@article{7775, abstract = {As a function of packing fraction at zero temperature and applied stress, an amorphous packing of spheres exhibits a jamming transition where the system is sensitive to boundary conditions even in the thermodynamic limit. Upon further compression, the system should become insensitive to boundary conditions provided it is sufficiently large. Here we explore the linear response to a large class of boundary perturbations in 2 and 3 dimensions. We consider each finite packing with periodic-boundary conditions as the basis of an infinite square or cubic lattice and study properties of vibrational modes at arbitrary wave vector. We find that the stability of such modes can be understood in terms of a competition between plane waves and the anomalous vibrational modes associated with the jamming transition; infinitesimal boundary perturbations become irrelevant for systems that are larger than a length scale that characterizes the transverse excitations. This previously identified length diverges at the jamming transition.}, author = {Schoenholz, Samuel S. and Goodrich, Carl Peter and Kogan, Oleg and Liu, Andrea J. and Nagel, Sidney R.}, issn = {1744-683X}, journal = {Soft Matter}, number = {46}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, title = {{Stability of jammed packings II: The transverse length scale}}, doi = {10.1039/c3sm51096d}, volume = {9}, year = {2013}, } @article{7774, abstract = {In 2005, Wyart et al. [Europhys. Lett., 2005, 72, 486] showed that the low frequency vibrational properties of jammed amorphous sphere packings can be understood in terms of a length scale, called l*, that diverges as the system becomes marginally unstable. Despite the tremendous success of this theory, it has been difficult to connect the counting argument that defines l* to other length scales that diverge near the jamming transition. We present an alternate derivation of l* based on the onset of rigidity. This phenomenological approach reveals the physical mechanism underlying the length scale and is relevant to a range of systems for which the original argument breaks down. It also allows us to present the first direct numerical measurement of l*.}, author = {Goodrich, Carl Peter and Ellenbroek, Wouter G. and Liu, Andrea J.}, issn = {1744-683X}, journal = {Soft Matter}, number = {46}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, title = {{Stability of jammed packings I: The rigidity length scale}}, doi = {10.1039/c3sm51095f}, volume = {9}, year = {2013}, } @article{8030, abstract = {While the plasticity of excitatory synaptic connections in the brain has been widely studied, the plasticity of inhibitory connections is much less understood. Here, we present recent experimental and theoretical findings concerning the rules of spike timing-dependent inhibitory plasticity and their putative network function. This is a summary of a workshop at the COSYNE conference 2012.}, author = {Vogels, Tim P and Froemke, R. C. and Doyon, N. and Gilson, M. and Haas, J. S. and Liu, R. and Maffei, A. and Miller, P. and Wierenga, C. J. and Woodin, M. A. and Zenke, F. and Sprekeler, H.}, issn = {1662-5110}, journal = {Frontiers in Neural Circuits}, publisher = {Frontiers Media}, title = {{Inhibitory synaptic plasticity: Spike timing-dependence and putative network function}}, doi = {10.3389/fncir.2013.00119}, volume = {7}, year = {2013}, } @article{811, abstract = {Cell migration is commonly accompanied by protrusion of membrane ruffles and lamellipodia. In two-dimensional migration, protrusion of these thin sheets of cytoplasm is considered relevant to both exploration of new space and initiation of nascent adhesion to the substratum. Lamellipodium formation can be potently stimulated by Rho GTPases of the Rac subfamily, but alsoby RhoG or Cdc42. Here we describe viable fibroblast cell lines geneticallydeficient for Rac1 that lack detectable levels of Rac2 and Rac3. Rac-deficient cells were devoid of apparent lamellipodia, but these structures were restored by expression of either Rac subfamily member, but not by Cdc42 or RhoG. Cells deficient in Rac showed strong reduction in wound closure and random cell migration and a notable loss of sensitivity to a chemotactic gradient. Despite these defects, Rac-deficient cells were able to spread, formed filopodia and established focal adhesions. Spreading in these cells was achieved by the extension of filopodia followed by the advancement of cytoplasmic veils between them. The number and size of focal adhesions as well as their intensity were largely unaffected by genetic removal of Rac1. However, Rac deficiency increased the mobility of different components in focal adhesions, potentially explaining how Rac - although not essential - can contribute to focal adhesion assembly. Together, our data demonstrate that Rac signaling is essential for lamellipodium protrusion and for efficient cell migration, but not for spreading or filopodium formation. Our findings also suggest that Rac GTPases are crucial to the establishment or maintenance of polarity in chemotactic migration.}, author = {Steffen, Anika and Ladwein, Markus and Georgi Dimchev and Hein, Anke and Schwenkmezger, Lisa and Arens, Stefan and Ladwein, Kathrin I and Holleboom, J. Margit and Florian Schur and Small, John V and Schwarz, Janett and Gerhard, Ralf and Faix, Jan and Stradal, Theresia E and Brakebusch, Cord H and Rottner, Klemens}, journal = {Journal of Cell Science}, number = {20}, pages = {4572 -- 4588}, publisher = {Company of Biologists}, title = {{Rac function is crucial for cell migration but is not required for spreading and focal adhesion formation}}, doi = {10.1242/jcs.118232}, volume = {126}, year = {2013}, } @article{812, abstract = {Lamellipodia are sheet-like protrusions formed during migration or phagocytosis and comprise a network of actin filaments. Filament formation in this network is initiated by nucleation/branching through the actin-related protein 2/3 (Arp2/3) complex downstream of its activator, suppressor of cAMP receptor/WASP-family verprolin homologous (Scar/WAVE), but the relative relevance of Arp2/3-mediated branching versus actin filament elongation is unknown. Here we use instantaneous interference with Arp2/3 complex function in live fibroblasts with established lamellipodia. This allows direct examination of both the fate of elongating filaments upon instantaneous suppression of Arp2/3 complex activity and the consequences of this treatment on the dynamics of other lamellipodial regulators. We show that Arp2/3 complex is an essential organizer of treadmilling actin filament arrays but has little effect on the net rate of actin filament turnover at the cell periphery. In addition, Arp2/3 complex serves as key upstream factor for the recruitment of modulators of lamellipodia formation such as capping protein or cofilin. Arp2/3 complex is thus decisive for filament organization and geometry within the network not only by generating branches and novel filament ends, but also by directing capping or severing activities to the lamellipodium. Arp2/3 complex is also crucial to lamellipodia-based migration of keratocytes.}, author = {Koestler, Stefan A and Steffen, Anika and Maria Nemethova and Winterhoff, Moritz and Luo, Ningning and Holleboom, J. Margit and Krupp, Jessica and Jacob, Sonja and Vinzenz, Marlene and Florian Schur and Schlüter, Kai and Gunning, Peter W and Winkler, Christoph and Schmeiser, Christian and Faix, Jan and Stradal, Theresia E and Small, John V and Rottner, Klemens}, journal = {Molecular Biology of the Cell}, number = {18}, pages = {2861 -- 2875}, publisher = {American Society for Biology}, title = {{Arp2/3 complex is essential for actin network treadmilling as well as for targeting of capping protein and cofilin}}, doi = {10.1091/mbc.E12-12-0857}, volume = {24}, year = {2013}, } @article{810, abstract = {Cryo-electron tomography combined with image processing by sub-tomogram averaging is unique in its power to resolve the structures of proteins and macromolecular complexes in situ. Limitations of the method, including the low signal to noise ratio within individual images from cryo-tomographic datasets and difficulties in determining the defocus at which the data was collected, mean that to date the very best structures obtained by sub-tomogram averaging are limited to a resolution of approximately 15. Å. Here, by optimizing data collection and defocus determination steps, we have determined the structure of assembled Mason-Pfizer monkey virus Gag protein using sub-tomogram averaging to a resolution of 8.5. Å. At this resolution alpha-helices can be directly and clearly visualized. These data demonstrate for the first time that high-resolution structural information can be obtained from cryo-electron tomograms using sub-tomogram averaging. Sub-tomogram averaging has the potential to allow detailed studies of unsolved and biologically relevant structures under biologically relevant conditions.}, author = {Florian Schur and Hagen, Wim J and De Marco, Alex and Briggs, John A}, journal = {Journal of Structural Biology}, number = {3}, pages = {394 -- 400}, publisher = {Academic Press}, title = {{Determination of protein structure at 8.5Å resolution using cryo-electron tomography and sub-tomogram averaging}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jsb.2013.10.015}, volume = {184}, year = {2013}, } @article{8245, abstract = {Background: Monoclonal antibodies (mAb), such as trastuzumab are a valuable addition to breast cancer therapy. Data obtained from neoadjuvant settings revealed that antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) is a major mechanism of action for the mAb trastuzumab. Conflicting results still call into question whether disease progression, prolonged treatment or concomitant chemotherapy influences ADCC and related immunological phenomena. Methods: We analyzed the activity of ADCC and antibody-dependent cell-mediated phagocytosis (ADCP) of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2/neu) positive breast cancer patients receiving trastuzumab therapy either in an adjuvant (n = 13) or metastatic (n = 15) setting as well as from trastuzumab treatment-naive (t-naive) HER2/neu negative patients (n = 15). PBMCs from healthy volunteers (n = 24) were used as controls. ADCC and ADCP activity was correlated with the expression of antibody binding Fc-gamma receptor (FcγR)I (CD64), FcγRII (CD32) and FcγRIII (CD16) on CD14+ (monocytes) and CD56+ (NK) cells, as well as the expression of CD107a+ (LAMP-1) on CD56+ cells and the total amount of CD4+CD25+FOXP3+ (Treg) cells. In metastatic patients, markers were correlated with progression-free survival (PFS). Results: ADCC activity was significantly down regulated in metastatic, adjuvant and t-naive patient cohorts as compared to healthy controls. Reduced ADCC activity was inversely correlated with the expression of CD107a on CD56+ cells in adjuvant patients. ADCC and ADCP activity of the patient cohorts were similar, regardless of treatment duration or additional chemotherapy. PFS in metastatic patients inversely correlated with the number of peripheral Treg cells. Conclusion: The reduction of ADCC in patients as compared to healthy controls calls for adjuvant strategies, such as immune-enhancing agents, to improve the activity of trastuzumab. However, efficacy of trastuzumab-specific ADCC and ADCP appears not to be affected by treatment duration, disease progression or concomitant chemotherapy. This finding supports the application of trastuzumab at any stage of the disease.}, author = {Petricevic, Branka and Laengle, Johannes and Singer, Josef and Sachet, Monika and Fazekas, Judit and Steger, Guenther and Bartsch, Rupert and Jensen-Jarolim, Erika and Bergmann, Michael}, issn = {1479-5876}, journal = {Journal of Translational Medicine}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Trastuzumab mediates antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity and phagocytosis to the same extent in both adjuvant and metastatic HER2/neu breast cancer patients}}, doi = {10.1186/1479-5876-11-307}, volume = {11}, year = {2013}, } @article{827, abstract = {As sessile organisms, plants have to be able to adapt to a continuously changing environment. Plants that perceive some of these changes as stress signals activate signaling pathways to modulate their development and to enable them to survive. The complex responses to environmental cues are to a large extent mediated by plant hormones that together orchestrate the final plant response. The phytohormone cytokinin is involved in many plant developmental processes. Recently, it has been established that cytokinin plays an important role in stress responses, but does not act alone. Indeed, the hormonal control of plant development and stress adaptation is the outcome of a complex network of multiple synergistic and antagonistic interactions between various hormones. Here, we review the recent findings on the cytokinin function as part of this hormonal network. We focus on the importance of the crosstalk between cytokinin and other hormones, such as abscisic acid, jasmonate, salicylic acid, ethylene, and auxin in the modulation of plant development and stress adaptation. Finally, the impact of the current research in the biotechnological industry will be discussed.}, author = {O'Brien, José and Benková, Eva}, journal = {Frontiers in Plant Science}, publisher = {Frontiers Research Foundation}, title = {{Cytokinin cross talking during biotic and abiotic stress responses}}, doi = {10.3389/fpls.2013.00451}, volume = {4}, year = {2013}, } @article{828, abstract = {The plant root system is essential for providing anchorage to the soil, supplying minerals and water, and synthesizing metabolites. It is a dynamic organ modulated by external cues such as environmental signals, water and nutrients availability, salinity and others. Lateral roots (LRs) are initiated from the primary root post-embryonically, after which they progress through discrete developmental stages which can be independently controlled, providing a high level of plasticity during root system formation. Within this review, main contributions are presented, from the classical forward genetic screens to the more recent high-throughput approaches, combined with computer model predictions, dissecting how LRs and thereby root system architecture is established and developed.}, author = {Cuesta, Candela and Wabnik, Krzysztof T and Benková, Eva}, journal = {Frontiers in Plant Science}, publisher = {Frontiers Research Foundation}, title = {{Systems approaches to study root architecture dynamics}}, doi = {10.3389/fpls.2013.00537}, volume = {4}, year = {2013}, } @article{830, abstract = {Upon hormonal signaling, ovules develop as lateral organs from the placenta. Ovule numbers ultimately determine the number of seeds that develop, and thereby contribute to the final seed yield in crop plants. We demonstrate here that CUP-SHAPED COTYLEDON 1 (CUC1), CUC2 and AINTEGUMENTA (ANT) have additive effects on ovule primordia formation. We show that expression of the CUC1 and CUC2 genes is required to redundantly regulate expression of PINFORMED1 (PIN1), which in turn is required for ovule primordia formation. Furthermore, our results suggest that the auxin response factor MONOPTEROS (MP/ARF5) may directly bind ANT, CUC1 and CUC2 and promote their transcription. Based on our findings, we propose an integrative model to describe the molecular mechanisms of the early stages of ovule development.}, author = {Galbiati, Francesca and Sinha Roy, Dola and Simonini, Sara and Cucinotta, Mara and Ceccato, Luca and Cuesta, Candela and Šimášková, Mária and Benková, Eva and Kamiuchi, Yuri and Aida, Mitsuhiro and Weijers, Dolf and Simon, Rüdiger and Masiero, Simona and Colombo, Lucia}, journal = {The Plant journal for cell and molecular biology}, number = {3}, pages = {446 -- 455}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{An integrative model of the control of ovule primordia formation}}, doi = {10.1111/tpj.12309}, volume = {76}, year = {2013}, } @article{831, abstract = {In Arabidopsis, lateral roots originate from pericycle cells deep within the primary root. New lateral root primordia (LRP) have to emerge through several overlaying tissues. Here, we report that auxin produced in new LRP is transported towards the outer tissues where it triggers cell separation by inducing both the auxin influx carrier LAX3 and cell-wall enzymes. LAX3 is expressed in just two cell files overlaying new LRP. To understand how this striking pattern of LAX3 expression is regulated, we developed a mathematical model that captures the network regulating its expression and auxin transport within realistic three-dimensional cell and tissue geometries. Our model revealed that, for the LAX3 spatial expression to be robust to natural variations in root tissue geometry, an efflux carrier is required--later identified to be PIN3. To prevent LAX3 from being transiently expressed in multiple cell files, PIN3 and LAX3 must be induced consecutively, which we later demonstrated to be the case. Our study exemplifies how mathematical models can be used to direct experiments to elucidate complex developmental processes.}, author = {Péret, Benjamin and Middleton, Alistair M and French, Andrew P and Larrieu, Antoine and Bishopp, Anthony and Njo, Maria and Wells, Darren M and Porco, Silvana and Mellor, Nathan and Band, Leah R and Casimiro, Ilda and Kleine-Vehn, Jürgen and Vanneste, Steffen and Sairanen, Ilkka and Mallet, Romain and Sandberg, Göran and Ljung, Karin and Beeckman, Tom and Eva Benková and Jirí Friml and Kramer, Eric and King, John R and De Smet, Ive and Pridmore, Tony and Owen, Markus and Bennett, Malcolm J}, journal = {Molecular Systems Biology}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Sequential induction of auxin efflux and influx carriers regulates lateral root emergence}}, doi = {10.1038/msb.2013.43}, volume = {9}, year = {2013}, } @article{8461, abstract = {Solid-state NMR provides insight into protein motion over time scales ranging from picoseconds to seconds. While in solution state the methodology to measure protein dynamics is well established, there is currently no such consensus protocol for measuring dynamics in solids. In this article, we perform a detailed investigation of measurement protocols for fast motions, i.e. motions ranging from picoseconds to a few microseconds, which is the range covered by dipolar coupling and relaxation experiments. We perform a detailed theoretical investigation how dipolar couplings and relaxation data can provide information about amplitudes and time scales of local motion. We show that the measurement of dipolar couplings is crucial for obtaining accurate motional parameters, while systematic errors are found when only relaxation data are used. Based on this realization, we investigate how the REDOR experiment can provide such data in a very accurate manner. We identify that with accurate rf calibration, and explicit consideration of rf field inhomogeneities, one can obtain highly accurate absolute order parameters. We then perform joint model-free analyses of 6 relaxation data sets and dipolar couplings, based on previously existing, as well as new data sets on microcrystalline ubiquitin. We show that nanosecond motion can be detected primarily in loop regions, and compare solid-state data to solution-state relaxation and RDC analyses. The protocols investigated here will serve as a useful basis towards the establishment of a routine protocol for the characterization of ps–μs motions in proteins by solid-state NMR.