@inproceedings{8191, abstract = {There has been a significant amount of research on hardware and software support for efficient concurrent data structures; yet, the question of how to build correct, simple, and scalable data structures has not yet been definitively settled. In this paper, we revisit this question from a minimalist perspective, and ask: what is the smallest amount of synchronization required for correct and efficient concurrent search data structures, and how could this minimal synchronization support be provided in hardware? To address these questions, we introduce memory tagging, a simple hardware mechanism which enables the programmer to "tag" a dynamic set of memory locations, at cache-line granularity, and later validate whether the memory has been concurrently modified, with the possibility of updating one of the underlying locations atomically if validation succeeds. We provide several examples showing that this mechanism can enable fast and arguably simple concurrent data structure designs, such as lists, binary search trees, balanced search trees, range queries, and Software Transactional Memory (STM) implementations. We provide an implementation of memory tags in the Graphite multi-core simulator, showing that the mechanism can be implemented entirely at the level of L1 cache, and that it can enable non-trivial speedups versus existing implementations of the above data structures.}, author = {Alistarh, Dan-Adrian and Brown, Trevor A and Singhal, Nandini}, booktitle = {Annual ACM Symposium on Parallelism in Algorithms and Architectures}, isbn = {9781450369350}, location = {Virtual Event, United States}, number = {7}, pages = {37--49}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, title = {{Memory tagging: Minimalist synchronization for scalable concurrent data structures}}, doi = {10.1145/3350755.3400213}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{7635, abstract = {Concurrent programming can be notoriously complex and error-prone. Programming bugs can arise from a variety of sources, such as operation re-reordering, or incomplete understanding of the memory model. A variety of formal and model checking methods have been developed to address this fundamental difficulty. While technically interesting, existing academic methods are still hard to apply to the large codebases typical of industrial deployments, which limits their practical impact.}, author = {Koval, Nikita and Sokolova, Mariia and Fedorov, Alexander and Alistarh, Dan-Adrian and Tsitelov, Dmitry}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the ACM SIGPLAN Symposium on Principles and Practice of Parallel Programming, PPOPP}, isbn = {9781450368186}, location = {San Diego, CA, United States}, pages = {423--424}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, title = {{Testing concurrency on the JVM with Lincheck}}, doi = {10.1145/3332466.3374503}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{8383, abstract = {We introduce extension-based proofs, a class of impossibility proofs that includes valency arguments. They are modelled as an interaction between a prover and a protocol. Using proofs based on combinatorial topology, it has been shown that it is impossible to deterministically solve k-set agreement among n > k ≥ 2 processes in a wait-free manner. However, it was unknown whether proofs based on simpler techniques were possible. We explain why this impossibility result cannot be obtained by an extension-based proof and, hence, extension-based proofs are limited in power.}, author = {Alistarh, Dan-Adrian and Aspnes, James and Ellen, Faith and Gelashvili, Rati and Zhu, Leqi}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 39th Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing}, isbn = {9781450375825}, location = {Virtual, Italy}, pages = {54--56}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, title = {{Brief Announcement: Why Extension-Based Proofs Fail}}, doi = {10.1145/3382734.3405743}, year = {2020}, } @article{8385, abstract = {We present a method for animating yarn-level cloth effects using a thin-shell solver. We accomplish this through numerical homogenization: we first use a large number of yarn-level simulations to build a model of the potential energy density of the cloth, and then use this energy density function to compute forces in a thin shell simulator. We model several yarn-based materials, including both woven and knitted fabrics. Our model faithfully reproduces expected effects like the stiffness of woven fabrics, and the highly deformable nature and anisotropy of knitted fabrics. Our approach does not require any real-world experiments nor measurements; because the method is based entirely on simulations, it can generate entirely new material models quickly, without the need for testing apparatuses or human intervention. We provide data-driven models of several woven and knitted fabrics, which can be used for efficient simulation with an off-the-shelf cloth solver.