@article{1923, abstract = {We derive the equations for a thin, axisymmetric elastic shell subjected to an internal active stress giving rise to active tension and moments within the shell. We discuss the stability of a cylindrical elastic shell and its response to a localized change in internal active stress. This description is relevant to describe the cellular actomyosin cortex, a thin shell at the cell surface behaving elastically at a short timescale and subjected to active internal forces arising from myosin molecular motor activity. We show that the recent observations of cell deformation following detachment of adherent cells (Maître J-L et al 2012 Science 338 253-6) are well accounted for by this mechanical description. The actin cortex elastic and bending moduli can be obtained from a quantitative analysis of cell shapes observed in these experiments. Our approach thus provides a non-invasive, imaging-based method for the extraction of cellular physical parameters.}, author = {Berthoumieux, Hélène and Maître, Jean-Léon and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J and Paluch, Ewa and Julicher, Frank and Salbreux, Guillaume}, journal = {New Journal of Physics}, publisher = {IOP Publishing Ltd.}, title = {{Active elastic thin shell theory for cellular deformations}}, doi = {10.1088/1367-2630/16/6/065005}, volume = {16}, year = {2014}, } @article{1921, abstract = {Cell polarity manifested by asymmetric distribution of cargoes, such as receptors and transporters, within the plasma membrane (PM) is crucial for essential functions in multicellular organisms. In plants, cell polarity (re)establishment is intimately linked to patterning processes. Despite the importance of cell polarity, its underlying mechanisms are still largely unknown, including the definition and distinctiveness of the polar domains within the PM. Here, we show in Arabidopsis thaliana that the signaling membrane components, the phosphoinositides phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (PtdIns4P) and phosphatidylinositol 4, 5-bisphosphate [PtdIns(4, 5)P2] as well as PtdIns4P 5-kinases mediating their interconversion, are specifically enriched at apical and basal polar plasma membrane domains. The PtdIns4P 5-kinases PIP5K1 and PIP5K2 are redundantly required for polar localization of specifically apical and basal cargoes, such as PIN-FORMED transporters for the plant hormone auxin. As a consequence of the polarity defects, instructive auxin gradients as well as embryonic and postembryonic patterning are severely compromised. Furthermore, auxin itself regulates PIP5K transcription and PtdIns4P and PtdIns(4, 5)P2 levels, in particular their association with polar PM domains. Our results provide insight into the polar domain-delineating mechanisms in plant cells that depend on apical and basal distribution of membrane lipids and are essential for embryonic and postembryonic patterning.}, author = {Tejos, Ricardo and Sauer, Michael and Vanneste, Steffen and Palacios-Gomez, MiriamPalacios and Li, Hongjiang and Heilmann, Mareike and Van Wijk, Ringo and Vermeer, Joop and Heilmann, Ingo and Munnik, Teun and Friml, Jirí}, journal = {Plant Cell}, number = {5}, pages = {2114 -- 2128}, publisher = {American Society of Plant Biologists}, title = {{Bipolar plasma membrane distribution of phosphoinositides and their requirement for auxin-mediated cell polarity and patterning in Arabidopsis}}, doi = {10.1105/tpc.114.126185}, volume = {26}, year = {2014}, } @article{1922, abstract = {Germination of Arabidopsis seeds in darkness induces apical hook development, based on a tightly regulated differential growth coordinated by a multiple hormone cross-talk. Here, we endeavoured to clarify the function of brassinosteroids (BRs) and cross-talk with ethylene in hook development. An automated infrared imaging system was developed to study the kinetics of hook development in etiolated Arabidopsis seedlings. To ascertain the photomorphogenic control of hook opening, the system was equipped with an automatic light dimmer. We demonstrate that ethylene and BRs are indispensable for hook formation and maintenance. Ethylene regulation of hook formation functions partly through BRs, with BR feedback inhibition of ethylene action. Conversely, BR-mediated extension of hook maintenance functions partly through ethylene. Furthermore, we revealed that a short light pulse is sufficient to induce rapid hook opening. Our dynamic infrared imaging system allows high-resolution, kinetic imaging of up to 112 seedlings in a single experimental run. At this high throughput, it is ideally suited to rapidly gain insight in pathway networks. We demonstrate that BRs and ethylene cooperatively regulate apical hook development in a phase-dependent manner. Furthermore, we show that light is a predominant regulator of hook opening, inhibiting ethylene- and BR-mediated postponement of hook opening.