-DC have unique functional properties that were previously attributed to pDC. Although pDC remain bona fide interferon-α–producing cells, their reported interleukin-12 (IL-12) production and CD4 T cell allostimulatory capacity can likely be attributed to “contaminating” pre-DC. We then asked whether the pre-DC population contained both uncommitted and committed pre-cDC1 and pre-cDC2 precursors, as recently shown in mice. Using microfluidic single-cell mRNA sequencing (scmRNAseq), we showed that the human pre-DC population contains cells exhibiting transcriptomic priming toward cDC1 and cDC2 lineages. Flow cytometry and in vitro DC differentiation experiments further identified CD123 + CADM1 − CD1c − putative uncommitted pre-DC, alongside CADM1 + CD1c − pre-cDC1 and CADM1 − CD1c + pre-cDC2. Finally, we found that pre-DC subsets expressed T cell costimulatory molecules and induced comparable proliferation and polarization of naive CD4 T cells as adult DC. However, exposure to the Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) ligand CpG triggered IL-12p40 and tumor necrosis factor–α production by early pre-DC, pre-cDC1, and pre-cDC2, in contrast to differentiated cDC1 and cDC2, which do not express TLR9. CONCLUSION Using unsupervised scmRNAseq and CyTOF analyses, we have unraveled the complexity of the human DC lineage at the single-cell level, revealing a continuous process of differentiation that starts in the bone marrow (BM) with common DC progenitors (CDP), diverges at the point of emergence of pre-DC and pDC potential, and culminates in maturation of both lineages in the blood and spleen. The pre-DC compartment contains functionally and phenotypically distinct lineage-committed subpopulations, including one early uncommitted CD123 + pre-DC subset and two CD45RA + CD123 lo lineage-committed subsets. The discovery of multiple committed pre-DC populations with unique capabilities opens promising new avenues for the therapeutic exploitation of DC subset-specific targeting.

425 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2012-Gut
TL;DR: The scenario of how HBV deals with the host immunity is presented and used to discuss how the immune response can be harnessed to potentially achieve infection control.
Abstract: Knowledge of the immunological events necessary to control hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection has accelerated in recent years, but their translation towards therapeutic strategies able to achieve a durable HBV suppression has been challenging. The scenario of how HBV deals with the host immunity is presented and used to discuss how the immune response can be harnessed to potentially achieve infection control.

425 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive study to elucidate how heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoparticle (hnRNP) proteins, among the most abundant RNA binding proteins, coordinate to regulate alternative pre-mRNA splicing (AS) in human cells.

425 citations


Authors

Showing all 16109 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Patrick O. Brown183755200985
Alberto Mantovani1831397163826
Paul G. Richardson1831533155912
Barry Halliwell173662159518
Tien Yin Wong1601880131830
Leroy Hood158853128452
Johan G. Eriksson1561257123325
Nancy A. Jenkins155741101587
Neal G. Copeland154726100130
Rui Zhang1512625107917
Seeram Ramakrishna147155299284
Mark M. Davis14458174358
Bin Liu138218187085
Michael J. Meaney13660481128
Michael R. Hayden13589173619
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202329
2022196
20212,127
20202,011
20191,783
20181,750