}, author = {Sperl, Georg and Narain, Rahul and Wojtan, Christopher J}, issn = {15577368}, journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics}, number = {4}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, title = {{Homogenized yarn-level cloth}}, doi = {10.1145/3386569.3392412}, volume = {39}, year = {2020}, } @article{7956, abstract = {When short-range attractions are combined with long-range repulsions in colloidal particle systems, complex microphases can emerge. Here, we study a system of isotropic particles, which can form lamellar structures or a disordered fluid phase when temperature is varied. We show that, at equilibrium, the lamellar structure crystallizes, while out of equilibrium, the system forms a variety of structures at different shear rates and temperatures above melting. The shear-induced ordering is analyzed by means of principal component analysis and artificial neural networks, which are applied to data of reduced dimensionality. Our results reveal the possibility of inducing ordering by shear, potentially providing a feasible route to the fabrication of ordered lamellar structures from isotropic particles.}, author = {Pȩkalski, J. and Rzadkowski, Wojciech and Panagiotopoulos, A. Z.}, issn = {10897690}, journal = {The Journal of chemical physics}, number = {20}, publisher = {AIP Publishing}, title = {{Shear-induced ordering in systems with competing interactions: A machine learning study}}, doi = {10.1063/5.0005194}, volume = {152}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{8382, abstract = {We present the first deterministic wait-free long-lived snapshot algorithm, using only read and write operations, that guarantees polylogarithmic amortized step complexity in all executions. This is the first non-blocking snapshot algorithm, using reads and writes only, that has sub-linear amortized step complexity in executions of arbitrary length. The key to our construction is a novel implementation of a 2-component max array object which may be of independent interest.}, author = {Baig, Mirza Ahad and Hendler, Danny and Milani, Alessia and Travers, Corentin}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 39th Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing}, isbn = {9781450375825}, location = {Virtual, Italy}, pages = {31--40}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, title = {{Long-lived snapshots with polylogarithmic amortized step complexity}}, doi = {10.1145/3382734.3406005}, year = {2020}, } @article{7428, abstract = {In the superconducting regime of FeTe(1−x)Sex, there exist two types of vortices which are distinguished by the presence or absence of zero-energy states in their core. To understand their origin, we examine the interplay of Zeeman coupling and superconducting pairings in three-dimensional metals with band inversion. Weak Zeeman fields are found to suppress intraorbital spin-singlet pairing, known to localize the states at the ends of the vortices on the surface. On the other hand, an orbital-triplet pairing is shown to be stable against Zeeman interactions, but leads to delocalized zero-energy Majorana modes which extend through the vortex. In contrast, the finite-energy vortex modes remain localized at the vortex ends even when the pairing is of orbital-triplet form. Phenomenologically, this manifests as an observed disappearance of zero-bias peaks within the cores of topological vortices upon an increase of the applied magnetic field. The presence of magnetic impurities in FeTe(1−x)Sex, which are attracted to the vortices, would lead to such Zeeman-induced delocalization of Majorana modes in a fraction of vortices that capture a large enough number of magnetic impurities. Our results provide an explanation for the dichotomy between topological and nontopological vortices recently observed in FeTe(1−x)Sex.}, author = {Ghazaryan, Areg and Lopes, P. L.S. and Hosur, Pavan and Gilbert, Matthew J. and Ghaemi, Pouyan}, issn = {24699969}, journal = {Physical Review B}, number = {2}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Effect of Zeeman coupling on the Majorana vortex modes in iron-based topological superconductors}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevB.101.020504}, volume = {101}, year = {2020}, } @article{8319, abstract = {We demonstrate that releasing atoms into free space from an optical lattice does not deteriorate cavity-generated spin squeezing for metrological purposes. In this work, an ensemble of 500000 spin-squeezed atoms in a high-finesse optical cavity with near-uniform atom-cavity coupling is prepared, released into free space, recaptured in the cavity, and probed. Up to ∼10 dB of metrologically relevant squeezing is retrieved for 700μs free-fall times, and decaying levels of squeezing are realized for up to 3 ms free-fall times. The degradation of squeezing results from loss of atom-cavity coupling homogeneity between the initial squeezed state generation and final collective state readout. A theoretical model is developed to quantify this degradation and this model is experimentally validated.}, author = {Wu, Yunfan and Krishnakumar, Rajiv and Martínez-Rincón, Julián and Malia, Benjamin K. and Hosten, Onur and Kasevich, Mark A.}, issn = {24699934}, journal = {Physical Review A}, number = {1}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Retrieval of cavity-generated atomic spin squeezing after free-space release}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevA.102.012224}, volume = {102}, year = {2020}, } @article{8766, abstract = {The “procedural” approach to animating ocean waves is the dominant algorithm for animating larger bodies of water in interactive applications as well as in off-line productions — it provides high visual quality with a low computational demand. In this paper, we widen the applicability of procedural water wave animation with an extension that guarantees the satisfaction of boundary conditions imposed by terrain while still approximating physical wave behavior. In combination with a particle system that models wave breaking, foam, and spray, this allows us to naturally model waves interacting with beaches and rocks. Our system is able to animate waves at large scales at interactive frame rates on a commodity PC.