}, author = {Smet, Dajo and Žádníková, Petra and Vandenbussche, Filip and Benková, Eva and Van Der Straeten, Dominique}, journal = {New Phytologist}, number = {4}, pages = {1398 -- 1411}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Dynamic infrared imaging analysis of apical hook development in Arabidopsis: The case of brassinosteroids}}, doi = {10.1111/nph.12751}, volume = {202}, year = {2014}, } @inproceedings{1927, abstract = {Constrained pseudorandom functions have recently been introduced independently by Boneh and Waters (Asiacrypt’13), Kiayias et al. (CCS’13), and Boyle et al. (PKC’14). In a standard pseudorandom function (PRF) a key k is used to evaluate the PRF on all inputs in the domain. Constrained PRFs additionally offer the functionality to delegate “constrained” keys kS which allow to evaluate the PRF only on a subset S of the domain. The three above-mentioned papers all show that the classical GGM construction (J.ACM’86) of a PRF from a pseudorandom generator (PRG) directly yields a constrained PRF where one can compute constrained keys to evaluate the PRF on all inputs with a given prefix. This constrained PRF has already found many interesting applications. Unfortunately, the existing security proofs only show selective security (by a reduction to the security of the underlying PRG). To achieve full security, one has to use complexity leveraging, which loses an exponential factor 2N in security, where N is the input length. The first contribution of this paper is a new reduction that only loses a quasipolynomial factor qlog N, where q is the number of adversarial queries. For this we develop a new proof technique which constructs a distinguisher by interleaving simple guessing steps and hybrid arguments a small number of times. This approach might be of interest also in other contexts where currently the only technique to achieve full security is complexity leveraging. Our second contribution is concerned with another constrained PRF, due to Boneh and Waters, which allows for constrained keys for the more general class of bit-fixing functions. Their security proof also suffers from a 2N loss, which we show is inherent. We construct a meta-reduction which shows that any “simple” reduction of full security from a noninteractive hardness assumption must incur an exponential security loss.}, author = {Georg Fuchsbauer and Konstantinov, Momchil and Krzysztof Pietrzak and Rao, Vanishree}, pages = {173 -- 192}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Adaptive security of constrained PRFs}}, doi = {10.1145/2591796.2591825}, volume = {8874}, year = {2014}, } @article{1926, abstract = {We consider cross products of finite graphs with a class of trees that have arbitrarily but finitely long line segments, such as the Fibonacci tree. Such cross products are called tree-strips. We prove that for small disorder random Schrödinger operators on such tree-strips have purely absolutely continuous spectrum in a certain set.}, author = {Sadel, Christian}, journal = {Mathematical Physics, Analysis and Geometry}, number = {3-4}, pages = {409 -- 440}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Absolutely continuous spectrum for random Schrödinger operators on the Fibonacci and similar Tree-strips}}, doi = {10.1007/s11040-014-9163-4}, volume = {17}, year = {2014}, } @article{1924, abstract = {Stomata are two-celled valves that control epidermal pores whose spacing optimizes shoot-atmosphere gas exchange. They develop from protodermal cells after unequal divisions followed by an equal division and differentiation. The concentration of the hormone auxin, a master plant developmental regulator, is tightly controlled in time and space, but its role, if any, in stomatal formation is obscure. Here dynamic changes of auxin activity during stomatal development are monitored using auxin input (DII-VENUS) and output (DR5:VENUS) markers by time-lapse imaging. A decrease in auxin levels in the smaller daughter cell after unequal division presages the acquisition of a guard mother cell fate whose equal division produces the two guard cells. Thus, stomatal patterning requires auxin pathway control of stem cell compartment size, as well as auxin depletion that triggers a developmental switch from unequal to equal division.}, author = {Le, Jie and Liu, Xuguang and Yang, Kezhen and Chen, Xiaolan and Zhu, Lingling and Wang, Hongzhe and Wang, Ming and Vanneste, Steffen and Morita, Miyo and Tasaka, Masao and Ding, Zhaojun and Friml, Jirí and Beeckman, Tom and Sack, Fred}, journal = {Nature Communications}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Auxin transport and activity regulate stomatal patterning and development}}, doi = {10.1038/ncomms4090}, volume = {5}, year = {2014}, } @article{1928, abstract = {In infectious disease epidemiology the basic reproductive ratio, R0, is defined as the average number of new infections caused by a single infected individual in a fully susceptible population. Many models describing competition for hosts between non-interacting pathogen strains in an infinite population lead to the conclusion that selection favors invasion of new strains if and only if they have higher R0 values than the resident. Here we demonstrate that this picture fails in finite populations. Using a simple stochastic SIS model, we show that in general there is no analogous optimization principle. We find that successive invasions may in some cases lead to strains that infect a smaller fraction of the host population, and that mutually invasible pathogen strains exist. In the limit of weak selection we demonstrate that an optimization principle does exist, although it differs from R0 maximization. For strains with very large R0, we derive an expression for this local fitness function and use it to establish a lower bound for the error caused by neglecting stochastic effects. Furthermore, we apply this weak selection limit to investigate the selection dynamics in the presence of a trade-off between the virulence and the transmission rate of a pathogen.