TY - JOUR AB - Recent lineage tracing studies have revealed that mammary gland homeostasis relies on unipotent stem cells. However, whether and when lineage restriction occurs during embryonic mammary development, and which signals orchestrate cell fate specification, remain unknown. Using a combination of in vivo clonal analysis with whole mount immunofluorescence and mathematical modelling of clonal dynamics, we found that embryonic multipotent mammary cells become lineage-restricted surprisingly early in development, with evidence for unipotency as early as E12.5 and no statistically discernable bipotency after E15.5. To gain insights into the mechanisms governing the switch from multipotency to unipotency, we used gain-of-function Notch1 mice and demonstrated that Notch activation cell autonomously dictates luminal cell fate specification to both embryonic and basally committed mammary cells. These functional studies have important implications for understanding the signals underlying cell plasticity and serve to clarify how reactivation of embryonic programs in adult cells can lead to cancer. AU - Lilja, Anna AU - Rodilla, Veronica AU - Huyghe, Mathilde AU - Hannezo, Edouard B AU - Landragin, Camille AU - Renaud, Olivier AU - Leroy, Olivier AU - Rulands, Steffen AU - Simons, Benjamin AU - Fré, Silvia ID - 288 IS - 6 JF - Nature Cell Biology TI - Clonal analysis of Notch1-expressing cells reveals the existence of unipotent stem cells that retain long-term plasticity in the embryonic mammary gland VL - 20 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Additive manufacturing has recently seen drastic improvements in resolution, making it now possible to fabricate features at scales of hundreds or even dozens of nanometers, which previously required very expensive lithographic methods. As a result, additive manufacturing now seems poised for optical applications, including those relevant to computer graphics, such as material design, as well as display and imaging applications. In this work, we explore the use of additive manufacturing for generating structural colors, where the structures are designed using a fabrication-aware optimization process. This requires a combination of full-wave simulation, a feasible parameterization of the design space, and a tailored optimization procedure. Many of these components should be re-usable for the design of other optical structures at this scale. We show initial results of material samples fabricated based on our designs. While these suffer from the prototype character of state-of-the-art fabrication hardware, we believe they clearly demonstrate the potential of additive nanofabrication for structural colors and other graphics applications. AU - Auzinger, Thomas AU - Heidrich, Wolfgang AU - Bickel, Bernd ID - 304 IS - 4 JF - ACM Transactions on Graphics TI - Computational design of nanostructural color for additive manufacturing VL - 37 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Molding is a popular mass production method, in which the initial expenses for the mold are offset by the low per-unit production cost. However, the physical fabrication constraints of the molding technique commonly restrict the shape of moldable objects. For a complex shape, a decomposition of the object into moldable parts is a common strategy to address these constraints, with plastic model kits being a popular and illustrative example. However, conducting such a decomposition requires considerable expertise, and it depends on the technical aspects of the fabrication technique, as well as aesthetic considerations. We present an interactive technique to create such decompositions for two-piece molding, in which each part of the object is cast between two rigid mold pieces. Given the surface description of an object, we decompose its thin-shell equivalent into moldable parts by first performing a coarse decomposition and then utilizing an active contour model for the boundaries between individual parts. Formulated as an optimization problem, the movement of the contours is guided by an energy reflecting fabrication constraints to ensure the moldability of each part. Simultaneously, the user is provided with editing capabilities to enforce aesthetic guidelines. Our interactive interface provides control of the contour positions by allowing, for example, the alignment of part boundaries with object features. Our technique enables a novel workflow, as it empowers novice users to explore the design space, and it generates fabrication-ready two-piece molds that can be used either for casting or industrial injection molding of free-form objects. AU - Nakashima, Kazutaka AU - Auzinger, Thomas AU - Iarussi, Emmanuel AU - Zhang, Ran AU - Igarashi, Takeo AU - Bickel, Bernd ID - 12 IS - 4 JF - ACM Transaction on Graphics TI - CoreCavity: Interactive shell decomposition for fabrication with two-piece rigid molds VL - 37 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Direct reciprocity is a mechanism for cooperation among humans. Many of our daily interactions are repeated. We interact repeatedly with our family, friends, colleagues, members of the local and even global community. In the theory of repeated games, it is a tacit assumption that the various games that a person plays simultaneously have no effect on each other. Here we introduce a general framework that allows us to analyze “crosstalk” between a player’s concurrent games. In the presence of crosstalk, the action a person experiences in one game can alter the person’s decision in another. We find that crosstalk impedes the maintenance of cooperation and requires stronger levels of forgiveness. The magnitude of the effect depends on the population structure. In more densely connected social groups, crosstalk has a stronger effect. A harsh retaliator, such as Tit-for-Tat, is unable to counteract crosstalk. The crosstalk framework provides a unified interpretation of direct and upstream reciprocity in the context of repeated games. AU - Reiter, Johannes AU - Hilbe, Christian AU - Rand, David AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu AU - Nowak, Martin ID - 454 IS - 1 JF - Nature Communications TI - Crosstalk in concurrent repeated games impedes direct reciprocity and requires stronger levels of forgiveness VL - 9 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Fast-spiking, parvalbumin-expressing GABAergic interneurons (PV+-BCs) express a complex machinery of rapid signaling mechanisms, including specialized voltage-gated ion channels to generate brief action potentials (APs). However, short APs are associated with overlapping Na+ and K+ fluxes and are therefore energetically expensive. How the potentially vicious combination of high AP frequency and inefficient spike generation can be reconciled with limited energy supply is presently unclear. To address this question, we performed direct recordings from the PV+-BC axon, the subcellular structure where active conductances for AP initiation and propagation are located. Surprisingly, the energy required for the AP was, on average, only ∼1.6 times the theoretical minimum. High energy efficiency emerged from the combination of fast inactivation of Na+ channels and delayed activation of Kv3-type K+ channels, which minimized ion flux overlap during APs. Thus, the complementary tuning of axonal Na+ and K+ channel gating optimizes both fast signaling properties and metabolic efficiency. Hu et al. demonstrate that action potentials in parvalbumin-expressing GABAergic interneuron axons are energetically efficient, which is highly unexpected given their brief duration. High energy efficiency emerges from the combination of fast inactivation of voltage-gated Na+ channels and delayed activation of Kv3 channels in the axon. AU - Hu, Hua AU - Roth, Fabian AU - Vandael, David H AU - Jonas, Peter M ID - 320 IS - 1 JF - Neuron TI - Complementary tuning of Na+ and K+ channel gating underlies fast and energy-efficient action potentials in GABAergic interneuron axons VL - 98 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Herd immunity, a process in which resistant individuals limit the spread of a pathogen among susceptible hosts has been extensively studied in eukaryotes. Even though bacteria have evolved multiple immune systems against their phage pathogens, herd immunity in bacteria remains unexplored. Here we experimentally demonstrate that herd immunity arises during phage epidemics in structured and unstructured Escherichia coli populations consisting of differing frequencies of susceptible and resistant cells harboring CRISPR immunity. In addition, we develop a mathematical model that quantifies how herd immunity is affected by spatial population structure, bacterial growth rate, and phage replication rate. Using our model we infer a general epidemiological rule describing the relative speed of an epidemic in partially resistant spatially structured populations. Our experimental and theoretical findings indicate that herd immunity may be important in bacterial communities, allowing for stable coexistence of bacteria and their phages and the maintenance of polymorphism in bacterial immunity. AU - Payne, Pavel AU - Geyrhofer, Lukas AU - Barton, Nicholas H AU - Bollback, Jonathan P ID - 423 JF - eLife TI - CRISPR-based herd immunity can limit phage epidemics in bacterial populations VL - 7 ER - TY - CONF AB - Due to data compression or low resolution, nearby vertices and edges of a graph drawing may be bundled to a common node or arc. We model such a “compromised” drawing by a piecewise