}, author = {Jeschke, Stefan and Hafner, Christian and Chentanez, Nuttapong and Macklin, Miles and Müller-Fischer, Matthias and Wojtan, Christopher J}, journal = {Computer Graphics forum}, location = {Online Symposium}, number = {8}, pages = {47--54}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{Making procedural water waves boundary-aware}}, doi = {10.1111/cgf.14100}, volume = {39}, year = {2020}, } @article{15055, abstract = {Markov decision processes (MDPs) are the defacto framework for sequential decision making in the presence of stochastic uncertainty. A classical optimization criterion for MDPs is to maximize the expected discounted-sum payoff, which ignores low probability catastrophic events with highly negative impact on the system. On the other hand, risk-averse policies require the probability of undesirable events to be below a given threshold, but they do not account for optimization of the expected payoff. We consider MDPs with discounted-sum payoff with failure states which represent catastrophic outcomes. The objective of risk-constrained planning is to maximize the expected discounted-sum payoff among risk-averse policies that ensure the probability to encounter a failure state is below a desired threshold. Our main contribution is an efficient risk-constrained planning algorithm that combines UCT-like search with a predictor learned through interaction with the MDP (in the style of AlphaZero) and with a risk-constrained action selection via linear programming. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach with experiments on classical MDPs from the literature, including benchmarks with an order of 106 states.}, author = {Brázdil, Tomáš and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Novotný, Petr and Vahala, Jiří}, issn = {2374-3468}, journal = {Proceedings of the 34th AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence}, keywords = {General Medicine}, location = {New York, NY, United States}, number = {06}, pages = {9794--9801}, publisher = {Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence}, title = {{Reinforcement learning of risk-constrained policies in Markov decision processes}}, doi = {10.1609/aaai.v34i06.6531}, volume = {34}, year = {2020}, } @article{15057, abstract = {Vaccinia virus–related kinase (VRK) is an evolutionarily conserved nuclear protein kinase. VRK-1, the single Caenorhabditis elegans VRK ortholog, functions in cell division and germline proliferation. However, the role of VRK-1 in postmitotic cells and adult life span remains unknown. Here, we show that VRK-1 increases organismal longevity by activating the cellular energy sensor, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), via direct phosphorylation. We found that overexpression of vrk-1 in the soma of adult C. elegans increased life span and, conversely, inhibition of vrk-1 decreased life span. In addition, vrk-1 was required for longevity conferred by mutations that inhibit C. elegans mitochondrial respiration, which requires AMPK. VRK-1 directly phosphorylated and up-regulated AMPK in both C. elegans and cultured human cells. Thus, our data show that the somatic nuclear kinase, VRK-1, promotes longevity through AMPK activation, and this function appears to be conserved between C. elegans and humans.}, author = {Park, Sangsoon and Artan, Murat and Han, Seung Hyun and Park, Hae-Eun H. and Jung, Yoonji and Hwang, Ara B. and Shin, Won Sik and Kim, Kyong-Tai and Lee, Seung-Jae V.}, issn = {2375-2548}, journal = {Science Advances}, number = {27}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{VRK-1 extends life span by activation of AMPK via phosphorylation}}, doi = {10.1126/sciadv.aaw7824}, volume = {6}, year = {2020}, } @article{15061, abstract = {The actin cytoskeleton, a dynamic network of actin filaments and associated F-actin–binding proteins, is fundamentally important in eukaryotes. α-Actinins are major F-actin bundlers that are inhibited by Ca2+ in nonmuscle cells. Here we report the mechanism of Ca2+-mediated regulation of Entamoeba histolytica α-actinin-2 (EhActn2) with features expected for the common ancestor of Entamoeba and higher eukaryotic α-actinins. Crystal structures of Ca2+-free and Ca2+-bound EhActn2 reveal a calmodulin-like domain (CaMD) uniquely inserted within the rod domain. Integrative studies reveal an exceptionally high affinity of the EhActn2 CaMD for Ca2+, binding of which can only be regulated in the presence of physiological concentrations of Mg2+. Ca2+ binding triggers an increase in protein multidomain rigidity, reducing conformational flexibility of F-actin–binding domains via interdomain cross-talk and consequently inhibiting F-actin bundling. In vivo studies uncover that EhActn2 plays an important role in phagocytic cup formation and might constitute a new drug target for amoebic dysentery.