}, author = {Humplik, Jan and Hill, Alison and Nowak, Martin}, journal = {Journal of Theoretical Biology}, pages = {149 -- 162}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Evolutionary dynamics of infectious diseases in finite populations}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jtbi.2014.06.039}, volume = {360}, year = {2014}, } @article{1929, abstract = {We propose an algorithm for the generalization of cartographic objects that can be used to represent maps on different scales.}, author = {Alexeev, V V and Bogaevskaya, V G and Preobrazhenskaya, M M and Ukhalov, A Y and Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Yakimova, Olga}, issn = {1573-8795}, journal = {Journal of Mathematical Sciences}, number = {6}, pages = {754 -- 760}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{An algorithm for cartographic generalization that preserves global topology}}, doi = {10.1007/s10958-014-2165-8}, volume = {203}, year = {2014}, } @article{1935, abstract = {We consider Ising models in d = 2 and d = 3 dimensions with nearest neighbor ferromagnetic and long-range antiferromagnetic interactions, the latter decaying as (distance)-p, p > 2d, at large distances. If the strength J of the ferromagnetic interaction is larger than a critical value J c, then the ground state is homogeneous. It has been conjectured that when J is smaller than but close to J c, the ground state is periodic and striped, with stripes of constant width h = h(J), and h → ∞ as J → Jc -. (In d = 3 stripes mean slabs, not columns.) Here we rigorously prove that, if we normalize the energy in such a way that the energy of the homogeneous state is zero, then the ratio e 0(J)/e S(J) tends to 1 as J → Jc -, with e S(J) being the energy per site of the optimal periodic striped/slabbed state and e 0(J) the actual ground state energy per site of the system. Our proof comes with explicit bounds on the difference e 0(J)-e S(J) at small but positive J c-J, and also shows that in this parameter range the ground state is striped/slabbed in a certain sense: namely, if one looks at a randomly chosen window, of suitable size ℓ (very large compared to the optimal stripe size h(J)), one finds a striped/slabbed state with high probability.}, author = {Giuliani, Alessandro and Lieb, Élliott and Seiringer, Robert}, issn = {1432-0916}, journal = {Communications in Mathematical Physics}, pages = {333 -- 350}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Formation of stripes and slabs near the ferromagnetic transition}}, doi = {10.1007/s00220-014-1923-2}, volume = {331}, year = {2014}, } @article{1936, abstract = {The social intelligence hypothesis states that the need to cope with complexities of social life has driven the evolution of advanced cognitive abilities. It is usually invoked in the context of challenges arising from complex intragroup structures, hierarchies, and alliances. However, a fundamental aspect of group living remains largely unexplored as a driving force in cognitive evolution: the competition between individuals searching for resources (producers) and conspecifics that parasitize their findings (scroungers). In populations of social foragers, abilities that enable scroungers to steal by outsmarting producers, and those allowing producers to prevent theft by outsmarting scroungers, are likely to be beneficial and may fuel a cognitive arms race. Using analytical theory and agent-based simulations, we present a general model for such a race that is driven by the producer-scrounger game and show that the race's plausibility is dramatically affected by the nature of the evolving abilities. If scrounging and scrounging avoidance rely on separate, strategy-specific cognitive abilities, arms races are short-lived and have a limited effect on cognition. However, general cognitive abilities that facilitate both scrounging and scrounging avoidance undergo stable, long-lasting arms races. Thus, ubiquitous foraging interactions may lead to the evolution of general cognitive abilities in social animals, without the requirement of complex intragroup structures.