linear map φ:G → ℝ. We wish to perturb φ by an arbitrarily small ε>0 into a proper drawing (in which the vertices are distinct points, any two edges intersect in finitely many points, and no three edges have a common interior point) that minimizes the number of crossings. An ε-perturbation, for every ε>0, is given by a piecewise linear map (Formula Presented), where with ||·|| is the uniform norm (i.e., sup norm). We present a polynomial-time solution for this optimization problem when G is a cycle and the map φ has no spurs (i.e., no two adjacent edges are mapped to overlapping arcs). We also show that the problem becomes NP-complete (i) when G is an arbitrary graph and φ has no spurs, and (ii) when φ may have spurs and G is a cycle or a union of disjoint paths. AU - Fulek, Radoslav AU - Tóth, Csaba D. ID - 5791 SN - 9783030044138 TI - Crossing minimization in perturbed drawings VL - 11282 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Over the past decade, the edge of chaos has proven to be a fruitful starting point for investigations of shear flows when the laminar base flow is linearly stable. Numerous computational studies of shear flows demonstrated the existence of states that separate laminar and turbulent regions of the state space. In addition, some studies determined invariant solutions that reside on this edge. In this paper, we study the unstable manifold of one such solution with the aid of continuous symmetry reduction, which we formulate here for the simultaneous quotiening of axial and azimuthal symmetries. Upon our investigation of the unstable manifold, we discover a previously unknown traveling-wave solution on the laminar-turbulent boundary with a relatively complex structure. By means of low-dimensional projections, we visualize different dynamical paths that connect these solutions to the turbulence. Our numerical experiments demonstrate that the laminar-turbulent boundary exhibits qualitatively different regions whose properties are influenced by the nearby invariant solutions. AU - Budanur, Nazmi B AU - Hof, Björn ID - 291 IS - 5 JF - Physical Review Fluids TI - Complexity of the laminar-turbulent boundary in pipe flow VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Inside a two-dimensional region (``cake""), there are m nonoverlapping tiles of a certain kind (``toppings""). We want to expand the toppings while keeping them nonoverlapping, and possibly add some blank pieces of the same ``certain kind,"" such that the entire cake is covered. How many blanks must we add? We study this question in several cases: (1) The cake and toppings are general polygons. (2) The cake and toppings are convex figures. (3) The cake and toppings are axis-parallel rectangles. (4) The cake is an axis-parallel rectilinear polygon and the toppings are axis-parallel rectangles. In all four cases, we provide tight bounds on the number of blanks. AU - Akopyan, Arseniy AU - Segal Halevi, Erel ID - 58 IS - 3 JF - SIAM Journal on Discrete Mathematics TI - Counting blanks in polygonal arrangements VL - 32 ER - TY - GEN AB - Herd immunity, a process in which resistant individuals limit the spread of a pathogen among susceptible hosts has been extensively studied in eukaryotes. Even though bacteria have evolved multiple immune systems against their phage pathogens, herd immunity in bacteria remains unexplored. Here we experimentally demonstrate that herd immunity arises during phage epidemics in structured and unstructured Escherichia coli populations consisting of differing frequencies of susceptible and resistant cells harboring CRISPR immunity. In addition, we develop a mathematical model that quantifies how herd immunity is affected by spatial population structure, bacterial growth rate, and phage replication rate. Using our model we infer a general epidemiological rule describing the relative speed of an epidemic in partially resistant spatially structured populations. Our experimental and theoretical findings indicate that herd immunity may be important in bacterial communities, allowing for stable coexistence of bacteria and their phages and the maintenance of polymorphism in bacterial immunity. AU - Payne, Pavel AU - Geyrhofer, Lukas AU - Barton, Nicholas H AU - Bollback, Jonathan P ID - 9840 TI - Data from: CRISPR-based herd immunity limits phage epidemics in bacterial populations ER - TY - JOUR AB - Social insects protect their colonies from infectious disease through collective defences that result in social immunity. In ants, workers first try to prevent infection of colony members. Here, we show that if this fails and a pathogen establishes an infection, ants employ an efficient multicomponent behaviour − "destructive disinfection" − to prevent further spread of disease through the colony. Ants