}, author = {Pinotsis, Nikos and Zielinska, Karolina and Babuta, Mrigya and Arolas, Joan L. and Kostan, Julius and Khan, Muhammad Bashir and Schreiner, Claudia and Testa Salmazo, Anita P and Ciccarelli, Luciano and Puchinger, Martin and Gkougkoulia, Eirini A. and Ribeiro, Euripedes de Almeida and Marlovits, Thomas C. and Bhattacharya, Alok and Djinovic-Carugo, Kristina}, issn = {1091-6490}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, number = {36}, pages = {22101--22112}, publisher = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Calcium modulates the domain flexibility and function of an α-actinin similar to the ancestral α-actinin}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1917269117}, volume = {117}, year = {2020}, } @article{15064, abstract = {We call a continuous self-map that reveals itself through a discrete set of point-value pairs a sampled dynamical system. Capturing the available information with chain maps on Delaunay complexes, we use persistent homology to quantify the evidence of recurrent behavior. We establish a sampling theorem to recover the eigenspaces of the endomorphism on homology induced by the self-map. Using a combinatorial gradient flow arising from the discrete Morse theory for Čech and Delaunay complexes, we construct a chain map to transform the problem from the natural but expensive Čech complexes to the computationally efficient Delaunay triangulations. The fast chain map algorithm has applications beyond dynamical systems.}, author = {Bauer, U. and Edelsbrunner, Herbert and Jablonski, Grzegorz and Mrozek, M.}, issn = {2367-1734}, journal = {Journal of Applied and Computational Topology}, number = {4}, pages = {455--480}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Čech-Delaunay gradient flow and homology inference for self-maps}}, doi = {10.1007/s41468-020-00058-8}, volume = {4}, year = {2020}, } @article{15063, abstract = {We consider the least singular value of a large random matrix with real or complex i.i.d. Gaussian entries shifted by a constant z∈C. We prove an optimal lower tail estimate on this singular value in the critical regime where z is around the spectral edge, thus improving the classical bound of Sankar, Spielman and Teng (SIAM J. Matrix Anal. Appl. 28:2 (2006), 446–476) for the particular shift-perturbation in the edge regime. Lacking Brézin–Hikami formulas in the real case, we rely on the superbosonization formula (Comm. Math. Phys. 283:2 (2008), 343–395).}, author = {Cipolloni, Giorgio and Erdös, László and Schröder, Dominik J}, issn = {2690-1005}, journal = {Probability and Mathematical Physics}, keywords = {General Medicine}, number = {1}, pages = {101--146}, publisher = {Mathematical Sciences Publishers}, title = {{Optimal lower bound on the least singular value of the shifted Ginibre ensemble}}, doi = {10.2140/pmp.2020.1.101}, volume = {1}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{15059, abstract = {In this paper we present a room temperature radiometer that can eliminate the need of using cryostats in satellite payload reducing its weight and improving reliability. The proposed radiometer is based on an electro-optic upconverter that boosts up microwave photons energy by upconverting them into an optical domain what makes them immune to thermal noise even if operating at room temperature. The converter uses a high-quality factor whispering gallery mode (WGM) resonator providing naturally narrow bandwidth and therefore might be useful for applications like microwave hyperspectral sensing. The upconversion process is explained by providing essential information about photon conversion efficiency and sensitivity. To prove the concept, we describe an experiment which shows state-of-the-art photon conversion efficiency n=10-5 per mW of pump power at the frequency of 80 GHz.}, author = {Wasiak, Michal and Botello, Gabriel Santamaria and Abdalmalak, Kerlos Atia and Sedlmeir, Florian and Rueda Sanchez, Alfredo R and Segovia-Vargas, Daniel and Schwefel, Harald G. L. and Munoz, Luis Enrique Garcia}, booktitle = {14th European Conference on Antennas and Propagation}, location = {Copenhagen, Denmark}, publisher = {IEEE}, title = {{Compact millimeter and submillimeter-wave photonic radiometer for cubesats}}, doi = {10.23919/eucap48036.2020.9135962}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{15074, abstract = {We introduce a new graph problem, the token dropping game, and we show how to solve it efficiently in a distributed setting. We use the token dropping game as a tool to design an efficient distributed algorithm for the stable orientation problem, which is a special case of the more general locally optimal semi-matching problem. The prior work by Czygrinow et al. (DISC 2012) finds a locally optimal semi-matching in O(Δ⁵) rounds in graphs of maximum degree Δ, which directly implies an algorithm with the same runtime for stable orientations. We improve the runtime to O(Δ⁴) for stable orientations and prove a lower bound of Ω(Δ) rounds.