}, author = {Arbilly, Michal and Weissman, Daniel and Feldman, Marcus and Grodzinski, Uri}, journal = {Behavioral Ecology}, number = {3}, pages = {487 -- 495}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, title = {{An arms race between producers and scroungers can drive the evolution of social cognition}}, doi = {10.1093/beheco/aru002}, volume = {25}, year = {2014}, } @article{1934, abstract = {The plant hormones auxin and cytokinin mutually coordinate their activities to control various aspects of development [1-9], and their crosstalk occurs at multiple levels [10, 11]. Cytokinin-mediated modulation of auxin transport provides an efficient means to regulate auxin distribution in plant organs. Here, we demonstrate that cytokinin does not merely control the overall auxin flow capacity, but might also act as a polarizing cue and control the auxin stream directionality during plant organogenesis. Cytokinin enhances the PIN-FORMED1 (PIN1) auxin transporter depletion at specific polar domains, thus rearranging the cellular PIN polarities and directly regulating the auxin flow direction. This selective cytokinin sensitivity correlates with the PIN protein phosphorylation degree. PIN1 phosphomimicking mutations, as well as enhanced phosphorylation in plants with modulated activities of PIN-specific kinases and phosphatases, desensitize PIN1 to cytokinin. Our results reveal conceptually novel, cytokinin-driven polarization mechanism that operates in developmental processes involving rapid auxin stream redirection, such as lateral root organogenesis, in which a gradual PIN polarity switch defines the growth axis of the newly formed organ.}, author = {Marhavy, Peter and Duclercq, Jérôme and Weller, Benjamin and Feraru, Elena and Bielach, Agnieszka and Offringa, Remko and Friml, Jirí and Schwechheimer, Claus and Murphy, Angus and Benková, Eva}, journal = {Current Biology}, number = {9}, pages = {1031 -- 1037}, publisher = {Cell Press}, title = {{Cytokinin controls polarity of PIN1-dependent Auxin transport during lateral root organogenesis}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cub.2014.04.002}, volume = {24}, year = {2014}, } @article{1932, abstract = {The existence of complex (multiple-step) genetic adaptations that are "irreducible" (i.e., all partial combinations are less fit than the original genotype) is one of the longest standing problems in evolutionary biology. In standard genetics parlance, these adaptations require the crossing of a wide adaptive valley of deleterious intermediate stages. Here, we demonstrate, using a simple model, that evolution can cross wide valleys to produce "irreducibly complex" adaptations by making use of previously cryptic mutations. When revealed by an evolutionary capacitor, previously cryptic mutants have higher initial frequencies than do new mutations, bringing them closer to a valley-crossing saddle in allele frequency space. Moreover, simple combinatorics implies an enormous number of candidate combinations exist within available cryptic genetic variation. We model the dynamics of crossing of a wide adaptive valley after a capacitance event using both numerical simulations and analytical approximations. Although individual valley crossing events become less likely as valleys widen, by taking the combinatorics of genotype space into account, we see that revealing cryptic variation can cause the frequent evolution of complex adaptations.}, author = {Trotter, Meredith and Weissman, Daniel and Peterson, Grant and Peck, Kayla and Masel, Joanna}, journal = {Evolution}, number = {12}, pages = {3357 -- 3367}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Cryptic genetic variation can make "irreducible complexity" a common mode of adaptation in sexual populations}}, doi = {10.1111/evo.12517}, volume = {68}, year = {2014}, } @article{1930, abstract = {(Figure Presented) Data acquisition, numerical inaccuracies, and sampling often introduce noise in measurements and simulations. Removing this noise is often necessary for efficient analysis and visualization of this data, yet many denoising techniques change the minima and maxima of a scalar field. For example, the extrema can appear or disappear, spatially move, and change their value. This can lead to wrong interpretations of the data, e.g., when the maximum temperature over an area is falsely reported being a few degrees cooler because the denoising method is unaware of these features. Recently, a topological denoising technique based on a global energy optimization was proposed, which allows the topology-controlled denoising of 2D scalar fields. While this method preserves the minima and maxima, it is constrained by the size of the data. We extend this work to large 2D data and medium-sized 3D data by introducing a novel domain decomposition approach. It allows processing small patches of the domain independently while still avoiding the introduction of new critical points. Furthermore, we propose an iterative refinement of the solution, which decreases the optimization energy compared to the previous approach and therefore gives smoother results that are closer to the input. We illustrate our technique on synthetic and real-world 2D and 3D data sets that highlight potential applications.