specifically target infected pupae during the pathogen's non-contagious incubation period, relying on chemical 'sickness cues' emitted by pupae. They then remove the pupal cocoon, perforate its cuticle and administer antimicrobial poison, which enters the body and prevents pathogen replication from the inside out. Like the immune system of a body that specifically targets and eliminates infected cells, this social immunity measure sacrifices infected brood to stop the pathogen completing its lifecycle, thus protecting the rest of the colony. Hence, the same principles of disease defence apply at different levels of biological organisation. AU - Pull, Christopher AU - Ugelvig, Line V AU - Wiesenhofer, Florian AU - Grasse, Anna V AU - Tragust, Simon AU - Schmitt, Thomas AU - Brown, Mark AU - Cremer, Sylvia ID - 616 JF - eLife TI - Destructive disinfection of infected brood prevents systemic disease spread in ant colonies VL - 7 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Pancreas development involves a coordinated process in which an early phase of cell segregation is followed by a longer phase of lineage restriction, expansion, and tissue remodeling. By combining clonal tracing and whole-mount reconstruction with proliferation kinetics and single-cell transcriptional profiling, we define the functional basis of pancreas morphogenesis. We show that the large-scale organization of mouse pancreas can be traced to the activity of self-renewing precursors positioned at the termini of growing ducts, which act collectively to drive serial rounds of stochastic ductal bifurcation balanced by termination. During this phase of branching morphogenesis, multipotent precursors become progressively fate-restricted, giving rise to self-renewing acinar-committed precursors that are conveyed with growing ducts, as well as ductal progenitors that expand the trailing ducts and give rise to delaminating endocrine cells. These findings define quantitatively how the functional behavior and lineage progression of precursor pools determine the large-scale patterning of pancreatic sub-compartments. AU - Sznurkowska, Magdalena AU - Hannezo, Edouard B AU - Azzarelli, Roberta AU - Rulands, Steffen AU - Nestorowa, Sonia AU - Hindley, Christopher AU - Nichols, Jennifer AU - Göttgens, Berthold AU - Huch, Meritxell AU - Philpott, Anna AU - Simons, Benjamin ID - 132 IS - 3 JF - Developmental Cell TI - Defining lineage potential and fate behavior of precursors during pancreas development VL - 46 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Seeds derive from ovules upon fertilization and therefore the total number of ovules determines the final seed yield, a fundamental trait in crop plants. Among the factors that co-ordinate the process of ovule formation, the transcription factors CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON 1 (CUC1) and CUC2 and the hormone cytokinin (CK) have a particularly prominent role. Indeed, the absence of both CUC1 and CUC2 causes a severe reduction in ovule number, a phenotype that can be rescued by CK treatment. In this study, we combined CK quantification with an integrative genome-wide target identification approach to select Arabidopsis genes regulated by CUCs that are also involved in CK metabolism. We focused our attention on the functional characterization of UDP-GLUCOSYL TRANSFERASE 85A3 (UGT85A3) and UGT73C1, which are up-regulated in the absence of CUC1 and CUC2 and encode enzymes able to catalyse CK inactivation by O-glucosylation. Our results demonstrate a role for these UGTs as a link between CUCs and CK homeostasis, and highlight the importance of CUCs and CKs in the determination of seed yield. AU - Cucinotta, Mara AU - Manrique, Silvia AU - Cuesta, Candela AU - Benková, Eva AU - Novák, Ondřej AU - Colombo, Lucia ID - 42 IS - 21 JF - Journal of Experimental Botany TI - Cup-shaped Cotyledon1 (CUC1) and CU2 regulate cytokinin homeostasis to determine ovule number in arabidopsis VL - 69 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We analyze a disordered central spin model, where a central spin interacts equally with each spin in a periodic one-dimensional (1D) random-field Heisenberg chain. If the Heisenberg chain is initially in the many-body localized (MBL) phase, we find that the coupling to the central spin suffices to delocalize the chain for a substantial range of coupling strengths. We calculate the phase diagram of the model and identify the phase boundary between the MBL and ergodic phase. Within the localized phase, the central spin significantly enhances the rate of the logarithmic entanglement growth and its saturation value. We attribute the increase in entanglement entropy to a nonextensive enhancement of magnetization fluctuations induced by the central