}, author = {Brandt, Sebastian and Keller, Barbara and Rybicki, Joel and Suomela, Jukka and Uitto, Jara}, booktitle = {34th International Symposium on Distributed Computing}, location = {Virtual}, publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik}, title = {{Brief announcement: Efficient load-balancing through distributed token dropping}}, doi = {10.4230/LIPIcs.DISC.2020.40}, volume = {179}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{15077, abstract = {We consider the following dynamic load-balancing process: given an underlying graph G with n nodes, in each step t≥ 0, one unit of load is created, and placed at a randomly chosen graph node. In the same step, the chosen node picks a random neighbor, and the two nodes balance their loads by averaging them. We are interested in the expected gap between the minimum and maximum loads at nodes as the process progresses, and its dependence on n and on the graph structure. Variants of the above graphical balanced allocation process have been studied previously by Peres, Talwar, and Wieder [Peres et al., 2015], and by Sauerwald and Sun [Sauerwald and Sun, 2015]. These authors left as open the question of characterizing the gap in the case of cycle graphs in the dynamic case, where weights are created during the algorithm’s execution. For this case, the only known upper bound is of 𝒪(n log n), following from a majorization argument due to [Peres et al., 2015], which analyzes a related graphical allocation process. In this paper, we provide an upper bound of 𝒪 (√n log n) on the expected gap of the above process for cycles of length n. We introduce a new potential analysis technique, which enables us to bound the difference in load between k-hop neighbors on the cycle, for any k ≤ n/2. We complement this with a "gap covering" argument, which bounds the maximum value of the gap by bounding its value across all possible subsets of a certain structure, and recursively bounding the gaps within each subset. We provide analytical and experimental evidence that our upper bound on the gap is tight up to a logarithmic factor.}, author = {Alistarh, Dan-Adrian and Nadiradze, Giorgi and Sabour, Amirmojtaba}, booktitle = {47th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming}, location = {Saarbrücken, Germany, Virtual}, publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik}, title = {{Dynamic averaging load balancing on cycles}}, doi = {10.4230/LIPIcs.ICALP.2020.7}, volume = {168}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{15082, abstract = {Two plane drawings of geometric graphs on the same set of points are called disjoint compatible if their union is plane and they do not have an edge in common. For a given set S of 2n points two plane drawings of perfect matchings M1 and M2 (which do not need to be disjoint nor compatible) are disjoint tree-compatible if there exists a plane drawing of a spanning tree T on S which is disjoint compatible to both M1 and M2. We show that the graph of all disjoint tree-compatible perfect geometric matchings on 2n points in convex position is connected if and only if 2n ≥ 10. Moreover, in that case the diameter of this graph is either 4 or 5, independent of n.}, author = {Aichholzer, Oswin and Obmann, Julia and Patak, Pavel and Perz, Daniel and Tkadlec, Josef}, booktitle = {36th European Workshop on Computational Geometry}, location = {Würzburg, Germany, Virtual}, title = {{Disjoint tree-compatible plane perfect matchings}}, year = {2020}, } @article{6748, abstract = {Fitting a function by using linear combinations of a large number N of `simple' components is one of the most fruitful ideas in statistical learning. This idea lies at the core of a variety of methods, from two-layer neural networks to kernel regression, to boosting. In general, the resulting risk minimization problem is non-convex and is solved by gradient descent or its variants. Unfortunately, little is known about global convergence properties of these approaches. Here we consider the problem of learning a concave function f on a compact convex domain Ω⊆ℝd, using linear combinations of `bump-like' components (neurons). The parameters to be fitted are the centers of N bumps, and the resulting empirical risk minimization problem is highly non-convex. We prove that, in the limit in which the number of neurons diverges, the evolution of gradient descent converges to a Wasserstein gradient flow in the space of probability distributions over Ω. Further, when the bump width δ tends to 0, this gradient flow has a limit which is a viscous porous medium equation. Remarkably, the cost function optimized by this gradient flow exhibits a special property known as displacement convexity, which implies exponential convergence rates for N→∞, δ→0. Surprisingly, this asymptotic theory appears to capture well the behavior for moderate values of δ,N. Explaining this phenomenon, and understanding the dependence on δ,N in a quantitative manner remains an outstanding challenge.}, author = {Javanmard, Adel and Mondelli, Marco and Montanari, Andrea}, issn = {1941-7330}, journal = {Annals of Statistics}, number = {6}, pages = {3619--3642}, publisher = {Institute of Mathematical Statistics}, title = {{Analysis of a two-layer neural network via displacement convexity}}, doi = {10.1214/20-AOS1945}, volume = {48}, year = {2020}, } @article{15070, abstract = {This workshop focused on interactions between the various perspectives on the moduli space of Higgs bundles over a Riemann surface. This subject draws on algebraic geometry, geometric topology, geometric analysis and mathematical physics, and the goal was to promote interactions between these various branches of the subject. The main current directions of research were well represented by the participants, and the talks included many from both senior and junior participants.