}, author = {Haller, Jens D. and Schanda, Paul}, issn = {0925-2738}, journal = {Journal of Biomolecular NMR}, keywords = {Spectroscopy, Biochemistry}, number = {3}, pages = {263--280}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Amplitudes and time scales of picosecond-to-microsecond motion in proteins studied by solid-state NMR: a critical evaluation of experimental approaches and application to crystalline ubiquitin}}, doi = {10.1007/s10858-013-9787-x}, volume = {57}, year = {2013}, } @article{8462, abstract = {The transition of proteins from their soluble functional state to amyloid fibrils and aggregates is associated with the onset of several human diseases. Protein aggregation often requires some structural reshaping and the subsequent formation of intermolecular contacts. Therefore, the study of the conformation of excited protein states and their ability to form oligomers is of primary importance for understanding the molecular basis of amyloid fibril formation. Here, we investigated the oligomerization processes that occur along the folding of the amyloidogenic human protein β2-microglobulin. The combination of real-time two-dimensional NMR data with real-time small-angle X-ray scattering measurements allowed us to derive thermodynamic and kinetic information on protein oligomerization of different conformational states populated along the folding pathways. In particular, we could demonstrate that a long-lived folding intermediate (I-state) has a higher propensity to oligomerize compared to the native state. Our data agree well with a simple five-state kinetic model that involves only monomeric and dimeric species. The dimers have an elongated shape with the dimerization interface located at the apical side of β2-microglobulin close to Pro32, the residue that has a trans conformation in the I-state and a cis conformation in the native (N) state. Our experimental data suggest that partial unfolding in the apical half of the protein close to Pro32 leads to an excited state conformation with enhanced propensity for oligomerization. This excited state becomes more populated in the transient I-state due to the destabilization of the native conformation by the trans-Pro32 configuration.}, author = {Rennella, E. and Cutuil, T. and Schanda, Paul and Ayala, I. and Gabel, F. and Forge, V. and Corazza, A. and Esposito, G. and Brutscher, B.}, issn = {0022-2836}, journal = {Journal of Molecular Biology}, keywords = {Molecular Biology}, number = {15}, pages = {2722--2736}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Oligomeric states along the folding pathways of β2-microglobulin: Kinetics, thermodynamics, and structure}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jmb.2013.04.028}, volume = {425}, year = {2013}, } @article{899, abstract = {Understanding fitness landscapes, a conceptual depiction of the genotype-to-phenotype relationship, is crucial to many areas of biology. Two aspects of fitness landscapes are the focus of contemporary studies of molecular evolution. First, the local shape of the fitness landscape defined by the contribution of individual alleles to fitness that is independent of all genetic interactions. Second, the global, multidimensional fitness landscape shape determined by how interactions between alleles at different loci change each other’s fitness impact, or epistasis. In explaining the high amino-acid usage (u), we focused on the global shape of the fitness landscape, ignoring the perturbations at individual sites.}, author = {Breen, Michael S and Kemena, Carsten and Vlasov, Peter K and Notredame, Cédric and Fyodor Kondrashov}, journal = {Nature}, number = {7451}, pages = {E2 -- E3}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Breen et al. reply}}, doi = {10.1038/nature12220}, volume = {497}, year = {2013}, } @article{9674, abstract = {The coalescence of nano-crystals during sintering is often found to result in interesting crystalline structures such as multi-fold twins, and yet the plasticity mechanism accompanying their formation is unclear. In this work, the sintering behavior of two unsupported copper nanoparticles initially at room temperature is investigated by molecular dynamics simulations under the constant-energy ensemble. The results reveal that once the two nanoparticles are brought into contact, they often go through drastic structural changes with the inter-particle grain boundary quickly eliminated, and single- and multi-fold twinning occurs frequently in the coalesced product. Whereas the formation of single twins is found to be via the more usual mechanism of emission of Shockley partials on {1 1 1} planes, the formation of fivefold twins, however, takes place via a novel dislocation-free mechanism involving a series of shear and rigid-body rotation processes caused by elastic waves with amplitudes not corresponding to any allowable Burgers vector in the fcc lattice. Such a lattice-wave, dislocation-free twinning mechanism has never been reported before.}, author = {Cheng, Bingqing and Ngan, Alfonso H.W.}, issn = {0749-6419}, journal = {International Journal of Plasticity}, pages = {65--79}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{The crystal structures of sintered copper nanoparticles: A molecular dynamics study}}, doi = {10.1016/j.ijplas.2013.01.006}, volume = {47}, year = {2013}, } @article{9676, abstract = {Despite its relevance to a range of technological applications including nanocrystalline material fabrication, the sintering mechanisms of nanoparticles have not been well understood. It has been recognized that extrapolation from understanding of macro-particle sintering is unreliable for the nano-particle size regime. In this work, the sintering behaviour of copper nanoparticles under periodic boundary conditions at different temperatures and pressures was investigated by Molecular Dynamics simulations. It was found that smaller particle sizes, higher temperature and higher external pressure facilitate densification. Through a comparison with a two-sphere model, the governing mechanisms for many nanoparticles sintered at low temperature (T⩽900K) were identified to be a variety of plasticity processes including dislocation, twinning and even amorphization at the contact neck regions, due to the presence of high stresses.}, author = {Cheng, Bingqing and Ngan, Alfonso H.W.}, issn = {0927-0256}, journal = {Computational Materials Science}, pages = {1--11}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{The sintering and densification behaviour of many copper nanoparticles: A molecular dynamics study}}, doi = {10.1016/j.commatsci.2013.03.014}, volume = {74}, year = {2013}, } @article{971, abstract = {We study the stability of the normal state in a mesoscopic NSN junction biased by a constant voltage V with respect to the formation of the superconducting order. Using the linearized time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau equation, we obtain the temperature dependence of the instability line, V inst(T), where nucleation of superconductivity takes place. For sufficiently low biases, a stationary symmetric superconducting state emerges below the instability line. For higher biases, the normal phase is destroyed by the formation of a nonstationary bimodal state with two superconducting nuclei localized near the opposite terminals. The low-temperature and large-voltage behavior of the instability line is highly sensitive to the details of the inelastic relaxation mechanism in the wire. Therefore, experimental studies of Vinst(T) in NSN junctions may be used as an effective tool to access the parameters of the inelastic relaxation in the normal state.}, author = {Maksym Serbyn and Skvortsov, Mikhail A}, journal = {Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics}, number = {2}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Onset of superconductivity in a voltage-biased normal-superconducting-normal microbridge}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.87.020501}, volume = {87}, year = {2013}, } @article{972, abstract = {In topological crystalline insulators (TCIs), topology and crystal symmetry intertwine to create surface states with distinct characteristics. The breaking of crystal symmetry in TCIs is predicted to impart mass to the massless Dirac fermions. Here, we report high-resolution scanning tunneling microscopy studies of a TCI, Pb1-xSnxSe that reveal the coexistence of zero-mass Dirac fermions protected by crystal symmetry with massive Dirac fermions consistent with crystal symmetry breaking. In addition, we show two distinct regimes of the Fermi surface topology separated by a Van-Hove singularity at the Lifshitz transition point. Our work paves the way for engineering the Dirac band gap and realizing interaction-driven topological quantum phenomena in TCIs.}, author = {Okada, Yoshinori and Serbyn, Maksym and Lin, Hsin and Walkup, Daniel and Zhou, Wenwen and Dhital, Chetan and Neupane, Madhab and Xu, Suyang and Wang, Yungjui and Sankar, Raman and Chou, Fangcheng and Bansil, Arun and Hasan, Md and Wilson, Stephen and Fu, Liang and Madhavan, Vidya}, journal = {Science}, number = {6153}, pages = {1496 -- 1499}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Observation of dirac node formation and mass acquisition in a topological crystalline insulator}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1239451}, volume = {341}, year = {2013}, } @article{975, abstract = {Recent numerical work by Bardarson, Pollmann, and Moore revealed a slow, logarithmic in time, growth of the entanglement entropy for initial product states in a putative many-body localized phase. We show that this surprising phenomenon results from the dephasing due to exponentially small interaction-induced corrections to the eigenenergies of different states. For weak interactions, we find that the entanglement entropy grows as ξln (Vt/), where V is the interaction strength, and ξ is the single-particle localization length. The saturated value of the entanglement entropy at long times is determined by the participation ratios of the initial state over the eigenstates of the subsystem. Our work shows that the logarithmic entanglement growth is a universal phenomenon characteristic of the many-body localized phase in any number of spatial dimensions, and reveals a broad hierarchy of dephasing time scales present in such a phase.}, author = {Maksym Serbyn and Papić, Zlatko and Abanin, Dmitry A}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {26}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Universal slow growth of entanglement in interacting strongly disordered systems}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.260601}, volume = {110}, year = {2013}, } @misc{9749, abstract = {Cooperative behavior, where one individual incurs a cost to help another, is a wide spread phenomenon. Here we study direct reciprocity in the context of the alternating Prisoner's Dilemma. We consider all strategies that can be implemented by one and two-state automata. We calculate the payoff matrix of all pairwise encounters in the presence of noise. We explore deterministic selection dynamics with and without mutation. Using different error rates and payoff values, we observe convergence to a small number of distinct equilibria. Two of them are uncooperative strict Nash equilibria representing always-defect (ALLD) and Grim. The third equilibrium is mixed and represents a cooperative alliance of several strategies, dominated by a strategy which we call Forgiver. Forgiver cooperates whenever the opponent has cooperated; it defects once when the opponent has defected, but subsequently Forgiver attempts to re-establish cooperation even if the opponent has defected again. Forgiver is not an evolutionarily stable strategy, but the alliance, which it rules, is asymptotically stable. For a wide range of parameter values the most commonly observed outcome is convergence to the mixed equilibrium, dominated by Forgiver. Our results show that although forgiving might incur a short-term loss it can lead to a long-term gain. Forgiveness facilitates stable cooperation in the presence of exploitation and noise.}, author = {Zagorsky, Benjamin and Reiter, Johannes and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Nowak, Martin}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Forgiver triumphs in alternating prisoner's dilemma }}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0080814.s001}, year = {2013}, } @article{2944, abstract = {We propose a two-step procedure for estimating multiple migration rates in an approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) framework, accounting for global nuisance parameters. The approach is not limited to migration, but generally of interest for inference problems with multiple parameters and a modular structure (e.g. independent sets of demes or loci). We condition on a known, but complex demographic model of a spatially subdivided population, motivated by the reintroduction of Alpine ibex (Capra ibex) into Switzerland. In the first step, the global parameters ancestral mutation rate and male mating skew have been estimated for the whole population in Aeschbacher et al. (Genetics 2012; 192: 1027). In the second step, we estimate in this study the migration rates independently for clusters of demes putatively connected by migration. For large clusters (many migration rates), ABC faces the problem of too many summary statistics. We therefore assess by simulation if estimation per pair of demes is a valid alternative. We find that the trade-off between reduced dimensionality for the pairwise estimation on the one hand and lower accuracy due to the assumption of pairwise independence on the other depends on the number of migration rates to be inferred: the accuracy of the pairwise approach increases with the number of parameters, relative to the joint estimation approach. To distinguish between low and zero migration, we perform ABC-type model comparison between a model with migration and one without. Applying the approach to microsatellite data from Alpine ibex, we find no evidence for substantial gene flow via migration, except for one pair of demes in one direction.}, author = {Aeschbacher, Simon and Futschik, Andreas and Beaumont, Mark}, journal = {Molecular Ecology}, number = {4}, pages = {987 -- 1002}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Approximate Bayesian computation for modular inference problems with many parameters: the example of migration rates. }}, doi = {10.1111/mec.12165}, volume = {22}, year = {2013}, } @article{894, abstract = {Background: Genetic variation at the melanocortin-1 receptor (MC1R) gene is correlated with melanin color variation in many birds. Feral pigeons (Columba livia) show two major melanin-based colorations: a red coloration due to pheomelanic pigment and a black coloration due to eumelanic pigment. Furthermore, within each color type, feral pigeons display continuous variation in the amount of melanin pigment present in the feathers, with individuals varying from pure white to a full dark melanic color. Coloration is highly heritable and it has been suggested that it is under natural or sexual selection, or both. Our objective was to investigate whether MC1R allelic variants are associated with plumage color in feral pigeons. Findings. We sequenced 888 bp of the coding sequence of MC1R among pigeons varying both in the type, eumelanin or pheomelanin, and the amount of melanin in their feathers. We detected 10 non-synonymous substitutions and 2 synonymous substitution but none of them were associated with a plumage type. It remains possible that non-synonymous substitutions that influence coloration are present in the short MC1R fragment that we did not sequence but this seems unlikely because we analyzed the entire functionally important region of the gene. Conclusions: Our results show that color differences among feral pigeons are probably not attributable to amino acid variation at the MC1R locus. Therefore, variation in regulatory regions of MC1R or variation in other genes may be responsible for the color polymorphism of feral pigeons.}, author = {Derelle, Romain and Kondrashov, Fyodor and Arkhipov, Vladimir and Corbel, Hélène and Frantz, Adrien and Gasparini, Julien and Jacquin, Lisa and Jacob, Gwenaël and Thibault, Sophie and Baudry, Emmanuelle}, journal = {BMC Research Notes}, number = {1}, publisher = {BioMed Central}, title = {{Color differences among feral pigeons (Columba livia) are not attributable to sequence variation in the coding region of the melanocortin-1 receptor gene MC1R}}, doi = {10.1186/1756-0500-6-310}, volume = {6}, year = {2013}, } @article{9055, abstract = {Spontaneous formation of colonies of bacteria or flocks of birds are examples of self-organization in active living matter. Here, we demonstrate a form of self-organization from nonequilibrium driving forces in a suspension of synthetic photoactivated colloidal particles. They lead to two-dimensional "living crystals," which form, break, explode, and re-form elsewhere. The dynamic assembly results from a competition between self-propulsion of particles and an attractive interaction induced respectively by osmotic and phoretic effects and activated by light. We measured a transition from normal to giant-number fluctuations. Our experiments are quantitatively described by simple numerical simulations. We show that the existence of the living crystals is intrinsically related to the out-of-equilibrium collisions of the self-propelled particles.}, author = {Palacci, Jérémie A and Sacanna, S. and Steinberg, A. P. and Pine, D. J. and Chaikin, P. M.}, issn = {1095-9203}, journal = {Science}, keywords = {Multidisciplinary}, number = {6122}, pages = {936--940}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science }, title = {{Living crystals of light-activated colloidal surfers}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1230020}, volume = {339}, year = {2013}, } @article{905, abstract = {A survey of avifauna was carried out in the Mys Shmidta area, north Chukotka, Russia from 8 June to 12 July 2011. A total of 90 species was recorded in the area, which together with literature data made a final list of 104 species. For several species this area is beyond the northern, north-eastern or north-western limits of their known distribution. We collected new data for 19 globally or locally threatened species. Tundra Swan Cygnus columbianus, Emperor Goose Anser canagica, American Golden Plover Pluvialis dominica, Western Sandpiper Calidris mauri, Semipalmated Sandpiper C. pusilla, Northern House Martin Delichon urbica and Barn Swallow Hirundo rustica were all confirmed to be breeding. Breeding of Brent Goose Branta bernicla nigricans, Spectacled Eider Somateria fischeri and Steller's Eider Polysticta stelleri was judged to be 'very likely'. There was no evidence for breeding of Ross's Gull Rhodostethia rosea despite several records. Two Eurasian Dotterels Eudromias morinellus were recorded displaying for the first time in the area, but the status of the species is unclear. The area is important for Snowy Owl Nyctea scandiaca, and as moulting grounds for Emperor Goose. Canada Goose Branta canadensis, Baikal Teal Anas formosa, Bar-tailed Godwit Limosa lapponica, Slaty-backed Gull Larus schistisagus, Thayer's Gull L. thayeri, Black-headed Gull L. ridibundus, White-tailed Eagle Haliaeetus albicilla, Steller's Sea Eagle H. pelagicus, Osprey Pandion haliaetus, Arctic Warbler Phylloscopus borealis and House Sparrow Passer domesticus are more likely to be rare vagrants or migrants. An observation of a Pine Siskin Carduelis pinus is the first record for Eurasia.