}, author = {Günther, David and Jacobson, Alec and Reininghaus, Jan and Seidel, Hans and Sorkine Hornung, Olga and Weinkauf, Tino}, journal = {IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics}, number = {12}, pages = {2585 -- 2594}, publisher = {IEEE}, title = {{Fast and memory-efficient topological denoising of 2D and 3D scalar fields}}, doi = {10.1109/TVCG.2014.2346432}, volume = {20}, year = {2014}, } @article{1933, abstract = {The development of the vertebrate brain requires an exquisite balance between proliferation and differentiation of neural progenitors. Notch signaling plays a pivotal role in regulating this balance, yet the interaction between signaling and receiving cells remains poorly understood. We have found that numerous nascent neurons and/or intermediate neurogenic progenitors expressing the ligand of Notch retain apical endfeet transiently at the ventricular lumen that form adherens junctions (AJs) with the endfeet of progenitors. Forced detachment of the apical endfeet of those differentiating cells by disrupting AJs resulted in precocious neurogenesis that was preceded by the downregulation of Notch signaling. Both Notch1 and its ligand Dll1 are distributed around AJs in the apical endfeet, and these proteins physically interact with ZO-1, a constituent of the AJ. Furthermore, live imaging of a fluorescently tagged Notch1 demonstrated its trafficking from the apical endfoot to the nucleus upon cleavage. Our results identified the apical endfoot as the central site of active Notch signaling to securely prohibit inappropriate differentiation of neural progenitors.}, author = {Hatakeyama, Jun and Wakamatsu, Yoshio and Nagafuchi, Akira and Kageyama, Ryoichiro and Shigemoto, Ryuichi and Shimamura, Kenji}, journal = {Development}, number = {8}, pages = {1671 -- 1682}, publisher = {Company of Biologists}, title = {{Cadherin-based adhesions in the apical endfoot are required for active Notch signaling to control neurogenesis in vertebrates}}, doi = {10.1242/dev.102988}, volume = {141}, year = {2014}, } @article{1931, abstract = {A wealth of experimental evidence suggests that working memory circuits preferentially represent information that is behaviorally relevant. Still, we are missing a mechanistic account of how these representations come about. Here we provide a simple explanation for a range of experimental findings, in light of prefrontal circuits adapting to task constraints by reward-dependent learning. In particular, we model a neural network shaped by reward-modulated spike-timing dependent plasticity (r-STDP) and homeostatic plasticity (intrinsic excitability and synaptic scaling). We show that the experimentally-observed neural representations naturally emerge in an initially unstructured circuit as it learns to solve several working memory tasks. These results point to a critical, and previously unappreciated, role for reward-dependent learning in shaping prefrontal cortex activity.}, author = {Savin, Cristina and Triesch, Jochen}, journal = {Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience}, number = {MAY}, publisher = {Frontiers Research Foundation}, title = {{Emergence of task-dependent representations in working memory circuits}}, doi = {10.3389/fncom.2014.00057}, volume = {8}, year = {2014}, } @article{1937, abstract = {We prove the edge universality of the beta ensembles for any β ≥ 1, provided that the limiting spectrum is supported on a single interval, and the external potential is C4 and regular. We also prove that the edge universality holds for generalized Wigner matrices for all symmetry classes. Moreover, our results allow us to extend bulk universality for beta ensembles from analytic potentials to potentials in class C4.}, author = {Bourgade, Paul and Erdös, László and Yau, Horngtzer}, journal = {Communications in Mathematical Physics}, number = {1}, pages = {261 -- 353}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Edge universality of beta ensembles}}, doi = {10.1007/s00220-014-2120-z}, volume = {332}, year = {2014}, } @misc{1981, abstract = {Variation in mitochondrial DNA is often assumed to be neutral and is used to construct the genealogical relationships among populations and species. However, if extant variation is the result of episodes of positive selection, these genealogies may be incorrect, although this information itself may provide biologically and evolutionary meaningful information. In fact, positive Darwinian selection has been detected in the mitochondrial-encoded subunits that comprise complex I from diverse taxa with seemingly dissimilar bioenergetic life histories, but the functional implications of the selected sites are unknown. Complex I produces roughly 40% of the proton flux that is used to synthesize ATP from ADP, and a functional model based on the high-resolution structure of complex I described a unique biomechanical apparatus for proton translocation. We reported positive selection at sites in this apparatus during the evolution of Pacific salmon, and it appeared this was also the case in published reports from other taxa, but a comparison among studies was difficult because different statistical tests were used to detect selection and oftentimes, specific sites were not reported. Here we review the literature of positive selection in mitochondrial genomes, the statistical tests used to detect selection, and the structural and functional models that are currently available to study the physiological implications of selection. We then search for signatures of positive selection among the coding mitochondrial genomes of 237 species with a common set of tests and verify that the ND5 subunit of complex I is a repeated target of positive Darwinian selection in diverse taxa. We propose a novel hypothesis to explain the results based on their bioenergetic life histories and provide a guide for laboratory and field studies to test this hypothesis.