}, author = {Anderson, Lara and Hausel, Tamás and Mazzeo, Rafe and Schaposnik, Laura}, issn = {1660-8933}, journal = {Oberwolfach Reports}, keywords = {Organic Chemistry, Biochemistry}, number = {2}, pages = {1357--1417}, publisher = {European Mathematical Society}, title = {{Geometry and physics of Higgs bundles}}, doi = {10.4171/owr/2019/23}, volume = {16}, year = {2020}, } @article{8741, abstract = {In ecology, climate and other fields, (sub)systems have been identified that can transition into a qualitatively different state when a critical threshold or tipping point in a driving process is crossed. An understanding of those tipping elements is of great interest given the increasing influence of humans on the biophysical Earth system. Complex interactions exist between tipping elements, e.g. physical mechanisms connect subsystems of the climate system. Based on earlier work on such coupled nonlinear systems, we systematically assessed the qualitative long-term behaviour of interacting tipping elements. We developed an understanding of the consequences of interactions on the tipping behaviour allowing for tipping cascades to emerge under certain conditions. The (narrative) application of these qualitative results to real-world examples of interacting tipping elements indicates that tipping cascades with profound consequences may occur: the interacting Greenland ice sheet and thermohaline ocean circulation might tip before the tipping points of the isolated subsystems are crossed. The eutrophication of the first lake in a lake chain might propagate through the following lakes without a crossing of their individual critical nutrient input levels. The possibility of emerging cascading tipping dynamics calls for the development of a unified theory of interacting tipping elements and the quantitative analysis of interacting real-world tipping elements.}, author = {Klose, Ann Kristin and Karle, Volker and Winkelmann, Ricarda and Donges, Jonathan F.}, issn = {20545703}, journal = {Royal Society Open Science}, number = {6}, publisher = {The Royal Society}, title = {{Emergence of cascading dynamics in interacting tipping elements of ecology and climate: Cascading dynamics in tipping elements}}, doi = {10.1098/rsos.200599}, volume = {7}, year = {2020}, } @article{7687, abstract = {A working group, which was established within the Network of Repository Managers (RepManNet), has dealt with common certifications for repositories. In addition, current requirements of the research funding agencies FWF and EU were also taken into account. The Core Trust Seal was examined in more detail. For this purpose, a questionnaire was sent to those organizations that are already certified with CTS in Austria. The answers were summarized and evaluated anonymously. It is recommended to go for a repository certification. Moreover, the development of a DINI certificate in Austria is strongly suggested.}, author = {Ernst, Doris and Novotny, Gertraud and Schönher, Eva Maria}, issn = {1022-2588}, journal = {Mitteilungen der Vereinigung Österreichischer Bibliothekarinnen und Bibliothekare}, number = {1}, pages = {46--59}, publisher = {Vereinigung Osterreichischer Bibliothekarinnen und Bibliothekare}, title = {{(Core Trust) Seal your repository!}}, doi = {10.31263/voebm.v73i1.3491}, volume = {73}, year = {2020}, } @article{15079, abstract = {Large complex systems tend to develop universal patterns that often represent their essential characteristics. For example, the cumulative effects of independent or weakly dependent random variables often yield the Gaussian universality class via the central limit theorem. For non-commutative random variables, e.g. matrices, the Gaussian behavior is often replaced by another universality class, commonly called random matrix statistics. Nearby eigenvalues are strongly correlated, and, remarkably, their correlation structure is universal, depending only on the symmetry type of the matrix. Even more surprisingly, this feature is not restricted to matrices; in fact Eugene Wigner, the pioneer of the field, discovered in the 1950s that distributions of the gaps between energy levels of complicated quantum systems universally follow the same random matrix statistics. This claim has never been rigorously proved for any realistic physical system but experimental data and extensive numerics leave no doubt as to its correctness. Since then random matrices have proved to be extremely useful phenomenological models in a wide range of applications beyond quantum physics that include number theory, statistics, neuroscience, population dynamics, wireless communication and mathematical finance. The ubiquity of random matrices in natural sciences is still a mystery, but recent years have witnessed a breakthrough in the mathematical description of the statistical structure of their spectrum. Random matrices and closely related areas such as log-gases have become an extremely active research area in probability theory. This workshop brought together outstanding researchers from a variety of mathematical backgrounds whose areas of research are linked to random matrices. While there are strong links between their motivations, the techniques used by these researchers span a large swath of mathematics, ranging from purely algebraic techniques to stochastic analysis, classical probability theory, operator algebra, supersymmetry, orthogonal polynomials, etc.