}, author = {Arkhipov, Vladimir Y and Noah T and Koschkar, Steffen and Fyodor Kondrashov}, journal = {Forktail}, number = {29}, pages = {25 -- 30}, publisher = {Oriental Bird Club}, title = {{Birds of Mys Shmidta, north Chukotka, Russia}}, year = {2013}, } @article{9153, abstract = {Internal tide driven mixing plays a key role in sustaining the deep ocean stratification and meridional overturning circulation. Internal tides can be generated by topographic horizontal scales ranging from hundreds of meters to tens of kilometers. State of the art topographic products barely resolve scales smaller than ∼10 km in the deep ocean. On these scales abyssal hills dominate ocean floor roughness. The impact of abyssal hill roughness on internal‐tide generation is evaluated in this study. The conversion of M2 barotropic to baroclinic tidal energy is calculated based on linear wave theory both in real and spectral space using the Shuttle Radar Topography Mission SRTM30_PLUS bathymetric product at 1/120° resolution with and without the addition of synthetic abyssal hill roughness. Internal tide generation by abyssal hills integrates to 0.1 TW globally or 0.03 TW when the energy flux is empirically corrected for supercritical slope (i.e., ∼10% of the energy flux due to larger topographic scales resolved in standard products in both cases). The abyssal hill driven energy conversion is dominated by mid‐ocean ridges, where abyssal hill roughness is large. Focusing on two regions located over the Mid‐Atlantic Ridge and the East Pacific Rise, it is shown that regionally linear theory predicts an increase of the energy flux due to abyssal hills of up to 100% or 60% when an empirical correction for supercritical slopes is attempted. Therefore, abyssal hills, unresolved in state of the art topographic products, can have a strong impact on internal tide generation, especially over mid‐ocean ridges.}, author = {Melet, Angélique and Nikurashin, Maxim and Muller, Caroline J and Falahat, S. and Nycander, Jonas and Timko, Patrick G. and Arbic, Brian K. and Goff, John A.}, issn = {2169-9275}, journal = {Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans}, number = {11}, pages = {6303--6318}, publisher = {American Geophysical Union}, title = {{Internal tide generation by abyssal hills using analytical theory}}, doi = {10.1002/2013jc009212}, volume = {118}, year = {2013}, } @article{9154, abstract = {In this study the response of tropical precipitation extremes to warming in organized convection is examined using a cloud-resolving model. Vertical shear is imposed to organize the convection into squall lines. Earlier studies show that in disorganized convection, the fractional increase of precipitation extremes is similar to that of surface water vapor, which is substantially smaller than the increase in column water vapor. It has been suggested that organized convection could lead to stronger amplifications. Regardless of the strength of the shear, amplifications of precipitation extremes in the cloud-resolving simulations are comparable to those of surface water vapor and are substantially less than increases in column water vapor. The results without shear and with critical shear, for which the squall lines are perpendicular to the shear, are surprisingly similar with a fractional rate of increase of precipitation extremes slightly smaller than that of surface water vapor. Interestingly, the dependence on shear is nonmonotonic, and stronger supercritical shear yields larger rates, close to or slightly larger than surface humidity. A scaling is used to evaluate the thermodynamic and dynamic contributions to precipitation extreme changes. To first order, they are dominated by the thermodynamic component, which has the same magnitude for all shears, close to the change in surface water vapor. The dynamic contribution plays a secondary role and tends to weaken extremes without shear and with critical shear, while it strengthens extremes with supercritical shear. These different dynamic contributions for different shears are due to different responses of convective mass fluxes in individual updrafts to warming.}, author = {Muller, Caroline J}, issn = {0894-8755}, journal = {Journal of Climate}, keywords = {Atmospheric Science}, number = {14}, pages = {5028--5043}, publisher = {American Meteorological Society}, title = {{Impact of convective organization on the response of tropical precipitation extremes to warming}}, doi = {10.1175/jcli-d-12-00655.1}, volume = {26}, year = {2013}, } @article{9167, abstract = {We introduce a self-propelled colloidal hematite docker that can be steered to a small particle cargo many times its size, dock, transport the cargo to a remote location, and then release it. The self-propulsion and docking are reversible and activated by visible light. The docker can be steered either by a weak uniform magnetic field or by nanoscale tracks in a textured substrate. The light-activated motion and docking originate from osmotic/phoretic particle transport in a concentration gradient of fuel, hydrogen peroxide, induced by the photocatalytic activity of the hematite. The docking mechanism is versatile and can be applied to various materials and shapes. The hematite dockers are simple single-component particles and are synthesized in bulk quantities. This system opens up new possibilities for designing complex micrometer-size factories as well as new biomimetic systems.}, author = {Palacci, Jérémie A and Sacanna, Stefano and Vatchinsky, Adrian and Chaikin, Paul M. and Pine, David J.}, issn = {15205126}, journal = {Journal of the American Chemical Society}, keywords = {Colloid and Surface Chemistry, Biochemistry, General Chemistry, Catalysis}, number = {43}, pages = {15978--15981}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, title = {{Photoactivated colloidal dockers for cargo transportation}}, doi = {10.1021/ja406090s}, volume = {135}, year = {2013}, } @article{921, abstract = {Recent experiments have shown that spreading epithelial sheets exhibit a long-range coordination of motility forces that leads to a buildup of tension in the tissue, which may enhance cell division and the speed of wound healing. Furthermore, the edges of these epithelial sheets commonly show finger-like protrusions whereas the bulk often displays spontaneous swirls of motile cells. To explain these experimental observations, we propose a simple flocking-type mechanism, in which cells tend to align their motility forceswith their velocity. Implementing this idea in amechanical tissue simulation, the proposed model gives rise to efficient spreading and can explain the experimentally observed long-range alignment of motility forces in highly disordered patterns, as well as the buildup of tensile stress throughout the tissue. Our model also qualitatively reproduces the dependence of swirl size and swirl velocity on cell density reported in experiments and exhibits an undulation instability at the edge of the spreading tissue commonly observed in vivo. Finally, we study the dependence of colony spreading speed on important physical and biological parameters and derive simple scaling relations that show that coordination of motility forces leads to an improvement of the wound healing process for realistic tissue parameters.}, author = {Basan, Markus and Elgeti, Jens and Hannezo, Edouard B and Rappel, Wouter and Levine, Herbert}, journal = {PNAS}, number = {7}, pages = {2452 -- 2459}, publisher = {National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Alignment of cellular motility forces with tissue flow as a mechanism for efficient wound healing}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1219937110}, volume = {110}, year = {2013}, } @article{9459, abstract = {Nucleosome remodelers of the DDM1/Lsh family are required for DNA methylation of transposable elements, but the reason for this is unknown. How DDM1 interacts with other methylation pathways, such as small-RNA-directed DNA methylation (RdDM), which is thought to mediate plant asymmetric methylation through DRM enzymes, is also unclear. Here, we show that most asymmetric methylation is facilitated by DDM1 and mediated by the methyltransferase CMT2 separately from RdDM. We find that heterochromatic sequences preferentially require DDM1 for DNA methylation and that this preference depends on linker histone H1. RdDM is instead inhibited by heterochromatin and absolutely requires the nucleosome remodeler DRD1. Together, DDM1 and RdDM mediate nearly all transposon methylation and collaborate to repress transposition and regulate the methylation and expression of genes. Our results indicate that DDM1 provides DNA methyltransferases access to H1-containing heterochromatin to allow stable silencing of transposable elements in cooperation with the RdDM pathway.}, author = {Zemach, Assaf and Kim, M. Yvonne and Hsieh, Ping-Hung and Coleman-Derr, Devin and Eshed-Williams, Leor and Thao, Ka and Harmer, Stacey L. and Zilberman, Daniel}, issn = {1097-4172}, journal = {Cell}, number = {1}, pages = {193--205}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{The Arabidopsis nucleosome remodeler DDM1 allows DNA methyltransferases to access H1-containing heterochromatin}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2013.02.033}, volume = {153}, year = {2013}, } @article{9481, abstract = {Arabidopsis thaliana endosperm, a transient tissue that nourishes the embryo, exhibits extensive localized DNA demethylation on maternally inherited chromosomes. Demethylation mediates parent-of-origin–specific (imprinted) gene expression but is apparently unnecessary for the extensive accumulation of maternally biased small RNA (sRNA) molecules detected in seeds. Endosperm DNA in the distantly related monocots rice and maize is likewise locally hypomethylated, but whether this hypomethylation is generally parent-of-origin specific is unknown. Imprinted expression of sRNA also remains uninvestigated in monocot seeds. Here, we report high-coverage sequencing of the Kitaake rice cultivar that enabled us to show that localized hypomethylation in rice endosperm occurs solely on the maternal genome, preferring regions of high DNA accessibility. Maternally expressed imprinted genes are enriched for hypomethylation at putative promoter regions and transcriptional termini and paternally expressed genes at promoters and gene bodies, mirroring our recent results in A. thaliana. However, unlike in A. thaliana, rice endosperm sRNA populations are dominated by specific strong sRNA-producing loci, and imprinted 24-nt sRNAs are expressed from both parental genomes and correlate with hypomethylation. Overlaps between imprinted sRNA loci and imprinted genes expressed from opposite alleles suggest that sRNAs may regulate genomic imprinting. Whereas sRNAs in seedling tissues primarily originate from small class II (cut-and-paste) transposable elements, those in endosperm are more uniformly derived, including sequences from other transposon classes, as well as genic and intergenic regions. Our data indicate that the endosperm exhibits a unique pattern of sRNA expression and suggest that localized hypomethylation of maternal endosperm DNA is conserved in flowering plants.}, author = {Rodrigues, Jessica A. and Ruan, Randy and Nishimura, Toshiro and Sharma, Manoj K. and Sharma, Rita and Ronald, Pamela C and Fischer, Robert L. and Zilberman, Daniel}, issn = {1091-6490}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, keywords = {Multidisciplinary}, number = {19}, pages = {7934--7939}, publisher = {National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Imprinted expression of genes and small RNA is associated with localized hypomethylation of the maternal genome in rice endosperm}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1306164110}, volume = {110}, year = {2013}, } @article{9663, abstract = {Molecular dynamics simulations of small Cu nanoparticles using three different interatomic potentials at rising temperature indicate that small nanoparticles can undergo solid-solid structural transitions through a direct geometrical conversion route. The direct geometrical conversion can happen for cuboctahedral nanoparticles, which turn into an icosahedra shape: one diagonal of the square faces contracts, and the faces are folded along the diagonal to give rise to two equilateral triangles. The transition is a kinetic process that cannot be fully explained through an energetic point of view. It has low activation energy and fast reaction time in the simulations. The transition mechanism is via the transmission of shear waves initiated from the particle surface and does not involve dislocation activity.}, author = {Cheng, Bingqing and Ngan, Alfonso H. W.}, issn = {1089-7690}, journal = {The Journal of Chemical Physics}, number = {16}, publisher = {AIP Publishing}, title = {{Thermally induced solid-solid structural transition of copper nanoparticles through direct geometrical conversion}}, doi = {10.1063/1.4802025}, volume = {138}, year = {2013}, } @article{9682, abstract = {In this work, we simulate the response of two Cu nanoparticles colliding at different approaching rates at room temperature by MD. For small nanospheres, the formation of single twins is favored at high approach rates, whereas larger nanospheres mainly deform by dislocation slip. For small nanocubes with large {100} flat surfaces, however, a dislocation-free direct geometrical conversion process that leads to five-fold twinning dominates except at highly retarded approaching rates. For larger nanocubes, single twin formation is the governing plasticity mechanism. The probability for plastic deformation by dislocation slip or twinning is attributed to the abundance of surface steps, which act as sites for dislocation nucleation.}, author = {Cheng, Bingqing and Ngan, Alfonso H.W.}, issn = {0921-5093}, journal = {Materials Science and Engineering: A}, pages = {326--334}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Crystal plasticity of Cu nanocrystals during collision}}, doi = {10.1016/j.msea.2013.07.065}, volume = {585}, year = {2013}, } @article{970, abstract = {Recently a new high-mobility Dirac material, trilayer graphene, was realized experimentally. The band structure of ABA-stacked trilayer graphene consists of a monolayer-like and a bilayer-like pair of bands. Here we study electronic properties of ABA-stacked trilayer graphene biased by a perpendicular electric field. We find that the combination of the bias and trigonal warping gives rise to a set of new Dirac points: In each valley, seven species of Dirac fermions with small masses of order of a few meV emerge. The positions and masses of the emergent Dirac fermions are tunable by bias, and one group of Dirac fermions becomes massless at a certain bias value. Therefore, in contrast to bilayer graphene, the conductivity at the neutrality point is expected to show nonmonotonic behavior, becoming of the order of a few e2/h when some Dirac masses vanish. Further, we analyze the evolution of the Landau level spectrum as a function of bias. The emergence of new Dirac points in the band structure translates into new threefold-degenerate groups of Landau levels. This leads to an anomalous quantum Hall effect, in which some quantum Hall steps have a height of 3e2/h. At an intermediate bias, the degeneracies of all Landau levels get lifted, and in this regime all quantum Hall plateaus are spaced by e2/h. Finally, we show that the pattern of Landau level crossings is very sensitive to certain band structure parameters, and can therefore provide a useful tool for determining their precise values.}, author = {Maksym Serbyn and Abanin, Dmitry A}, journal = {Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics}, number = {11}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{New Dirac points and multiple Landau level crossings in biased trilayer graphene}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.87.115422}, volume = {87}, year = {2013}, } @article{973, abstract = {We construct a complete set of local integrals of motion that characterize the many-body localized (MBL) phase. Our approach relies on the assumption that local perturbations act locally on the eigenstates in the MBL phase, which is supported by numerical simulations of the random-field XXZ spin chain. We describe the structure of the eigenstates in the MBL phase and discuss the implications of local conservation laws for its nonequilibrium quantum dynamics. We argue that the many-body localization can be used to protect coherence in the system by suppressing relaxation between eigenstates with different local integrals of motion.}, author = {Maksym Serbyn and Papić, Zlatko and Abanin, Dmitry A}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {12}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Local conservation laws and the structure of the many body localized states}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.111.127201}, volume = {111}, year = {2013}, } @article{974, abstract = {We propose a possible realization of the overscreened Kondo impurity problem by a magnetic s=1/2 impurity embedded in a two-dimensional S=1 U(1) spin liquid with a Fermi surface. This problem contains an interesting interplay between non-Fermi-liquid behavior induced by a U(1) gauge field coupled to fermions and a non-Fermi-liquid fixed point in the overscreened Kondo problem. Using a large-N expansion together with an expansion in the dynamical exponent of the gauge field, we find that the coupling to the gauge field leads to weak but observable changes in the physical properties of the system at the overscreened Kondo fixed point. We discuss the extrapolation of this result to a physical case and argue that the realization of overscreened Kondo physics could lead to observations of effects due to gauge fields.