spin. Finally, we demonstrate that correlation functions of the central spin can be utilized to distinguish between MBL and ergodic phases of the 1D chain. Hence, we propose the use of a central spin as a possible experimental probe to identify the MBL phase. AU - Hetterich, Daniel AU - Yao, Norman AU - Serbyn, Maksym AU - Pollmann, Frank AU - Trauzettel, Björn ID - 46 IS - 16 JF - Physical Review B TI - Detection and characterization of many-body localization in central spin models VL - 98 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Migrating cells penetrate tissue barriers during development, inflammatory responses, and tumor metastasis. We study if migration in vivo in such three-dimensionally confined environments requires changes in the mechanical properties of the surrounding cells using embryonic Drosophila melanogaster hemocytes, also called macrophages, as a model. We find that macrophage invasion into the germband through transient separation of the apposing ectoderm and mesoderm requires cell deformations and reductions in apical tension in the ectoderm. Interestingly, the genetic pathway governing these mechanical shifts acts downstream of the only known tumor necrosis factor superfamily member in Drosophila, Eiger, and its receptor, Grindelwald. Eiger-Grindelwald signaling reduces levels of active Myosin in the germband ectodermal cortex through the localization of a Crumbs complex component, Patj (Pals-1-associated tight junction protein). We therefore elucidate a distinct molecular pathway that controls tissue tension and demonstrate the importance of such regulation for invasive migration in vivo. AU - Ratheesh, Aparna AU - Biebl, Julia AU - Smutny, Michael AU - Veselá, Jana AU - Papusheva, Ekaterina AU - Krens, Gabriel AU - Kaufmann, Walter AU - György, Attila AU - Casano, Alessandra M AU - Siekhaus, Daria E ID - 308 IS - 3 JF - Developmental Cell TI - Drosophila TNF modulates tissue tension in the embryo to facilitate macrophage invasive migration VL - 45 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Creeping flow of polymeric fluid without inertia exhibits elastic instabilities and elastic turbulence accompanied by drag enhancement due to elastic stress produced by flow-stretched polymers. However, in inertia-dominated flow at high Re and low fluid elasticity El, a reduction in turbulent frictional drag is caused by an intricate competition between inertial and elastic stresses. Here we explore the effect of inertia on the stability of viscoelastic flow in a broad range of control parameters El and (Re,Wi). We present the stability diagram of observed flow regimes in Wi-Re coordinates and find that the instabilities' onsets show an unexpectedly nonmonotonic dependence on El. Further, three distinct regions in the diagram are identified based on El. Strikingly, for high-elasticity fluids we discover a complete relaminarization of flow at Reynolds number in the range of 1 to 10, different from a well-known turbulent drag reduction. These counterintuitive effects may be explained by a finite polymer extensibility and a suppression of vorticity at high Wi. Our results call for further theoretical and numerical development to uncover the role of inertial effect on elastic turbulence in a viscoelastic flow. AU - Varshney, Atul AU - Steinberg, Victor ID - 17 IS - 10 JF - Physical Review Fluids TI - Drag enhancement and drag reduction in viscoelastic flow VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Although cells respond specifically to environments, how environmental identity is encoded intracellularly is not understood. Here, we study this organization of information in budding yeast by estimating the mutual information between environmental transitions and the dynamics of nuclear translocation for 10 transcription factors. Our method of estimation is general, scalable, and based on decoding from single cells. The dynamics of the transcription factors are necessary to encode the highest amounts of extracellular information, and we show that information is transduced through two channels: Generalists (Msn2/4, Tod6 and Dot6, Maf1, and Sfp1) can encode the nature of multiple stresses, but only if stress is high; specialists (Hog1, Yap1, and Mig1/2) encode one particular stress, but do so more quickly and for a wider range of magnitudes. In particular, Dot6 encodes almost as much information as Msn2, the master regulator of the environmental stress response. Each transcription factor reports differently, and it is only their collective behavior that distinguishes between multiple environmental states. Changes in the dynamics of the localization of transcription factors thus constitute a precise, distributed internal representation of extracellular change. We predict that such multidimensional