}, author = {Erdös, László and Götze, Friedrich and Guionnet, Alice}, issn = {1660-8933}, journal = {Oberwolfach Reports}, number = {4}, pages = {3459--3527}, publisher = {European Mathematical Society}, title = {{Random matrices}}, doi = {10.4171/owr/2019/56}, volume = {16}, year = {2020}, } @article{15072, abstract = {The interaction among fundamental particles in nature leads to many interesting effects in quantum statistical mechanics; examples include superconductivity for charged systems and superfluidity in cold gases. It is a huge challenge for mathematical physics to understand the collective behavior of systems containing a large number of particles, emerging from known microscopic interactions. In this workshop we brought together researchers working on different aspects of many-body quantum mechanics to discuss recent developments, exchange ideas and propose new challenges and research directions.}, author = {Hainzl, Christian and Schlein, Benjamin and Seiringer, Robert and Warzel, Simone}, issn = {1660-8933}, journal = {Oberwolfach Reports}, number = {3}, pages = {2541--2603}, publisher = {European Mathematical Society}, title = {{Many-body quantum systems}}, doi = {10.4171/owr/2019/41}, volume = {16}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{15071, abstract = {A mesophilic methanogenic culture, designated JL01, was isolated from Holocene permafrost in the Russian Arctic [1]. After long-term extensive cultivation at 15°C it turned out to be a tied binary culture of archaeal (JL01) and bacterial (Sphaerochaeta associata GLS2) strains. Strain JL01 was a strict anaerobe and grew on methanol, acetate and methylamines as energy and carbon sources. Cells were irregular coccoid, non-motile, non-spore-forming, and Gram-stainpositive. Optimum conditions for growth were 24-28 oC, pH 6.8–7.3 and 0.075-0.1 M NaCl. Phylogenetic tree reconstructions based on 16S rRNA and concatenated alignment of broadly conserved protein-coding genes revealed its close relation to Methanosarcina mazei S-6 T (similarity 99.5%). The comparison of whole genomic sequences (ANI) of the isolate and the type strain of M.mazei was 98.5%, which is higher than the values recommended for new species. Thus strain JL01 (=VKM B-2370=JCM 31898) represents the first M. mazei isolated from permanently subzero Arcticsediments. The long-term co-cultivation of JL01 with S. associata GLS2T showed the methane production without any additional carbon and energy sources. Genome analysis of S. associata GLS2T revealed putative genes involved in methanochondroithin catabolism.}, author = {Oshurkova, Viktoriia and Troshina, Olga and Trubitsyn, Vladimir and Ryzhmanova, Yana and Bochkareva, Olga and Shcherbakova, Viktoria}, booktitle = {Proceedings of 1st International Electronic Conference on Microbiology}, location = {Virtual}, publisher = {MDPI}, title = {{Characterization of methanosarcina mazei JL01 isolated from holocene arctic permafrost and study of the archaeon cooperation with bacterium Sphaerochaeta associata GLS2T}}, doi = {10.3390/ecm2020-07116}, year = {2020}, } @article{15153, abstract = {Mammalian circadian rhythms are generated by a transcription-based feedback loop in which CLOCK:BMAL1 drives transcription of its repressors (PER1/2, CRY1/2), which ultimately interact with CLOCK:BMAL1 to close the feedback loop with ~24 hr periodicity. Here we pinpoint a key difference between CRY1 and CRY2 that underlies their differential strengths as transcriptional repressors. Both cryptochromes bind the BMAL1 transactivation domain similarly to sequester it from coactivators and repress CLOCK:BMAL1 activity. However, we find that CRY1 is recruited with much higher affinity to the PAS domain core of CLOCK:BMAL1, allowing it to serve as a stronger repressor that lengthens circadian period. We discovered a dynamic serine-rich loop adjacent to the secondary pocket in the photolyase homology region (PHR) domain that regulates differential binding of cryptochromes to the PAS domain core of CLOCK:BMAL1. Notably, binding of the co-repressor PER2 remodels the serine loop of CRY2, making it more CRY1-like and enhancing its affinity for CLOCK:BMAL1.}, author = {Fribourgh, Jennifer L and Srivastava, Ashutosh and Sandate, Colby R and Michael, Alicia Kathleen and Hsu, Peter L and Rakers, Christin and Nguyen, Leslee T and Torgrimson, Megan R and Parico, Gian Carlo G and Tripathi, Sarvind and Zheng, Ning and Lander, Gabriel C and Hirota, Tsuyoshi and Tama, Florence and Partch, Carrie L}, issn = {2050-084X}, journal = {eLife}, keywords = {General Immunology and Microbiology, General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Medicine, General Neuroscience}, publisher = {eLife Sciences Publications}, title = {{Dynamics at the serine loop underlie differential affinity of cryptochromes for CLOCK:BMAL1 to control circadian timing}}, doi = {10.7554/elife.55275}, volume = {9}, year = {2020}, } @article{15152, abstract = {Transcription factors (TFs) regulate gene expression through chromatin where nucleosomes restrict DNA access. To study how TFs bind nucleosome-occupied motifs, we focused on the reprogramming factors OCT4 and SOX2 in mouse embryonic stem cells. We determined TF engagement throughout a nucleosome at base-pair resolution in vitro, enabling structure determination by cryo–electron microscopy at two preferred positions. Depending on motif location, OCT4 and SOX2 differentially distort nucleosomal DNA. At one position, OCT4-SOX2 removes DNA from histone H2A and histone H3; however, at an inverted motif, the TFs only induce local DNA distortions. OCT4 uses one of its two DNA-binding domains to engage DNA in both structures, reading out a partial motif. These findings explain site-specific nucleosome engagement by the pluripotency factors OCT4 and SOX2, and they reveal how TFs distort nucleosomes to access chromatinized motifs.