}, author = {Serbyn, Maksym and Senthil, Todadri and Lee, Patrick}, journal = {Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics}, number = {2}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Overscreened Kondo fixed point in S=1 spin liquid}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.88.024419}, volume = {88}, year = {2013}, } @article{2284, abstract = {Background: The brood of ants and other social insects is highly susceptible to pathogens, particularly those that penetrate the soft larval and pupal cuticle. We here test whether the presence of a pupal cocoon, which occurs in some ant species but not in others, affects the sanitary brood care and fungal infection patterns after exposure to the entomopathogenic fungus Metarhizium brunneum. We use a) a comparative approach analysing four species with either naked or cocooned pupae and b) a within-species analysis of a single ant species, in which both pupal types co-exist in the same colony. Results: We found that the presence of a cocoon did not compromise fungal pathogen detection by the ants and that species with cocooned pupae increased brood grooming after pathogen exposure. All tested ant species further removed brood from their nests, which was predominantly expressed towards larvae and naked pupae treated with the live fungal pathogen. In contrast, cocooned pupae exposed to live fungus were not removed at higher rates than cocooned pupae exposed to dead fungus or a sham control. Consistent with this, exposure to the live fungus caused high numbers of infections and fungal outgrowth in larvae and naked pupae, but not in cocooned pupae. Moreover, the ants consistently removed the brood prior to fungal outgrowth, ensuring a clean brood chamber. Conclusion: Our study suggests that the pupal cocoon has a protective effect against fungal infection, causing an adaptive change in sanitary behaviours by the ants. It further demonstrates that brood removal-originally described for honeybees as "hygienic behaviour"-is a widespread sanitary behaviour in ants, which likely has important implications on disease dynamics in social insect colonies.}, author = {Tragust, Simon and Ugelvig, Line V and Chapuisat, Michel and Heinze, Jürgen and Cremer, Sylvia}, journal = {BMC Evolutionary Biology}, number = {1}, publisher = {BioMed Central}, title = {{Pupal cocoons affect sanitary brood care and limit fungal infections in ant colonies}}, doi = {10.1186/1471-2148-13-225}, volume = {13}, year = {2013}, } @article{2277, abstract = {Redundancies and correlations in the responses of sensory neurons may seem to waste neural resources, but they can also carry cues about structured stimuli and may help the brain to correct for response errors. To investigate the effect of stimulus structure on redundancy in retina, we measured simultaneous responses from populations of retinal ganglion cells presented with natural and artificial stimuli that varied greatly in correlation structure; these stimuli and recordings are publicly available online. Responding to spatio-temporally structured stimuli such as natural movies, pairs of ganglion cells were modestly more correlated than in response to white noise checkerboards, but they were much less correlated than predicted by a non-adapting functional model of retinal response. Meanwhile, responding to stimuli with purely spatial correlations, pairs of ganglion cells showed increased correlations consistent with a static, non-adapting receptive field and nonlinearity. We found that in response to spatio-temporally correlated stimuli, ganglion cells had faster temporal kernels and tended to have stronger surrounds. These properties of individual cells, along with gain changes that opposed changes in effective contrast at the ganglion cell input, largely explained the pattern of pairwise correlations across stimuli where receptive field measurements were possible.}, author = {Simmons, Kristina and Prentice, Jason and Tkacik, Gasper and Homann, Jan and Yee, Heather and Palmer, Stephanie and Nelson, Philip and Balasubramanian, Vijay}, journal = {PLoS Computational Biology}, number = {12}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Transformation of stimulus correlations by the retina}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pcbi.1003344}, volume = {9}, year = {2013}, } @misc{9754, abstract = {Short-read sequencing technologies have in principle made it feasible to draw detailed inferences about the recent history of any organism. In practice, however, this remains challenging due to the difficulty of genome assembly in most organisms and the lack of statistical methods powerful enough to discriminate among recent, non-equilibrium histories. We address both the assembly and inference challenges. We develop a bioinformatic pipeline for generating outgroup-rooted alignments of orthologous sequence blocks from de novo low-coverage short-read data for a small number of genomes, and show how such sequence blocks can be used to fit explicit models of population divergence and admixture in a likelihood framework. To illustrate our approach, we reconstruct the Pleistocene history of an oak-feeding insect (the oak gallwasp Biorhiza pallida) which, in common with many other taxa, was restricted during Pleistocene ice ages to a longitudinal series of southern refugia spanning theWestern Palaearctic. Our analysis of sequence blocks sampled from a single genome from each of three major glacial refugia reveals support for an unexpected history dominated by recent admixture. Despite the fact that 80% of the genome is affected by admixture during the last glacial cycle, we are able to infer the deeper divergence history of these populations. These inferences are robust to variation in block length, mutation model, and the sampling location of individual genomes within refugia. This combination of de novo assembly and numerical likelihood calculation provides a powerful framework for estimating recent population history that can be applied to any organism without the need for prior genetic resources.}, author = {Hearn, Jack and Stone, Graham and Barton, Nicholas H and Lohse, Konrad and Bunnefeld, Lynsey}, publisher = {Dryad}, title = {{Data from: Likelihood-based inference of population history from low coverage de novo genome assemblies}}, doi = {10.5061/dryad.r3r60}, year = {2013}, } @article{976, abstract = {Motivated by a search for experimental probes to access the physics of fractionalized excitations called spinons in spin liquids, we study the interaction of spinons with lattice vibrations. We consider the case of algebraic spin liquid, when spinons have fermionic statistics and a Dirac-like dispersion. We establish the general procedure for deriving spinon-phonon interactions, which is based on symmetry considerations. The procedure is illustrated for four different algebraic spin liquids: π-flux and staggered-flux phases on a square lattice, π-flux phase on a kagome lattice, and zero-flux phase on a honeycomb lattice. Although the low-energy description is similar for all these phases, different underlying symmetry groups lead to a distinct form of spinon-phonon interaction Hamiltonian. The explicit form of the spinon-phonon interaction is used to estimate the attenuation of ultrasound in an algebraic spin liquid. The prospects of the sound attenuation as a probe of spinons are discussed.}, author = {Maksym Serbyn and Lee, Patrick}, journal = {Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics}, number = {17}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Spinon-phonon interaction in algebraic spin liquids}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.87.174424}, volume = {87}, year = {2013}, } @article{12638, abstract = {Central Asian water resources largely depend on melt water generated in the Pamir and Tien Shan mountain ranges. To estimate future water availability in this region, it is necessary to use climate projections to estimate the future glacier extent and volume. In this study, we evaluate the impact of uncertainty in climate change projections on the future glacier extent in the Amu and Syr Darya river basins. To this end we use the latest climate change projections generated for the upcoming IPCC report (CMIP5) and, for comparison, projections used in the fourth IPCC assessment (CMIP3). With these projections we force a regionalized glacier mass balance model, and estimate changes in the basins' glacier extent as a function of the glacier size distribution in the basins and projected temperature and precipitation. This glacier mass balance model is specifically developed for implementation in large scale hydrological models, where the spatial resolution does not allow for simulating individual glaciers and data scarcity is an issue. Although the CMIP5 ensemble results in greater regional warming than the CMIP3 ensemble and the range in projections for temperature as well as precipitation is wider for the CMIP5 than for the CMIP3, the spread in projections of future glacier extent in Central Asia is similar for both ensembles. This is because differences in temperature rise are small during periods of maximum melt (July–September) while differences in precipitation change are small during the period of maximum accumulation (October–February). However, the model uncertainty due to parameter uncertainty is high, and has roughly the same importance as uncertainty in the climate projections. Uncertainty about the size of the decline in glacier extent remains large, making estimates of future Central Asian glacier evolution and downstream water availability uncertain.}, author = {Lutz, A. F. and Immerzeel, W. W. and Gobiet, A. and Pellicciotti, Francesca and Bierkens, M. F. P.}, issn = {1607-7938}, journal = {Hydrology and Earth System Sciences}, keywords = {General Earth and Planetary Sciences, General Engineering, General Environmental Science}, number = {9}, pages = {3661--3677}, publisher = {Copernicus GmbH}, title = {{Comparison of climate change signals in CMIP3 and CMIP5 multi-model ensembles and implications for Central Asian glaciers}}, doi = {10.5194/hess-17-3661-2013}, volume = {17}, year = {2013}, } @article{12639, abstract = {In the headwater catchments of the main Asian rivers, glaciohydrological models are a useful tool to anticipate impacts of climatic changes. However, the reliability of their projections strongly depends on the quality and quantity of data that are available for parameter estimation, model calibration and validation, as well as on the accuracy of climate change projections. In this study the physically oriented, glaciohydrological model TOPKAPI-ETH is used to simulate future changes in snow, glacier, and runoff from the Hunza River Basin in northern Pakistan. Three key sources of model uncertainty in future runoff projections are compared: model parameters, climate projections, and natural climate variability. A novel approach, applicable also to ungauged catchments, is used to determine which model parameters and model components significantly affect the overall model uncertainty. We show that the model is capable of reproducing streamflow and glacier mass balances, but that all analyzed sources of uncertainty significantly affect the reliability of future projections, and that their effect is variable in time and in space. The effect of parametric uncertainty often exceeds the impact of climate uncertainty and natural climate variability, especially in heavily glacierized subcatchments. The results of the uncertainty analysis allow detailed recommendations on network design and the timing and location of field measurements, which could efficiently help to reduce model uncertainty in the future.}, author = {Ragettli, S. and Pellicciotti, Francesca and Bordoy, R. and Immerzeel, W. W.}, issn = {0043-1397}, journal = {Water Resources Research}, keywords = {Water Science and Technology}, number = {9}, pages = {6048--6066}, publisher = {American Geophysical Union}, title = {{Sources of uncertainty in modeling the glaciohydrological response of a Karakoram watershed to climate change}}, doi = {10.1002/wrcr.20450}, volume = {49}, year = {2013}, } @article{12633, abstract = {We use two hydrological models of varying complexity to study the Juncal River Basin in the Central Andes of Chile with the aim to understand the degree of conceptualization and the spatial structure that are needed to model present and future streamflows. We use a conceptual semi-distributed model based on elevation bands [Water Evaluation and Planning (WEAP)], frequently used for water management, and a physically oriented, fully distributed model [Topographic Kinematic Wave Approximation and Integration ETH Zurich (TOPKAPI-ETH)] developed for research purposes mainly. We evaluate the ability of the two models to reproduce the key hydrological processes in the basin with emphasis on snow accumulation and melt, streamflow and the relationships between internal processes. Both models are capable of reproducing observed runoff and the evolution of Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer snow cover adequately. In spite of WEAP's simple and conceptual approach for modelling snowmelt and its lack of glacier representation and snow gravitational redistribution as well as a proper routing algorithm, this model can reproduce historical data with a similar goodness of fit as the more complex TOPKAPI-ETH. We show that the performance of both models can be improved by using measured precipitation gradients of higher temporal resolution. In contrast to the good performance of the conceptual model for the present climate, however, we demonstrate that the simplifications in WEAP lead to error compensation, which results in different predictions in simulated melt and runoff for a potentially warmer future climate. TOPKAPI-ETH, using a more physical representation of processes, depends less on calibration and thus is less subject to a compensation of errors through different model components. Our results show that data obtained locally in ad hoc short-term field campaigns are needed to complement data extrapolated from long-term records for simulating changes in the water cycle of high-elevation catchments but that these data can only be efficiently used by a model applying a spatially distributed physical representation of hydrological processes.}, author = {Ragettli, S. and Cortés, G. and McPhee, J. and Pellicciotti, Francesca}, issn = {0885-6087}, journal = {Hydrological Processes}, keywords = {Water Science and Technology}, number = {23}, pages = {5674--5695}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{An evaluation of approaches for modelling hydrological processes in high-elevation, glacierized Andean watersheds}}, doi = {10.1002/hyp.10055}, volume = {28}, year = {2013}, } @article{9520, abstract = {Plants undergo alternation of generation in which reproductive cells develop in the plant body ("sporophytic generation") and then differentiate into a multicellular gamete-forming "gametophytic generation." Different populations of helper cells assist in this transgenerational journey, with somatic tissues supporting early development and single nurse cells supporting gametogenesis. New data reveal a two-way relationship between early reproductive cells and their helpers involving complex epigenetic and signaling networks determining cell number and fate. Later, the egg cell plays a central role in specifying accessory cells, whereas in both gametophytes, companion cells contribute non-cell-autonomously to the epigenetic landscape of the gamete genomes.}, author = {Feng, Xiaoqi and Zilberman, Daniel and Dickinson, Hugh}, issn = {1878-1551}, journal = {Developmental Cell}, number = {3}, pages = {215--225}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{A conversation across generations: Soma-germ cell crosstalk in plants}}, doi = {10.1016/j.devcel.2013.01.014}, volume = {24}, year = {2013}, } @article{13405, abstract = {We report a method for preparing electrode–molecule–electrode junctions that incorporate nonsymmetrical azobenzene dithiols. Our approach is based on sequential deprotection of thiol moieties originally carrying two different protecting groups. The azobenzene derivatives retained their switching properties within monolayers and permitted the photocontrol of electrical conductance.}, author = {Ely, Tal and Das, Sanjib and Li, Wenjie and Kundu, Pintu and Tirosh, Einat and Cahen, David and Vilan, Ayelet and Klajn, Rafal}, issn = {1437-2096}, journal = {Synlett}, keywords = {Organic Chemistry}, number = {18}, pages = {2370--2374}, publisher = {Georg Thieme Verlag}, title = {{Photocontrol of electrical conductance with a nonsymmetrical azobenzene dithiol}}, doi = {10.1055/s-0033-1340087}, volume = {24}, year = {2013}, } @article{13406, abstract = {Dual-responsive nanoparticles are designed by functionalizing magnetic cores with light-responsive ligands. These materials respond to both light and magnetic fields and can be assembled into various higher-order structures, depending on the relative contributions of these two stimuli.}, author = {Das, Sanjib and Ranjan, Priyadarshi and Maiti, Pradipta Sankar and Singh, Gurvinder and Leitus, Gregory and Klajn, Rafal}, issn = {0935-9648}, journal = {Advanced Materials}, keywords = {Mechanical Engineering, Mechanics of Materials, General Materials Science}, number = {3}, pages = {422--426}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{Dual-responsive nanoparticles and their self-assembly}}, doi = {10.1002/adma.201201734}, volume = {25}, year = {2013}, } @article{2914, abstract = {The scale invariance of natural images suggests an analogy to the statistical mechanics of physical systems at a critical point. Here we examine the distribution of pixels in small image patches and show how to construct the corresponding thermodynamics. We find evidence for criticality in a diverging specific heat, which corresponds to large fluctuations in how "surprising" we find individual images, and in the quantitative form of the entropy vs energy. We identify special image configurations as local energy minima and show that average patches within each basin are interpretable as lines and edges in all orientations.}, author = {Stephens, Greg and Mora, Thierry and Tkacik, Gasper and Bialek, William}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {1}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Statistical thermodynamics of natural images}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.110.018701}, volume = {110}, year = {2013}, } @inbook{10900, abstract = {Leukocyte migration through the interstitial space is crucial for the maintenance of tolerance and immunity. The main cues for leukocyte trafficking are chemokines thought to directionally guide these cells towards their targets. However, model systems that facilitate quantification of chemokine-guided leukocyte migration in vivo are uncommon. Here we describe an ex vivo crawl-in assay using explanted mouse ears that allows the visualization of chemokine-dependent dendritic cell (DC) motility in the dermal interstitium in real time. We present methods for the preparation of mouse ear sheets and their use in multidimensional confocal imaging experiments to monitor and analyze the directional migration of fluorescently labelled DCs through the dermis and into afferent lymphatic vessels. The assay provides a more physiological approach to study leukocyte migration than in vitro three-dimensional (3D) or 2-dimensional (2D) migration assays such as collagen gels and transwell assays.