}, author = {Garvin, Michael R and Bielawski, Joseph P and Leonid Sazanov and Gharrett, Anthony J}, booktitle = {Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research}, number = {1}, pages = {1 -- 17}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Review and meta-analysis of natural selection in mitochondrial complex I in metazoans}}, doi = {10.1111/jzs.12079}, volume = {53}, year = {2014}, } @article{1980, abstract = {Non-proton pumping type II NADH dehydrogenase (NDH-2) plays a central role in the respiratory metabolism of bacteria, and in the mitochondria of fungi, plants and protists. The lack of NDH-2 in mammalian mitochondria and its essentiality in important bacterial pathogens suggests these enzymes may represent a potential new drug target to combat microbial pathogens. Here, we report the first crystal structure of a bacterial NDH-2 enzyme at 2.5Å resolution from Caldalkalibacillus thermarum. The NDH-2 structure reveals a homodimeric organization that has a unique dimer interface. NDH-2 is localized to the cytoplasmic membrane by two separated C-terminal membrane-anchoring regions that are essential for membrane localization and FAD binding, but not NDH-2 dimerization. Comparison of bacterial NDH-2 with the yeast NADH dehydrogenase (Ndi1) structure revealed non-overlapping binding sites for quinone and NADH in the bacterial enzyme. The bacterial NDH-2 structure establishes a framework for the structure-based design of small-molecule inhibitors.}, author = {Heikal, Adam and Nakatani, Yoshio and Dunn, Elyse A and Weimar, Marion R and Day, Catherine and Baker, Edward N and Lott, Shaun J and Leonid Sazanov and Cook, Gregory}, journal = {Molecular Microbiology}, number = {5}, pages = {950 -- 964}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Structure of the bacterial type II NADH dehydrogenase: a monotopic membrane protein with an essential role in energy generation}}, doi = {10.1111/mmi.12507}, volume = {91}, year = {2014}, } @article{1979, abstract = {NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) is the first and largest enzyme in the respiratory chain of mitochondria and many bacteria. It couples the transfer of two electrons between NADH and ubiquinone to the translocation of four protons across the membrane. Complex I is an L-shaped assembly formed by the hydrophilic (peripheral) arm, containing all the redox centres performing electron transfer and the membrane arm, containing proton-translocating machinery. Mitochondrial complex I consists of 44 subunits of about 1 MDa in total, whilst the prokaryotic enzyme is simpler and generally consists of 14 conserved “core” subunits. Recently we have determined the first atomic structure of the entire complex I, using the enzyme from Thermus thermophilus (536 kDa, 16 subunits, 9 Fe-S clusters, 64 TM helices). Structure suggests a unique coupling mechanism, with redox energy of electron transfer driving proton translocation via long-range (up to ~200 Å) conformational changes. It resembles a steam engine, with coupling elements (akin to coupling rods) linking parts of this molecular machine.}, author = {Leonid Sazanov}, journal = {Journal of Bioenergetics and Biomembranes}, number = {4}, pages = {247 -- 253}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{The mechanism of coupling between electron transfer and proton translocation in respiratory complex I}}, doi = {10.1007/s10863-014-9554-z}, volume = {46}, year = {2014}, } @article{1989, abstract = {During animal cell division, the cleavage furrow is positioned by microtubules that signal to the actin cortex at the cell midplane. We developed a cell-free system to recapitulate cytokinesis signaling using cytoplasmic extract from Xenopus eggs. Microtubules grew out as asters from artificial centrosomes and met to organize antiparallel overlap zones. These zones blocked the interpenetration of neighboring asters and recruited cytokinesis midzone proteins, including the chromosomal passenger complex (CPC) and centralspindlin. The CPC was transported to overlap zones, which required two motor proteins, Kif4A and a Kif20A paralog. Using supported lipid bilayers to mimic the plasma membrane, we observed the recruitment of cleavage furrow markers, including an active RhoA reporter, at microtubule overlaps. This system opens further approaches to understanding the biophysics of cytokinesis signaling.}, author = {Nguyen, Phuong A and Groen, Aaron C and Martin Loose and Ishihara, Keisuke and Wühr, Martin and Field, Christine M and Mitchison, Timothy J}, journal = {Science}, number = {6206}, pages = {244 -- 247}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Spatial organization of cytokinesis signaling reconstituted in a cell-free system}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1256773}, volume = {346}, year = {2014}, }