representations are common in cellular decision-making. AU - Granados, Alejandro AU - Pietsch, Julian AU - Cepeda Humerez, Sarah A AU - Farquhar, Isebail AU - Tkacik, Gasper AU - Swain, Peter ID - 281 IS - 23 JF - PNAS TI - Distributed and dynamic intracellular organization of extracellular information VL - 115 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Clathrin-mediated endocytosis requires the coordinated assembly of various endocytic proteins and lipids at the plasma membrane. Accumulating evidence demonstrates a crucial role for phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PtdIns(4,5)P2) in endocytosis, but specific roles for PtdIns(4)P other than as the biosynthetic precursor of PtdIns(4,5)P2 have not been clarified. In this study we investigated the role of PtdIns(4)P or PtdIns(4,5)P2 in receptor-mediated endocytosis through the construction of temperature-sensitive (ts) mutants for the PI 4-kinases Stt4p and Pik1p and the PtdIns(4) 5-kinase Mss4p. Quantitative analyses of endocytosis revealed that both the stt4(ts)pik1(ts) and mss4(ts) mutants have a severe defect in endocytic internalization. Live-cell imaging of endocytic protein dynamics in stt4(ts)pik1(ts) and mss4(ts) mutants revealed that PtdIns(4)P is required for the recruitment of the alpha-factor receptor Ste2p to clathrin-coated pits whereas PtdIns(4,5)P2 is required for membrane internalization. We also found that the localization to endocytic sites of the ENTH/ANTH domain-bearing clathrin adaptors, Ent1p/Ent2p and Yap1801p/Yap1802p, is significantly impaired in the stt4(ts)pik1(ts) mutant, but not in the mss4(ts) mutant. These results suggest distinct roles in successive steps for PtdIns(4)P and PtdIns(4,5)P2 during receptor-mediated endocytosis. AU - Yamamoto, Wataru AU - Wada, Suguru AU - Nagano, Makoto AU - Aoshima, Kaito AU - Siekhaus, Daria E AU - Toshima, Junko AU - Toshima, Jiro ID - 620 IS - 1 JF - Journal of Cell Science TI - Distinct roles for plasma membrane PtdIns 4 P and PtdIns 4 5 P2 during yeast receptor mediated endocytosis VL - 131 ER - TY - CONF AB - We describe a new algorithm for the parametric identification problem for signal temporal logic (STL), stated as follows. Given a densetime real-valued signal w and a parameterized temporal logic formula φ, compute the subset of the parameter space that renders the formula satisfied by the signal. Unlike previous solutions, which were based on search in the parameter space or quantifier elimination, our procedure works recursively on φ and computes the evolution over time of the set of valid parameter assignments. This procedure is similar to that of monitoring or computing the robustness of φ relative to w. Our implementation and experiments demonstrate that this approach can work well in practice. AU - Bakhirkin, Alexey AU - Ferrere, Thomas AU - Maler, Oded ID - 182 SN - 978-1-4503-5642-8 T2 - Proceedings of the 21st International Conference on Hybrid Systems TI - Efficient parametric identification for STL ER - TY - CONF AB - Vector Addition Systems with States (VASS) provide a well-known and fundamental model for the analysis of concurrent processes, parameterized systems, and are also used as abstract models of programs in resource bound analysis. In this paper we study the problem of obtaining asymptotic bounds on the termination time of a given VASS. In particular, we focus on the practically important case of obtaining polynomial bounds on termination time. Our main contributions are as follows: First, we present a polynomial-time algorithm for deciding whether a given VASS has a linear asymptotic complexity. We also show that if the complexity of a VASS is not linear, it is at least quadratic. Second, we classify VASS according to quantitative properties of their cycles. We show that certain singularities in these properties are the key reason for non-polynomial asymptotic complexity of VASS. In absence of singularities, we show that the asymptotic complexity is always polynomial and of the form Θ(nk), for some integer k d, where d is the dimension of the VASS. We present a polynomial-time algorithm computing the optimal k. For general VASS, the same algorithm, which is based on a complete technique for the construction of ranking functions in VASS, produces a valid lower bound, i.e., a k such that the termination complexity is (nk). Our results are based on new insights into the geometry of VASS dynamics, which hold the potential for further applicability to VASS analysis. AU - Brázdil, Tomáš AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu AU - Kučera, Antonín AU - Novotny, Petr AU - Velan, Dominik AU - Zuleger, Florian ID - 143 SN - 978-1-4503-5583-4 TI - Efficient algorithms for asymptotic bounds on termination time in VASS VL - F138033 ER -