}, author = {Weber, Michele and Sixt, Michael K}, booktitle = {Chemokines}, editor = {Cardona, Astrid and Ubogu, Eroboghene}, isbn = {9781627034258}, issn = {1940-6029}, pages = {215--226}, publisher = {Humana Press}, title = {{Live Cell Imaging of Chemotactic Dendritic Cell Migration in Explanted Mouse Ear Preparations}}, doi = {10.1007/978-1-62703-426-5_14}, volume = {1013}, year = {2013}, } @inbook{5747, author = {Dragoi, Cezara and Gupta, Ashutosh and Henzinger, Thomas A}, booktitle = {Computer Aided Verification}, isbn = {9783642397981}, issn = {1611-3349}, location = {Saint Petersburg, Russia}, pages = {174--190}, publisher = {Springer Berlin Heidelberg}, title = {{Automatic Linearizability Proofs of Concurrent Objects with Cooperating Updates}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-39799-8_11}, volume = {8044}, year = {2013}, } @inproceedings{10902, abstract = {We consider how to edit strings from a source language so that the edited strings belong to a target language, where the languages are given as deterministic finite automata. Non-streaming (or offline) transducers perform edits given the whole source string. We show that the class of deterministic one-pass transducers with registers along with increment and min operation suffices for computing optimal edit distance, whereas the same class of transducers without the min operation is not sufficient. Streaming (or online) transducers perform edits as the letters of the source string are received. We present a polynomial time algorithm for the partial-repair problem that given a bound α asks for the construction of a deterministic streaming transducer (if one exists) that ensures that the ‘maximum fraction’ η of the strings of the source language are edited, within cost α, to the target language.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Chaubal, Siddhesh and Rubin, Sasha}, booktitle = {7th International Conference on Language and Automata Theory and Applications}, isbn = {9783642370632}, issn = {1611-3349}, location = {Bilbao, Spain}, pages = {214--225}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{How to travel between languages}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-37064-9_20}, volume = {7810}, year = {2013}, } @inproceedings{10897, abstract = {Taking images is an efficient way to collect data about the physical world. It can be done fast and in exquisite detail. By definition, image processing is the field that concerns itself with the computation aimed at harnessing the information contained in images [10]. This talk is concerned with topological information. Our main thesis is that persistent homology [5] is a useful method to quantify and summarize topological information, building a bridge that connects algebraic topology with applications. We provide supporting evidence for this thesis by touching upon four technical developments in the overlap between persistent homology and image processing.}, author = {Edelsbrunner, Herbert}, booktitle = {Graph-Based Representations in Pattern Recognition}, isbn = {9783642382208}, issn = {1611-3349}, location = {Vienna, Austria}, pages = {182--183}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Persistent homology in image processing}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-38221-5_19}, volume = {7877}, year = {2013}, } @phdthesis{1405, abstract = {Motivated by the analysis of highly dynamic message-passing systems, i.e. unbounded thread creation, mobility, etc. we present a framework for the analysis of depth-bounded systems. Depth-bounded systems are one of the most expressive known fragment of the π-calculus for which interesting verification problems are still decidable. Even though they are infinite state systems depth-bounded systems are well-structured, thus can be analyzed algorithmically. We give an interpretation of depth-bounded systems as graph-rewriting systems. This gives more flexibility and ease of use to apply depth-bounded systems to other type of systems like shared memory concurrency. First, we develop an adequate domain of limits for depth-bounded systems, a prerequisite for the effective representation of downward-closed sets. Downward-closed sets are needed by forward saturation-based algorithms to represent potentially infinite sets of states. Then, we present an abstract interpretation framework to compute the covering set of well-structured transition systems. Because, in general, the covering set is not computable, our abstraction over-approximates the actual covering set. Our abstraction captures the essence of acceleration based-algorithms while giving up enough precision to ensure convergence. We have implemented the analysis in the PICASSO tool and show that it is accurate in practice. Finally, we build some further analyses like termination using the covering set as starting point.}, author = {Zufferey, Damien}, issn = {2663-337X}, pages = {134}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{Analysis of dynamic message passing programs}}, doi = {10.15479/at:ista:1405}, year = {2013}, } @inproceedings{2847, abstract = {Depth-Bounded Systems form an expressive class of well-structured transition systems. They can model a wide range of concurrent infinite-state systems including those with dynamic thread creation, dynamically changing communication topology, and complex shared heap structures. We present the first method to automatically prove fair termination of depth-bounded systems. Our method uses a numerical abstraction of the system, which we obtain by systematically augmenting an over-approximation of the system’s reachable states with a finite set of counters. This numerical abstraction can be analyzed with existing termination provers. What makes our approach unique is the way in which it exploits the well-structuredness of the analyzed system. We have implemented our work in a prototype tool and used it to automatically prove liveness properties of complex concurrent systems, including nonblocking algorithms such as Treiber’s stack and several distributed processes. Many of these examples are beyond the scope of termination analyses that are based on traditional counter abstractions.}, author = {Bansal, Kshitij and Koskinen, Eric and Wies, Thomas and Zufferey, Damien}, editor = {Piterman, Nir and Smolka, Scott}, location = {Rome, Italy}, pages = {62 -- 77}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Structural Counter Abstraction}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-36742-7_5}, volume = {7795}, year = {2013}, } @phdthesis{1406, abstract = {Epithelial spreading is a critical part of various developmental and wound repair processes. Here we use zebrafish epiboly as a model system to study the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying the spreading of epithelial sheets. During zebrafish epiboly the enveloping cell layer (EVL), a simple squamous epithelium, spreads over the embryo to eventually cover the entire yolk cell by the end of gastrulation. The EVL leading edge is anchored through tight junctions to the yolk syncytial layer (YSL), where directly adjacent to the EVL margin a contractile actomyosin ring is formed that is thought to drive EVL epiboly. The prevalent view in the field was that the contractile ring exerts a pulling force on the EVL margin, which pulls the EVL towards the vegetal pole. However, how this force is generated and how it affects EVL morphology still remains elusive. Moreover, the cellular mechanisms mediating the increase in EVL surface area, while maintaining tissue integrity and function are still unclear. Here we show that the YSL actomyosin ring pulls on the EVL margin by two distinct force-generating mechanisms. One mechanism is based on contraction of the ring around its circumference, as previously proposed. The second mechanism is based on actomyosin retrogade flows, generating force through resistance against the substrate. The latter can function at any epiboly stage even in situations where the contraction-based mechanism is unproductive. Additionally, we demonstrate that during epiboly the EVL is subjected to anisotropic tension, which guides the orientation of EVL cell division along the main axis (animal-vegetal) of tension. The influence of tension in cell division orientation involves cell elongation and requires myosin-2 activity for proper spindle alignment. Strikingly, we reveal that tension-oriented cell divisions release anisotropic tension within the EVL and that in the absence of such divisions, EVL cells undergo ectopic fusions. We conclude that forces applied to the EVL by the action of the YSL actomyosin ring generate a tension anisotropy in the EVL that orients cell divisions, which in turn limit tissue tension increase thereby facilitating tissue spreading.}, author = {Campinho, Pedro}, issn = {2663-337X}, pages = {123}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{Mechanics of zebrafish epiboly: Tension-oriented cell divisions limit anisotropic tissue tension in epithelial spreading}}, year = {2013}, } @article{2247, abstract = {Cooperative behavior, where one individual incurs a cost to help another, is a wide spread phenomenon. Here we study direct reciprocity in the context of the alternating Prisoner's Dilemma. We consider all strategies that can be implemented by one and two-state automata. We calculate the payoff matrix of all pairwise encounters in the presence of noise. We explore deterministic selection dynamics with and without mutation. Using different error rates and payoff values, we observe convergence to a small number of distinct equilibria. Two of them are uncooperative strict Nash equilibria representing always-defect (ALLD) and Grim. The third equilibrium is mixed and represents a cooperative alliance of several strategies, dominated by a strategy which we call Forgiver. Forgiver cooperates whenever the opponent has cooperated; it defects once when the opponent has defected, but subsequently Forgiver attempts to re-establish cooperation even if the opponent has defected again. Forgiver is not an evolutionarily stable strategy, but the alliance, which it rules, is asymptotically stable. For a wide range of parameter values the most commonly observed outcome is convergence to the mixed equilibrium, dominated by Forgiver. Our results show that although forgiving might incur a short-term loss it can lead to a long-term gain. Forgiveness facilitates stable cooperation in the presence of exploitation and noise.}, author = {Zagorsky, Benjamin and Reiter, Johannes and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Nowak, Martin}, journal = {PLoS One}, number = {12}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Forgiver triumphs in alternating prisoner's dilemma }}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0080814}, volume = {8}, year = {2013}, } @article{2858, abstract = {Tumor growth is caused by the acquisition of driver mutations, which enhance the net reproductive rate of cells. Driver mutations may increase cell division, reduce cell death, or allow cells to overcome density-limiting effects. We study the dynamics of tumor growth as one additional driver mutation is acquired. Our models are based on two-type branching processes that terminate in either tumor disappearance or tumor detection. In our first model, both cell types grow exponentially, with a faster rate for cells carrying the additional driver. We find that the additional driver mutation does not affect the survival probability of the lesion, but can substantially reduce the time to reach the detectable size if the lesion is slow growing. In our second model, cells lacking the additional driver cannot exceed a fixed carrying capacity, due to density limitations. In this case, the time to detection depends strongly on this carrying capacity. Our model provides a quantitative framework for studying tumor dynamics during different stages of progression. We observe that early, small lesions need additional drivers, while late stage metastases are only marginally affected by them. These results help to explain why additional driver mutations are typically not detected in fast-growing metastases.}, author = {Reiter, Johannes and Božić, Ivana and Allen, Benjamin and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Nowak, Martin}, journal = {Evolutionary Applications}, number = {1}, pages = {34 -- 45}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{The effect of one additional driver mutation on tumor progression}}, doi = {10.1111/eva.12020}, volume = {6}, year = {2013}, } @article{2816, abstract = {In solid tumors, targeted treatments can lead to dramatic regressions, but responses are often short-lived because resistant cancer cells arise. The major strategy proposed for overcoming resistance is combination therapy. We present a mathematical model describing the evolutionary dynamics of lesions in response to treatment. We first studied 20 melanoma patients receiving vemurafenib. We then applied our model to an independent set of pancreatic, colorectal, and melanoma cancer patients with metastatic disease. We find that dual therapy results in long-term disease control for most patients, if there are no single mutations that cause cross-resistance to both drugs; in patients with large disease burden, triple therapy is needed. We also find that simultaneous therapy with two drugs is much more effective than sequential therapy. Our results provide realistic expectations for the efficacy of new drug combinations and inform the design of trials for new cancer therapeutics.}, author = {Božić, Ivana and Reiter, Johannes and Allen, Benjamin and Antal, Tibor and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Shah, Preya and Moon, Yo and Yaqubie, Amin and Kelly, Nicole and Le, Dung and Lipson, Evan and Chapman, Paul and Diaz, Luis and Vogelstein, Bert and Nowak, Martin}, journal = {eLife}, publisher = {eLife Sciences Publications}, title = {{Evolutionary dynamics of cancer in response to targeted combination therapy}}, doi = {10.7554/eLife.00747}, volume = {2}, year = {2013}, } @inproceedings{2000, abstract = {In this work we present a flexible tool for tumor progression, which simulates the evolutionary dynamics of cancer. Tumor progression implements a multi-type branching process where the key parameters are the fitness landscape, the mutation rate, and the average time of cell division. The fitness of a cancer cell depends on the mutations it has accumulated. The input to our tool could be any fitness landscape, mutation rate, and cell division time, and the tool produces the growth dynamics and all relevant statistics.}, author = {Reiter, Johannes and Božić, Ivana and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Nowak, Martin}, booktitle = {Proceedings of 25th Int. Conf. on Computer Aided Verification}, location = {St. Petersburg, Russia}, pages = {101 -- 106}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{TTP: Tool for tumor progression}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-39799-8_6}, volume = {8044}, year = {2013}, } @inproceedings{2445, abstract = {We develop program synthesis techniques that can help programmers fix concurrency-related bugs. We make two new contributions to synthesis for concurrency, the first improving the efficiency of the synthesized code, and the second improving the efficiency of the synthesis procedure itself. The first contribution is to have the synthesis procedure explore a variety of (sequential) semantics-preserving program transformations. Classically, only one such transformation has been considered, namely, the insertion of synchronization primitives (such as locks). Based on common manual bug-fixing techniques used by Linux device-driver developers, we explore additional, more efficient transformations, such as the reordering of independent instructions. The second contribution is to speed up the counterexample-guided removal of concurrency bugs within the synthesis procedure by considering partial-order traces (instead of linear traces) as counterexamples. A partial-order error trace represents a set of linear (interleaved) traces of a concurrent program all of which lead to the same error. By eliminating a partial-order error trace, we eliminate in a single iteration of the synthesis procedure all linearizations of the partial-order trace. We evaluated our techniques on several simplified examples of real concurrency bugs that occurred in Linux device drivers.}, author = {Cerny, Pavol and Henzinger, Thomas A and Radhakrishna, Arjun and Ryzhyk, Leonid and Tarrach, Thorsten}, location = {St. Petersburg, Russia}, pages = {951 -- 967}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Efficient synthesis for concurrency by semantics-preserving transformations}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-39799-8_68}, volume = {8044}, year = {2013}, } @article{2926, abstract = {To fight infectious diseases, host immune defenses are employed at multiple levels. Sanitary behavior, such as pathogen avoidance and removal, acts as a first line of defense to prevent infection [1] before activation of the physiological immune system. Insect societies have evolved a wide range of collective hygiene measures and intensive health care toward pathogen-exposed group members [2]. One of the most common behaviors is allogrooming, in which nestmates remove infectious particles from the body surfaces of exposed individuals [3]. Here we show that, in invasive garden ants, grooming of fungus-exposed brood is effective beyond the sheer mechanical removal of fungal conidiospores; it also includes chemical disinfection through the application of poison produced by the ants themselves. Formic acid is the main active component of the poison. It inhibits fungal growth of conidiospores remaining on the brood surface after grooming and also those collected in the mouth of the grooming ant. This dual function is achieved by uptake of the poison droplet into the mouth through acidopore self-grooming and subsequent application onto the infectious brood via brood grooming. This extraordinary behavior extends the current understanding of grooming and the establishment of social immunity in insect societies.}, author = {Tragust, Simon and Mitteregger, Barbara and Barone, Vanessa and Konrad, Matthias and Ugelvig, Line V and Cremer, Sylvia}, journal = {Current Biology}, number = {1}, pages = {76 -- 82}, publisher = {Cell Press}, title = {{Ants disinfect fungus-exposed brood by oral uptake and spread of their poison}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cub.2012.11.034}, volume = {23}, year = {2013}, } @inproceedings{2305, abstract = {We study the complexity of central controller synthesis problems for finite-state Markov decision processes, where the objective is to optimize both the expected mean-payoff performance of the system and its stability. e argue that the basic theoretical notion of expressing the stability in terms of the variance of the mean-payoff (called global variance in our paper) is not always sufficient, since it ignores possible instabilities on respective runs. For this reason we propose alernative definitions of stability, which we call local and hybrid variance, and which express how rewards on each run deviate from the run's own mean-payoff and from the expected mean-payoff, respectively. We show that a strategy ensuring both the expected mean-payoff and the variance below given bounds requires randomization and memory, under all the above semantics of variance. We then look at the problem of determining whether there is a such a strategy. For the global variance, we show that the problem is in PSPACE, and that the answer can be approximated in pseudo-polynomial time. For the hybrid variance, the analogous decision problem is in NP, and a polynomial-time approximating algorithm also exists. For local variance, we show that the decision problem is in NP. Since the overall performance can be traded for stability (and vice versa), we also present algorithms for approximating the associated Pareto curve in all the three cases. Finally, we study a special case of the decision problems, where we require a given expected mean-payoff together with zero variance. Here we show that the problems can be all solved in polynomial time.}, author = {Brázdil, Tomáš and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Forejt, Vojtěch and Kučera, Antonín}, booktitle = {28th Annual ACM/IEEE Symposium}, location = {New Orleans, LA, United States}, pages = {331 -- 340}, publisher = {IEEE}, title = {{Trading performance for stability in Markov decision processes}}, doi = {10.1109/LICS.2013.39}, year = {2013}, } @inproceedings{2820, abstract = {In this paper, we introduce the powerful framework of graph games for the analysis of real-time scheduling with firm deadlines. We introduce a novel instance of a partial-observation game that is suitable for this purpose, and prove decidability of all the involved decision problems. We derive a graph game that allows the automated computation of the competitive ratio (along with an optimal witness algorithm for the competitive ratio) and establish an NP-completeness proof for the graph game problem. For a given on-line algorithm, we present polynomial time solution for computing (i) the worst-case utility; (ii) the worst-case utility ratio w.r.t. a clairvoyant off-line algorithm; and (iii) the competitive ratio. A major strength of the proposed approach lies in its flexibility w.r.t. incorporating additional constraints on the adversary and/or the algorithm, including limited maximum or average load, finiteness of periods of overload, etc., which are easily added by means of additional instances of standard objective functions for graph games. }, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Kößler, Alexander and Schmid, Ulrich}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 16th International conference on Hybrid systems: Computation and control}, isbn = {978-1-4503-1567-8 }, location = {Philadelphia, PA, United States}, pages = {163 -- 172}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Automated analysis of real-time scheduling using graph games}}, doi = {10.1145/2461328.2461356}, year = {2013}, } @inproceedings{2272, abstract = {We consider Conditional Random Fields (CRFs) with pattern-based potentials defined on a chain. In this model the energy of a string (labeling) x1...xn is the sum of terms over intervals [i,j] where each term is non-zero only if the substring xi...xj equals a prespecified pattern α. Such CRFs can be naturally applied to many sequence tagging problems. We present efficient algorithms for the three standard inference tasks in a CRF, namely computing (i) the partition function, (ii) marginals, and (iii) computing the MAP. Their complexities are respectively O(nL), O(nLℓmax) and O(nLmin{|D|,log(ℓmax+1)}) where L is the combined length of input patterns, ℓmax is the maximum length of a pattern, and D is the input alphabet. This improves on the previous algorithms of (Ye et al., 2009) whose complexities are respectively O(nL|D|), O(n|Γ|L2ℓ2max) and O(nL|D|), where |Γ| is the number of input patterns. In addition, we give an efficient algorithm for sampling. Finally, we consider the case of non-positive weights. (Komodakis & Paragios, 2009) gave an O(nL) algorithm for computing the MAP. We present a modification that has the same worst-case complexity but can beat it in the best case. }, author = {Takhanov, Rustem and Kolmogorov, Vladimir}, booktitle = {ICML'13 Proceedings of the 30th International Conference on International}, location = {Atlanta, GA, USA}, number = {3}, pages = {145 -- 153}, publisher = {ML Research Press}, title = {{Inference algorithms for pattern-based CRFs on sequence data}}, volume = {28}, year = {2013}, } @article{2448, abstract = {Cell-to-cell directional flow of the phytohormone auxin is primarily established by polar localization of the PIN auxin transporters, a process tightly regulated at multiple levels by auxin itself. We recently reported that, in the context of strong auxin flows, activity of the vacuolar ZIFL1.1 transporter is required for fine-tuning of polar auxin transport rates in the Arabidopsis root. In particular, ZIFL1.1 function protects plasma-membrane stability of the PIN2 carrier in epidermal root tip cells under conditions normally triggering PIN2 degradation. Here, we show that ZIFL1.1 activity at the root tip also promotes PIN1 plasma-membrane abundance in central cylinder cells, thus supporting the notion that ZIFL1.1 acts as a general positive modulator of polar auxin transport in roots.}, author = {Remy, Estelle and Baster, Pawel and Friml, Jirí and Duque, Paula}, journal = {Plant Signaling & Behavior}, number = {10}, publisher = {Taylor & Francis}, title = {{ZIFL1.1 transporter modulates polar auxin transport by stabilizing membrane abundance of multiple PINs in Arabidopsis root tip}}, doi = {10.4161/psb.25688}, volume = {8}, year = {2013}, } @article{2853, abstract = {High relatedness among interacting individuals has generally been considered a precondition for the evolution of altruism. However, kin-selection theory also predicts the evolution of altruism when relatedness is low, as long as the cost of the altruistic act is minor compared with its benefit. Here, we demonstrate evidence for a low-cost altruistic act in bacteria. We investigated Escherichia coli responding to the attack of an obligately lytic phage by committing suicide in order to prevent parasite transmission to nearby relatives. We found that bacterial suicide provides large benefits to survivors at marginal costs to committers. The cost of suicide was low, because infected cells are moribund, rapidly dying upon phage infection, such that no more opportunity for reproduction remains. As a consequence of its marginal cost, host suicide was selectively favoured even when relatedness between committers and survivors approached zero. Altogether, our findings demonstrate that low-cost suicide can evolve with ease, represents an effective host-defence strategy, and seems to be widespread among microbes. Moreover, low-cost suicide might also occur in higher organisms as exemplified by infected social insect workers leaving the colony to die in isolation.}, author = {Refardt, Dominik and Bergmiller, Tobias and Kümmerli, Rolf}, issn = {1471-2954}, journal = {Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B Biological Sciences}, number = {1759}, publisher = {The Royal Society}, title = {{Altruism can evolve when relatedness is low: Evidence from bacteria committing suicide upon phage infection}}, doi = {10.1098/rspb.2012.3035}, volume = {280}, year = {2013}, } @misc{9751, abstract = {High relatedness among interacting individuals has generally been considered a precondition for the evolution of altruism. However, kin-selection theory also predicts the evolution of altruism when relatedness is low, as long as the cost of the altruistic act is minor compared to its benefit. Here, we demonstrate evidence for a low-cost altruistic act in bacteria. We investigated Escherichia coli responding to the attack of an obligately lytic phage by committing suicide in order to prevent parasite transmission to nearby relatives. We found that bacterial suicide provides large benefits to survivors at marginal costs to committers. The cost of suicide was low because infected cells are moribund, rapidly dying upon phage infection, such that no more opportunity for reproduction remains. As a consequence of its marginal cost, host suicide was selectively favoured even when relatedness between committers and survivors approached zero. Altogether, our findings demonstrate that low-cost suicide can evolve with ease, represents an effective host-defence strategy, and seems to be widespread among microbes. Moreover, low-cost suicide might also occur in higher organisms as exemplified by infected social insect workers leaving the colony to die in isolation.}, author = {Refardt, Dominik and Bergmiller, Tobias and Kümmerli, Rolf}, publisher = {Dryad}, title = {{Data from: Altruism can evolve when relatedness is low: evidence from bacteria committing suicide upon phage infection}}, doi = {10.5061/dryad.b1q2n}, year = {2013}, } @article{7785, abstract = {Neural circuit assembly requires selection of specific cell fates, axonal trajectories, and synaptic targets. By analyzing the function of a secreted semaphorin, Sema-2b, in Drosophila olfactory receptor neuron (ORN) development, we identified multiple molecular and cellular mechanisms that link these events. Notch signaling limits Sema-2b expression to ventromedial ORN classes, within which Sema-2b cell-autonomously sensitizes ORN axons to external semaphorins. Central-brain-derived Sema-2a and Sema-2b attract Sema-2b-expressing axons to the ventromedial trajectory. In addition, Sema-2b/PlexB-mediated axon-axon interactions consolidate this trajectory choice and promote ventromedial axon-bundle formation. Selecting the correct developmental trajectory is ultimately essential for proper target choice. These findings demonstrate that Sema-2b couples ORN axon guidance to postsynaptic target neuron dendrite patterning well before the final target selection phase, and exemplify how a single guidance molecule can drive consecutive stages of neural circuit assembly with the help of sophisticated spatial and temporal regulation.}, author = {Joo, William J. and Sweeney, Lora Beatrice Jaeger and Liang, Liang and Luo, Liqun}, issn = {0896-6273}, journal = {Neuron}, number = {4}, pages = {673--686}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Linking cell fate, trajectory choice, and target selection: Genetic analysis of sema-2b in olfactory axon targeting}}, doi = {10.1016/j.neuron.2013.03.022}, volume = {78}, year = {2013}, } @techreport{2274, abstract = {Proofs of work (PoW) have been suggested by Dwork and Naor (Crypto'92) as protection to a shared resource. The basic idea is to ask the service requestor to dedicate some non-trivial amount of computational work to every request. The original applications included prevention of spam and protection against denial of service attacks. More recently, PoWs have been used to prevent double spending in the Bitcoin digital currency system. In this work, we put forward an alternative concept for PoWs -- so-called proofs of space (PoS), where a service requestor must dedicate a significant amount of disk space as opposed to computation. We construct secure PoS schemes in the random oracle model, using graphs with high "pebbling complexity" and Merkle hash-trees. }, author = {Dziembowski, Stefan and Faust, Sebastian and Kolmogorov, Vladimir and Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z}, publisher = {IST Austria}, title = {{Proofs of Space}}, year = {2013}, } @article{15162, abstract = {Cytological profiling (CP) is an unbiased image-based screening technique that uses automated microscopy and image analysis to profile compounds based on numerous quantifiable phenotypic features. We used CP to evaluate a library of nearly 500 compounds with documented mechanisms of action (MOAs) spanning a wide range of biological pathways. We developed informatics techniques for generating dosage-independent phenotypic “fingerprints” for each compound, and for quantifying the likelihood that a compound's CP fingerprint corresponds to its annotated MOA. We identified groups of features that distinguish classes with closely related phenotypes, such as microtubule poisons vs. HSP90 inhibitors, and DNA synthesis vs. proteasome inhibitors. We tested several cases in which cytological profiles indicated novel mechanisms, including a tyrphostin kinase inhibitor involved in mitochondrial uncoupling, novel microtubule poisons, and a nominal PPAR-gamma ligand that acts as a proteasome inhibitor, using independent biochemical assays to confirm the MOAs predicted by the CP signatures. We also applied maximal-information statistics to identify correlations between cytological features and kinase inhibitory activities by combining the CP fingerprints of 24 kinase inhibitors with published data on their specificities against a diverse panel of kinases. The resulting analysis suggests a strategy for probing the biological functions of specific kinases by compiling cytological data from inhibitors of varying specificities.}, author = {Woehrmann, Marcos H. and Bray, Walter M. and Durbin, James K. and Nisam, Sean C. and Michael, Alicia Kathleen and Glassey, Emerson and Stuart, Joshua M. and Lokey, R. Scott}, issn = {1742-2051}, journal = {Molecular BioSystems}, keywords = {Molecular Biology, Biotechnology}, number = {11}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, title = {{Large-scale cytological profiling for functional analysis of bioactive compounds}}, doi = {10.1039/c3mb70245f}, volume = {9}, year = {2013}, } @article{10387, abstract = {We report numerical simulations of membrane tubulation driven by large colloidal particles. Using Monte Carlo simulations we study how the process depends on particle size and binding strength, and present accurate free energy calculations to sort out how tube formation compares with the competing budding process. We find that tube formation is a result of the collective behavior of the particles adhering on the surface, and it occurs for binding strengths that are smaller than those required for budding. We also find that long linear aggregates of particles forming on the membrane surface act as nucleation seeds for tubulation by lowering the free energy barrier associated to the process.}, author = {Šarić, Anđela and Cacciuto, Angelo}, issn = {1079-7114}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, keywords = {general physics and astronomy}, number = {18}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Mechanism of membrane tube formation induced by adhesive nanocomponents}}, doi = {10.1103/physrevlett.109.188101}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{10388, abstract = {Using computer simulations, we show that lipid membranes can mediate linear aggregation of spherical nanoparticles binding to it for a wide range of biologically relevant bending rigidities. This result is in net contrast with the isotropic aggregation of nanoparticles on fluid interfaces or the expected clustering of isotropic insertions in biological membranes. We present a phase diagram indicating where linear aggregation is expected and compute explicitly the free-energy barriers associated with linear and isotropic aggregation. Finally, we provide simple scaling arguments to explain this phenomenology.}, author = {Šarić, Anđela and Cacciuto, Angelo}, issn = {1079-7114}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, keywords = {general physics and astronomy}, number = {11}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Fluid membranes can drive linear aggregation of adsorbed spherical nanoparticles}}, doi = {10.1103/physrevlett.108.118101}, volume = {108}, year = {2012}, } @article{1055, abstract = {In July, 2011, a 32-year-old man presented with thoracic pain radiating to the left arm and upper dorsum, shortness of breath, and palpitations. He had had upper back tension for 6 months. Medical history was unremarkable apart from moderate nicotine use (two pack-years). Echocardiography, electrocardiography, and laboratory tests were unremarkable, excluding a cardiac event. CT of the chest after chest radiography showed a large bulla of 16 cm diameter in the right hemithorax (figure A). We did not detect radiological evidence of underlying pulmonary disease. The bulla wall was unremarkable and no structures were seen within the bulla.}, author = {Erne, Barbara and Graff, Mareike and Klemm, Wolfram and Danzl, Johann G and Leschber, Gunda}, journal = {The Lancet}, number = {9849}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Bulla in the lung}}, doi = {10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60690-4}, volume = {380}, year = {2012}, } @article{1056, abstract = {We prepare and study a metastable attractive Mott-insulator state formed with bosonic atoms in a three-dimensional optical lattice. Starting from a Mott insulator with Cs atoms at weak repulsive interactions, we use a magnetic Feshbach resonance to tune the interactions to large attractive values and produce a metastable state pinned by attractive interactions with a lifetime on the order of 10 s. We probe the (de)excitation spectrum via lattice modulation spectroscopy, measuring the interaction dependence of two- and three-body bound-state energies. As a result of increased on-site three-body loss we observe resonance broadening and suppression of tunneling processes that produce three-body occupation.}, author = {Mark, Manfred and Haller, Elmar and Lauber, Katharina and Danzl, Johann G and Janisch, Alexander and Büchler, Hans and Daley, Andrew and Nägerl, Hanns}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {21}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Preparation and spectroscopy of a metastable mott-insulator state with attractive interactions}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.215302}, volume = {108}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{10750, abstract = {The goal of this work is to study the superconducting coherence length in the fluctuation regime in cuprate superconductors. In this work we present cantilever torque magnetometry measurements of micron-size BSCCO flakes patterned with arrays of nanometer scale rings or holes. Using ultrasensitive dynamic torque magnetometry, oscillations in magnetization are observed near Tc as a function of the applied magnetic flux threading the array. Special effort was made to detect the oscillations in magnetization at temperatures above Tc, where the Nernst effect and magnetization measurements suggest the possibility of pairing. To constrain the magnitude of the coherence length in the fluctuation regime, we will present the dependence of the amplitude of the h/2e period oscillations as a function of temperature and hole size.}, author = {Polshyn, Hryhoriy and Budakian, Raffi}, booktitle = {APS March Meeting 2012}, issn = {0003-0503}, location = {Boston, MA, United States}, number = {1}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Cantilever torque magnetometry study of multiply connected BSCCO arrays near Tc}}, volume = {57}, year = {2012}, } @inbook{10896, abstract = {Under physiological conditions the brain, via the purine salvage pathway, reuses the preformed purine bases hypoxanthine, derived from ATP degradation, and adenine (Ade), derived from polyamine synthesis, to restore its ATP pool. However, the massive degradation of ATP during ischemia, although providing valuable neuroprotective adenosine, results in the accumulation and loss of diffusible purine metabolites and thereby leads to a protracted reduction in the post-ischemic ATP pool size. In vivo, this may both limit the ability to deploy ATP-dependent reparative mechanisms and reduce the subsequent availability of adenosine, whilst in brain slices results in tissue with substantially lower levels of ATP than in vivo. In the present review, we describe the mechanisms by which brain tissue replenishes its ATP, how this can be improved with the clinically tolerated chemicals D-ribose and adenine, and the functional, and potential therapeutic, implications of doing so.}, author = {zur Nedden, Stephanie and Doney, Alexander S. and Frenguelli, Bruno G.}, booktitle = {Adenosine}, editor = {Masino, Susan and Boison, Detlev}, isbn = {9781461439028}, pages = {109--129}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{The double-edged sword: Gaining Adenosine at the expense of ATP. How to balance the books}}, doi = {10.1007/978-1-4614-3903-5_6}, year = {2012}, } @article{11089, abstract = {The Nuclear Envelope (NE) contains over 100 different proteins that associate with nuclear components such as chromatin, the lamina and the transcription machinery. Mutations in genes encoding NE proteins have been shown to result in tissue-specific defects and disease, suggesting cell-type specific differences in NE composition and function. Consistent with these observations, recent studies have revealed unexpected functions for numerous NE associated proteins during cell differentiation and development. Here we review the latest insights into the roles played by the NE in cell differentiation, development, disease and aging, focusing primarily on inner nuclear membrane (INM) proteins and nuclear pore components.}, author = {Gomez-Cavazos, J Sebastian and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {0955-0674}, journal = {Current Opinion in Cell Biology}, keywords = {Cell Biology}, number = {6}, pages = {775--783}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Outfits for different occasions: tissue-specific roles of Nuclear Envelope proteins}}, doi = {10.1016/j.ceb.2012.08.008}, volume = {24}, year = {2012}, } @article{11091, abstract = {Neoplastic cells are often characterized by specific morphological abnormalities of the nuclear envelope (NE), which have been used for cancer diagnosis for more than a century. The NE is a double phospholipid bilayer that encapsulates the nuclear genome, regulates all nuclear trafficking of RNAs and proteins and prevents the passive diffusion of macromolecules between the nucleoplasm and the cytoplasm. Whether there is a consequence to the proper functioning of the cell and loss of structural integrity of the nucleus remains unclear. Using live cell imaging, we characterize a phenomenon wherein nuclei of several proliferating human cancer cell lines become temporarily ruptured during interphase. Strikingly, NE rupturing was associated with the mislocalization of nucleoplasmic and cytoplasmic proteins and, in the most extreme cases, the entrapment of cytoplasmic organelles in the nuclear interior. In addition, we observed the formation of micronuclei-like structures during interphase and the movement of chromatin out of the nuclear space. The frequency of these NE rupturing events was higher in cells in which the nuclear lamina, a network of intermediate filaments providing mechanical support to the NE, was not properly formed. Our data uncover the existence of a NE instability that has the potential to change the genomic landscape of cancer cells.}, author = {Vargas, Jesse D. and Hatch, Emily M. and Anderson, Daniel J. and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {1949-1042}, journal = {Nucleus}, keywords = {Cell Biology}, number = {1}, pages = {88--100}, publisher = {Taylor & Francis}, title = {{Transient nuclear envelope rupturing during interphase in human cancer cells}}, doi = {10.4161/nucl.18954}, volume = {3}, year = {2012}, } @article{11093, abstract = {Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are built from ∼30 different proteins called nucleoporins or Nups. Previous studies have shown that several Nups exhibit cell-type-specific expression and that mutations in NPC components result in tissue-specific diseases. Here we show that a specific change in NPC composition is required for both myogenic and neuronal differentiation. The transmembrane nucleoporin Nup210 is absent in proliferating myoblasts and embryonic stem cells (ESCs) but becomes expressed and incorporated into NPCs during cell differentiation. Preventing Nup210 production by RNAi blocks myogenesis and the differentiation of ESCs into neuroprogenitors. We found that the addition of Nup210 to NPCs does not affect nuclear transport but is required for the induction of genes that are essential for cell differentiation. Our results identify a single change in NPC composition as an essential step in cell differentiation and establish a role for Nup210 in gene expression regulation and cell fate determination.}, author = {D'Angelo, Maximiliano A. and Gomez-Cavazos, J. Sebastian and Mei, Arianna and Lackner, Daniel H. and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {1534-5807}, journal = {Developmental Cell}, keywords = {Developmental Biology, Cell Biology, General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, Molecular Biology}, number = {2}, pages = {446--458}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{A change in nuclear pore complex composition regulates cell differentiation}}, doi = {10.1016/j.devcel.2011.11.021}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, } @article{11092, abstract = {To combat the functional decline of the proteome, cells use the process of protein turnover to replace potentially impaired polypeptides with new functional copies. We found that extremely long-lived proteins (ELLPs) did not turn over in postmitotic cells of the rat central nervous system. These ELLPs were associated with chromatin and the nuclear pore complex, the central transport channels that mediate all molecular trafficking in and out of the nucleus. The longevity of these proteins would be expected to expose them to potentially harmful metabolites, putting them at risk of accumulating damage over extended periods of time. Thus, it is possible that failure to maintain proper levels and functional integrity of ELLPs in nonproliferative cells might contribute to age-related deterioration in cell and tissue function.}, author = {Savas, Jeffrey N. and Toyama, Brandon H. and Xu, Tao and Yates, John R. and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {1095-9203}, journal = {Science}, keywords = {Multidisciplinary}, number = {6071}, pages = {942--942}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Extremely long-lived nuclear pore proteins in the rat brain}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1217421}, volume = {335}, year = {2012}, } @article{11090, abstract = {Nuclear export of mRNAs is thought to occur exclusively through nuclear pore complexes. In this issue of Cell, Speese et al. identify an alternate pathway for mRNA export in muscle cells where ribonucleoprotein complexes involved in forming neuromuscular junctions transit the nuclear envelope by fusing with and budding through the nuclear membrane.}, author = {Hatch, Emily M. and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {0092-8674}, journal = {Cell}, keywords = {General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology}, number = {4}, pages = {733--735}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{RNP export by nuclear envelope budding}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2012.04.018}, volume = {149}, year = {2012}, } @article{113, abstract = {Although liquids typically flow around intruding objects, a counterintuitive phenomenon occurs in dense suspensions of micrometre-sized particles: they become liquid-like when perturbed lightly, but harden when driven strongly. Rheological experiments have investigated how such thickening arises under shear, and linked it to hydrodynamic interactions or granular dilation. However, neither of these mechanisms alone can explain the ability of suspensions to generate very large, positive normal stresses under impact. To illustrate the phenomenon, such stresses can be large enough to allow a person to run across a suspension without sinking, and far exceed the upper limit observed under shear or extension. Here we show that these stresses originate from an impact-generated solidification front that transforms an initially compressible particle matrix into a rapidly growing jammed region, ultimately leading to extraordinary amounts of momentum absorption. Using high-speed videography, embedded force sensing and X-ray imaging, we capture the detailed dynamics of this process as it decelerates a metal rod hitting a suspension of cornflour (cornstarch) in water. We develop a model for the dynamic solidification and its effect on the surrounding suspension that reproduces the observed behaviour quantitatively. Our findings suggest that prior interpretations of the impact resistance as dominated by shear thickening need to be revisited.}, author = {Waitukaitis, Scott R and Jaeger, Heinrich}, journal = {Nature}, number = {7406}, pages = {205 -- 209}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Impact-activated solidification of dense suspensions via dynamic jamming fronts}}, doi = {10.1038/nature11187}, volume = {487}, year = {2012}, } @article{114, abstract = {We report on an investigation of the solidification of a cornstarch and water suspension during normal impact on its surface. We find that a finite time after impact, the suspension displays characteristics reminiscent of a solid, including localized stress transmission, the development of a yield stress, and some elastic energy storage. The time dependence of these characteristics depends on the thickness of the cornstarch layer, showing that the solidification is a dynamic process driven by the impacting object. These findings confirm previous speculations that rapidly applied normal stress transforms the normally fluid-like suspension into a temporarily jammed solid and draw a clear distinction between the effects of normal stress and shear stress in dense suspensions.}, author = {Waitukaitis, Scott R and Jaeger, Heinrich}, journal = {Revista Cubana de Fisica}, number = {1E}, pages = {1E31 -- 1E33}, publisher = {Universidad de La Habana}, title = {{Solidification of a cornstarch and water suspension}}, volume = {29}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{11656, abstract = {Suppose your sole interest in recommending a product to me is to maximize the amount paid to you by the seller for a sequence of recommendations. How should you recommend optimally if I become more inclined to ignore you with each irrelevant recommendation you make? Finding an answer to this question is a key challenge in all forms of marketing that rely on and explore social ties; ranging from personal recommendations to viral marketing. We prove that even if the recommendee regains her initial trust on each successful recommendation, the expected revenue the recommender can make over an infinite period due to payments by the seller is bounded. This can only be overcome when the recommendee also incrementally regains trust during periods without any recommendation. Here, we see a connection to "banner blindness," suggesting that showing fewer ads can lead to a higher long-term revenue.}, author = {Dütting, Paul and Henzinger, Monika H and Weber, Ingmar}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 21st ACM international conference on Information and knowledge management}, isbn = {9781450311564}, location = {Maui, HI, United States}, pages = {2268--2286}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, title = {{Maximizing revenue from strategic recommendations under decaying trust}}, doi = {10.1145/2396761.2398621}, year = {2012}, } @article{11751, abstract = {The Seebeck coefficients, electrical resistivities, total thermal conductivities, and magnetization are reported for temperatures between 5 and 350 K for n-type Bi0.88Sb0.12 nano-composite alloys made by Ho-doping at the 0, 1, and 3 % atomic levels. The alloys were prepared using a dc hot-pressing method, and are shown to be single phase for both Ho contents with grain sizes on the average of 900 nm. We find the parent compound has a maximum of ZT = 0.28 at 231 K, while doping 1 % Ho increases the maximum ZT to 0.31 at 221 K and the 3 % doped sample suppresses the maximum ZT = 0.24 at a temperature of 260 K.}, author = {Lukas, K. C. and Joshi, G. and Modic, Kimberly A and Ren, Z. F. and Opeil, C. P.}, issn = {1573-4803}, journal = {Journal of Materials Science}, number = {15}, pages = {5729--5734}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Thermoelectric properties of Ho-doped Bi0.88Sb0.12}}, doi = {10.1007/s10853-012-6463-6}, volume = {47}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{11794, abstract = {We study individual rational, Pareto optimal, and incentive compatible mechanisms for auctions with heterogeneous items and budget limits. For multi-dimensional valuations we show that there can be no deterministic mechanism with these properties for divisible items. We use this to show that there can also be no randomized mechanism that achieves this for either divisible or indivisible items. For single-dimensional valuations we show that there can be no deterministic mechanism with these properties for indivisible items, but that there is a randomized mechanism that achieves this for either divisible or indivisible items. The impossibility results hold for public budgets, while the mechanism allows private budgets, which is in both cases the harder variant to show. While all positive results are polynomial-time algorithms, all negative results hold independent of complexity considerations.}, author = {Dütting, Paul and Henzinger, Monika H and Starnberger, Martin}, booktitle = {8th International Workshop on Internet and Network Economics}, isbn = {9783642353109}, issn = {1611-3349}, location = {Liverpool, United Kingdom}, pages = {44–57}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Auctions with heterogeneous items and budget limits}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-35311-6_4}, volume = {7695}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{11795, abstract = {We study multiple keyword sponsored search auctions with budgets. Each keyword has multiple ad slots with a click-through rate. The bidders have additive valuations, which are linear in the click-through rates, and budgets, which are restricting their overall payments. Additionally, the number of slots per keyword assigned to a bidder is bounded. We show the following results: (1) We give the first mechanism for multiple keywords, where click-through rates differ among slots. Our mechanism is incentive compatible in expectation, individually rational in expectation, and Pareto optimal. (2) We study the combinatorial setting, where each bidder is only interested in a subset of the keywords. We give an incentive compatible, individually rational, Pareto optimal, and deterministic mechanism for identical click-through rates. (3) We give an impossibility result for incentive compatible, individually rational, Pareto optimal, and deterministic mechanisms for bidders with diminishing marginal valuations.}, author = {Colini-Baldeschi, Riccardo and Henzinger, Monika H and Leonardi, Stefano and Starnberger, Martin}, booktitle = {39th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming}, isbn = {9783642315848}, issn = {0302-9743}, location = {Warwick, United Kingdom}, pages = {1–12}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{On multiple keyword sponsored search auctions with budgets}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-31585-5_1}, volume = {7392}, year = {2012}, } @article{11964, abstract = {A detailed investigation on the direct arylation of benzene with aryl bromides by using first-row transition metals under high-temperature/high-pressure (high-T/p) conditions is described. By employing a parallel reactor platform for rapid reaction screening and discovery at elevated temperatures, various metal/ligand/base combinations were evaluated for their ability to enable biaryl formation through C-H activation. The combination of cobalt(III) acetylacetonate and lithium bis(trimethylsilyl)amide was subjected to further process intensification at 200 °C (15 bar), allowing a significant reduction of the catalyst/base loading and a dramatic increase in catalytic efficiency (turnover frequency) by a factor of 1000 compared to traditional protocols. The high-throughput screening additionally identified novel nickel- and copper-based metal/ligand combinations that favored an amination pathway competing with C-H activation, with the addition of ligands, such as 1,10-phenanthroline, having a profound influence on the selectivity. In addition to metal-based catalysts, high-T/p process windows were also successfully applied to transition-metal-free systems, utilizing 1,10-phenanthroline as organocatalyst.}, author = {Pieber, Bartholomäus and Cantillo, David and Kappe, C. Oliver}, issn = {1521-3765}, journal = {Chemistry – A European Journal}, number = {16}, pages = {5047--5055}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{Direct arylation of benzene with aryl bromides using high‐temperature/high‐pressure process windows: Expanding the scope of C-H activation chemistry}}, doi = {10.1002/chem.201103748}, volume = {18}, year = {2012}, } @article{11963, abstract = {Peroxides and ethers in flow: 2-Carbonyl-substituted phenols and β-ketoesters react safely with ethers in a microreactor environment using a copper catalyst and an organic peroxide (TBHP). This protocol results in unsymmetrical acetal scaffolds not easily available otherwise (see scheme).}, author = {Kumar, G. Sathish and Pieber, Bartholomäus and Reddy, K. Rajender and Kappe, C. Oliver}, issn = {1521-3765}, journal = {Chemistry - A European Journal}, number = {20}, pages = {6124--6128}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{Copper-catalyzed formation of C-O bonds by direct α-C-H bond activation of ethers using stoichiometric amounts of peroxide in batch and continuous-flow formats}}, doi = {10.1002/chem.201200815}, volume = {18}, year = {2012}, } @article{12644, abstract = {In the Dry Andes of central Chile, summer water resources originate mostly from snowmelt and ice melt. We use the physically based, spatially distributed hydrological model TOPKAPI to study the exchange between glaciers and climate in the upper Aconcagua River Basin during the summer season and identify the model parameters that are robust and transferable and those that are more dependent on calibration. TOPKAPI has recently been adapted to incorporate an enhanced temperature index approach for snow and ice melting. We suggest a calibration procedure that allows calibration of parameters in three steps by separating parameters governing distinct processes. We evaluate the parameters' transferability in time and in space by applying the model at two spatial scales. TOPKAPI's ability to simulate the relevant processes is tested against meteorological, ablation, and glacier runoff data measured on Juncal Norte Glacier during two glacier ablation seasons. The model was applied successfully to the climatic setting of the Dry Andes once its parameters were recalibrated. We found a clear distinction between parameters that are stable in time and those that need recalibration. The parameters of the melt model are transferable from one season to the other, while the parameters governing the extrapolation of meteorological input data and the routing of glacier meltwater need recalibration from one season to the other. Sensitivity analysis revealed that the model is most sensitive to the temperature lapse rate governing the extrapolation of air temperature from point measurements to the glacier scale and to the melt parameter that multiplies the shortwave radiation balance.}, author = {Ragettli, S. and Pellicciotti, Francesca}, issn = {0043-1397}, journal = {Water Resources Research}, number = {3}, publisher = {American Geophysical Union}, title = {{Calibration of a physically based, spatially distributed hydrological model in a glacierized basin: On the use of knowledge from glaciometeorological processes to constrain model parameters}}, doi = {10.1029/2011wr010559}, volume = {48}, year = {2012}, } @article{12646, abstract = {Assessment of water resources from remote mountainous catchments plays a crucial role for the development of rural areas in or in the vicinity of mountain ranges. The scarcity of data, however, prevents the application of standard approaches that are based on data-driven models. The Hindu Kush–Karakoram–Himalaya mountain range is a crucial area in terms of water resources, but our understanding of the response of its high-elevation catchments to a changing climate is hindered by lack of hydro-meteorological and cryospheric data. Hydrological modeling is challenging here because internal inconsistencies—such as an underestimation of precipitation input that can be compensated for by an overestimation of meltwater—might be hidden due to the complexity of feedback mechanisms that govern melt and runoff generation in such basins. Data scarcity adds to this difficulty by preventing the application of systematic calibration procedures that would allow identification of the parameter set that could guarantee internal consistency in the simulation of the single hydrological components. In this work, we use simulations from the Hunza River Basin in the Karakoram region obtained with the hydrological model TOPKAPI to quantify the predictive power of discharge and snow-cover data sets, as well as the combination of both. We also show that short-term measurements of meteorological variables such as radiative fluxes, wind speed, relative humidity, and air temperature from glacio-meteorological experiments are crucial for a correct parameterization of surface melt processes. They enable detailed simulations of the energy fluxes governing glacier–atmosphere interaction and the resulting ablation through energy-balance modeling. These simulations are used to derive calibrated parameters for the simplified snow and glacier routines in TOPKAPI. We demonstrate that such parameters are stable in space and time in similar climatic regions, thus reducing the number of parameters requiring calibration.}, author = {Pellicciotti, Francesca and Buergi, Cyrill and Immerzeel, Walter Willem and Konz, Markus and Shrestha, Arun B.}, issn = {1994-7151}, journal = {Mountain Research and Development}, number = {1}, pages = {39--50}, publisher = {International Mountain Society}, title = {{Challenges and uncertainties in hydrological modeling of remote Hindu Kush–Karakoram–Himalayan (HKH) basins: Suggestions for calibration strategies}}, doi = {10.1659/mrd-journal-d-11-00092.1}, volume = {32}, year = {2012}, } @article{12647, abstract = {Accurate quantification of the spatial distribution of precipitation in mountain regions is crucial for assessments of water resources and for the understanding of high-altitude hydrology, yet it is one of the largest unknowns due to the lack of high-altitude observations. The Hunza basin in Pakistan contains very large glacier systems, which, given the melt, cannot persist unless precipitation (snow input) is much higher than what is observed at the meteorological stations, mostly located in mountain valleys. Several studies, therefore, suggest strong positive vertical precipitation lapse rates; in the present study, we quantify this lapse rate by using glaciers as a proxy. We assume a neutral mass balance for the glaciers for the period from 2001 to 2003, and we inversely model the precipitation lapse by balancing the total accumulation in the catchment area and the ablation over the glacier area for the 50 largest glacier systems in the Hunza basin in the Karakoram. Our results reveal a vertical precipitation lapse rate that equals 0.21 ± 0.12% m−1, with a maximum precipitation at an elevation of 5500 masl. We showed that the total annual basin precipitation (828 mm) is 260% higher than what is estimated based on interpolated observations (319 mm); this has major consequences for hydrological modeling and water resource assessments in general. Our results were validated by using previously published studies on individual glaciers as well as the water balance of the Hunza basin. The approach is more widely applicable in mountain ranges where precipitation measurements at high altitude are lacking.}, author = {Immerzeel, Walter Willem and Pellicciotti, Francesca and Shrestha, Arun B.}, issn = {1994-7151}, journal = {Mountain Research and Development}, keywords = {General Environmental Science, Development, Environmental Chemistry}, number = {1}, pages = {30--38}, publisher = {International Mountain Society}, title = {{Glaciers as a proxy to quantify the spatial distribution of precipitation in the Hunza basin}}, doi = {10.1659/mrd-journal-d-11-00097.1}, volume = {32}, year = {2012}, } @article{12648, abstract = {Distributed glacier melt models generally assume that the glacier surface consists of bare exposed ice and snow. In reality, many glaciers are wholly or partially covered in layers of debris that tend to suppress ablation rates. In this paper, an existing physically based point model for the ablation of debris-covered ice is incorporated in a distributed melt model and applied to Haut Glacier d'Arolla, Switzerland, which has three large patches of debris cover on its surface. The model is based on a 10 m resolution digital elevation model (DEM) of the area; each glacier pixel in the DEM is defined as either bare or debris-covered ice, and may be covered in snow that must be melted off before ice ablation is assumed to occur. Each debris-covered pixel is assigned a debris thickness value using probability distributions based on over 1000 manual thickness measurements. Locally observed meteorological data are used to run energy balance calculations in every pixel, using an approach suitable for snow, bare ice or debris-covered ice as appropriate. The use of the debris model significantly reduces the total ablation in the debris-covered areas, however the precise reduction is sensitive to the temperature extrapolation used in the model distribution because air near the debris surface tends to be slightly warmer than over bare ice. Overall results suggest that the debris patches, which cover 10% of the glacierized area, reduce total runoff from the glacierized part of the basin by up to 7%.}, author = {Reid, T. D. and Carenzo, M. and Pellicciotti, Francesca and Brock, B. W.}, issn = {0148-0227}, journal = {Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres}, keywords = {Paleontology, Space and Planetary Science, Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous), Atmospheric Science, Earth-Surface Processes, Geochemistry and Petrology, Soil Science, Water Science and Technology, Ecology, Aquatic Science, Forestry, Oceanography, Geophysics}, number = {D18}, publisher = {American Geophysical Union}, title = {{Including debris cover effects in a distributed model of glacier ablation}}, doi = {10.1029/2012jd017795}, volume = {117}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{1384, abstract = {Software model checking, as an undecidable problem, has three possible outcomes: (1) the program satisfies the specification, (2) the program does not satisfy the specification, and (3) the model checker fails. The third outcome usually manifests itself in a space-out, time-out, or one component of the verification tool giving up; in all of these failing cases, significant computation is performed by the verification tool before the failure, but no result is reported. We propose to reformulate the model-checking problem as follows, in order to have the verification tool report a summary of the performed work even in case of failure: given a program and a specification, the model checker returns a condition Ψ - usually a state predicate - such that the program satisfies the specification under the condition Ψ - that is, as long as the program does not leave the states in which Ψ is satisfied. In our experiments, we investigated as one major application of conditional model checking the sequential combination of model checkers with information passing. We give the condition that one model checker produces, as input to a second conditional model checker, such that the verification problem for the second is restricted to the part of the state space that is not covered by the condition, i.e., the second model checker works on the problems that the first model checker could not solve. Our experiments demonstrate that repeated application of conditional model checkers, passing information from one model checker to the next, can significantly improve the verification results and performance, i.e., we can now verify programs that we could not verify before.}, author = {Beyer, Dirk and Henzinger, Thomas A and Keremoglu, Mehmet and Wendler, Philipp}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the ACM SIGSOFT 20th International Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering}, location = {Cary, NC, USA}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Conditional model checking: A technique to pass information between verifiers}}, doi = {10.1145/2393596.2393664}, year = {2012}, } @article{1472, abstract = {For G = GL 2, PGL 2, SL 2 we prove that the perverse filtration associated with the Hitchin map on the rational cohomology of the moduli space of twisted G-Higgs bundles on a compact Riemann surface C agrees with the weight filtration on the rational cohomology of the twisted G character variety of C when the cohomologies are identified via non-Abelian Hodge theory. The proof is accomplished by means of a study of the topology of the Hitchin map over the locus of integral spectral curves.}, author = {De Cataldo, Mark A and Tamas Hausel and Migliorini, Luca}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics}, number = {3}, pages = {1329 -- 1407}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, title = {{Topology of hitchin systems and Hodge theory of character varieties: The case A 1}}, doi = {10.4007/annals.2012.175.3.7}, volume = {175}, year = {2012}, } @article{1471, abstract = {Given a possibly reducible and non-reduced spectral cover π: X → C over a smooth projective complex curve C we determine the group of connected components of the Prym variety Prym(X/C). As an immediate application we show that the finite group of n-torsion points of the Jacobian of C acts trivially on the cohomology of the twisted SL n-Higgs moduli space up to the degree which is predicted by topological mirror symmetry. In particular this yields a new proof of a result of Harder-Narasimhan, showing that this finite group acts trivially on the cohomology of the twisted SL n stable bundle moduli space.}, author = {Tamas Hausel and Pauly, Christian}, journal = {Geometry and Topology}, number = {3}, pages = {1609 -- 1638}, publisher = {University of Warwick}, title = {{Prym varieties of spectral covers}}, doi = {10.2140/gt.2012.16.1609}, volume = {16}, year = {2012}, } @article{171, abstract = {For given non-zero integers a, b, q we investigate the density of solutions (x, y) ∈ ℤ2 to the binary cubic congruence ax2 + by3 ≡ 0 mod q, and use it to establish the Manin conjecture for a singular del Pezzo surface of degree 2 defined over ℚ.}, author = {Timothy Browning and Baier, Stephan}, journal = {Journal fur die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik}, number = {680}, pages = {1 -- 65}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, title = {{Inhomogeneous cubic congruences and rational points on del Pezzo surfaces}}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1515/crelle.2012.039}, volume = {2013}, year = {2012}, } @article{1725, abstract = {The spatial organization of cell fates during development involves the interpretation of morphogen gradients by cellular signaling cascades and transcriptional networks. Recent studies use biophysical models, genetics, and quantitative imaging to unravel how tissue-level morphogen behavior arises from subcellular events. Moreover, data from several systems show that morphogen gradients, downstream signaling, and the activity of cell-intrinsic transcriptional networks change dynamically during pattern formation. Studies from Drosophila and now also vertebrates suggest that transcriptional network dynamics are central to the generation of gene expression patterns. Together, this leads to the view that pattern formation is an emergent behavior that results from the coordination of events occurring across molecular, cellular, and tissue scales. The development of novel approaches to study this complex process remains a challenge.}, author = {Anna Kicheva and Cohen, Michael H and Briscoe, James}, journal = {Science}, number = {6104}, pages = {210 -- 212}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Developmental pattern formation: Insights from physics and biology}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1225182}, volume = {338}, year = {2012}, } @article{1757, abstract = {Self-assembled Ge wires with a height of only 3 unit cells and a length of up to 2 micrometers were grown on Si(001) by means of a catalyst-free method based on molecular beam epitaxy. The wires grow horizontally along either the [100] or the [010] direction. On atomically flat surfaces, they exhibit a highly uniform, triangular cross section. A simple thermodynamic model accounts for the existence of a preferential base width for longitudinal expansion, in quantitative agreement with the experimental findings. Despite the absence of intentional doping, the first transistor-type devices made from single wires show low-resistive electrical contacts and single-hole transport at sub-Kelvin temperatures. In view of their exceptionally small and self-defined cross section, these Ge wires hold promise for the realization of hole systems with exotic properties and provide a new development route for silicon-based nanoelectronics.}, author = {Zhang, Jianjun and Georgios Katsaros and Montalenti, Francesco and Scopece, Daniele and Rezaev, Roman O and Mickel, Christine H and Rellinghaus, Bernd and Miglio, Leo P and De Franceschi, Silvano and Rastelli, Armando and Schmidt, Oliver G}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {8}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Monolithic growth of ultrathin Ge nanowires on Si(001) }}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.085502}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{1758, abstract = {We studied the low-energy states of spin-1/2 quantum dots defined in InAs/InP nanowires and coupled to aluminum superconducting leads. By varying the superconducting gap Δ with a magnetic field B we investigated the transition from strong coupling Δ≪T K to weak-coupling Δ≫T K, where T K is the Kondo temperature. Below the critical field, we observe a persisting zero-bias Kondo resonance that vanishes only for low B or higher temperatures, leaving the room to more robust subgap structures at bias voltages between Δ and 2Δ. For strong and approximately symmetric tunnel couplings, a Josephson supercurrent is observed in addition to the Kondo peak. We ascribe the coexistence of a Kondo resonance and a superconducting gap to a significant density of intragap quasiparticle states, and the finite-bias subgap structures to tunneling through Shiba states. Our results, supported by numerical calculations, own relevance also in relation to tunnel-spectroscopy experiments aiming at the observation of Majorana fermions in hybrid nanostructures.}, author = {Lee, Eduardo J and Jiang, Xiaocheng and Aguado, Ramón and Georgios Katsaros and Lieber, Charles M and De Franceschi, Silvano}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {18}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Zero-bias anomaly in a nanowire quantum dot coupled to superconductors}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.186802}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{1756, abstract = {We report on the electronic transport properties of multiple-gate devices fabricated from undoped silicon nanowires. Understanding and control of the relevant transport mechanisms was achieved by means of local electrostatic gating and temperature-dependent measurements. The roles of the source/drain contacts and of the silicon channel could be independently evaluated and tuned. Wrap gates surrounding the silicide-silicon contact interfaces were proved to be effective in inducing a full suppression of the contact Schottky barriers, thereby enabling carrier injection down to liquid helium temperature. By independently tuning the effective Schottky barrier heights, a variety of reconfigurable device functionalities could be obtained. In particular, the same nanowire device could be configured to work as a Schottky barrier transistor, a Schottky diode, or a p-n diode with tunable polarities. This versatility was eventually exploited to realize a NAND logic gate with gain well above one.}, author = {Mongillo, Massimo and Spathis, Panayotis N and Georgios Katsaros and Gentile, Pascal and De Franceschi, Silvano}, journal = {Nano Letters}, number = {6}, pages = {3074 -- 3079}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, title = {{Multifunctional devices and logic gates with undoped silicon nanowires}}, doi = {10.1021/nl300930m}, volume = {12}, year = {2012}, } @article{1783, abstract = {Nonlinearity and entanglement are two important properties by which physical systems can be identified as nonclassical. We study the dynamics of the resonant interaction of up to N=3 two-level systems and a single mode of the electromagnetic field sharing a single excitation dynamically. We observe coherent vacuum Rabi oscillations and their nonlinear √N speedup by tracking the populations of all qubits and the resonator in time. We use quantum state tomography to show explicitly that the dynamics generates maximally entangled states of the W class in a time limited only by the collective interaction rate. We use an entanglement witness and the 3-tangle to characterize the state whose fidelity F=78% is limited in our experiments by crosstalk arising during the simultaneous qubit manipulations which is absent in a sequential approach with F=91%.}, author = {Mlynek, Jonas A and Abdumalikov, Abdufarrukh A and Johannes Fink and Steffen, L. Kraig and Baur, Matthias P and Lang, C and Van Loo, Arjan F and Wallraff, Andreas}, journal = {Physical Review A - Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics}, number = {5}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Demonstrating W-type entanglement of Dicke states in resonant cavity quantum electrodynamics}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevA.86.053838}, volume = {86}, year = {2012}, }