}, author = {Michael, Alicia Kathleen and Grand, Ralph S. and Isbel, Luke and Cavadini, Simone and Kozicka, Zuzanna and Kempf, Georg and Bunker, Richard D. and Schenk, Andreas D. and Graff-Meyer, Alexandra and Pathare, Ganesh R. and Weiss, Joscha and Matsumoto, Syota and Burger, Lukas and Schübeler, Dirk and Thomä, Nicolas H.}, issn = {1095-9203}, journal = {Science}, number = {6498}, pages = {1460--1465}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science }, title = {{Mechanisms of OCT4-SOX2 motif readout on nucleosomes}}, doi = {10.1126/science.abb0074}, volume = {368}, year = {2020}, } @phdthesis{7525, abstract = {The medial habenula (MHb) is an evolutionary conserved epithalamic structure important for the modulation of emotional memory. It is involved in regulation of anxiety, compulsive behavior, addiction (nicotinic and opioid), sexual and feeding behavior. MHb receives inputs from septal regions and projects exclusively to the interpeduncular nucleus (IPN). Distinct sub-regions of the septum project to different subnuclei of MHb: the bed nucleus of anterior commissure projects to dorsal MHb and the triangular septum projects to ventral MHb. Furthermore, the dorsal and ventral MHb project to the lateral and rostral/central IPN, respectively. Importantly, these projections have unique features of prominent co-release of different neurotransmitters and requirement of a peculiar type of calcium channel for release. In general, synaptic neurotransmission requires an activity-dependent influx of Ca2+ into the presynaptic terminal through voltage-gated calcium channels. The calcium channel family most commonly involved in neurotransmitter release comprises three members, P/Q-, N- and R-type with Cav2.1, Cav2.2 and Cav2.3 subunits, respectively. In contrast to most CNS synapses that mainly express Cav2.1 and/or Cav2.2, MHb terminals in the IPN exclusively express Cav2.3. In other parts of the brain, such as the hippocampus, Cav2.3 is mostly located to postsynaptic elements. This unusual presynaptic location of Cav2.3 in the MHb-IPN pathway implies unique mechanisms of glutamate release in this pathway. One potential example of such uniqueness is the facilitation of release by GABAB receptor (GBR) activation. Presynaptic GBRs usually inhibit the release of neurotransmitters by inhibiting presynaptic calcium channels. MHb shows the highest expression levels of GBR in the brain. GBRs comprise two subunits, GABAB1 (GB1) and GABAB2 (GB2), and are associated with auxiliary subunits, called potassium channel tetramerization domain containing proteins (KCTD) 8, 12, 12b and 16. Among these four subunits, KCTD12b is exclusively expressed in ventral MHb, and KCTD8 shows the strongest expression in the whole MHb among other brain regions, indicating that KCTD8 and KCTD12b may be involved in the unique mechanisms of neurotransmitter release mediated by Cav2.3 and regulated by GBRs in this pathway. In the present study, we first verified that neurotransmission in both dorsal and ventral MHb-IPN pathways is mainly mediated by Cav2.3 using a selective blocker of R-type channels, SNX-482. We next found that baclofen, a GBR agonist, has facilitatory effects on release from ventral MHb terminal in rostral IPN, whereas it has inhibitory effects on release from dorsal MHb terminals in lateral IPN, indicating that KCTD12b expressed exclusively in ventral MHb may have a role in the facilitatory effects of GBR activation. In a heterologous expression system using HEK cells, we found that KCTD8 and KCTD12b but not KCTD12 directly bind with Cav2.3. Pre-embedding immunogold electron microscopy data show that Cav2.3 and KCTD12b are distributed most densely in presynaptic active zone in IPN with KCTD12b being present only in rostral/central but not lateral IPN, whereas GABAB, KCTD8 and KCTD12 are distributed most densely in perisynaptic sites with KCTD12 present more frequently in postsynaptic elements and only in rostral/central IPN. In freeze-fracture replica labelling, Cav2.3, KCTD8 and KCTD12b are co-localized with each other in the same active zone indicating that they may form complexes regulating vesicle release in rostral IPN. On electrophysiological studies of wild type (WT) mice, we found that paired-pulse ratio in rostral IPN of KCTD12b knock-out (KO) mice is lower than those of WT and KCTD8 KO mice. Consistent with this finding, in mean variance analysis, release probability in rostral IPN of KCTD12b KO mice is higher than that of WT and KCTD8 KO mice. Although paired-pulse ratios are not different between WT and KCTD8 KO mice, the mean variance analysis revealed significantly lower release probability in rostral IPN of KCTD8 KO than WT mice. These results demonstrate bidirectional regulation of Cav2.3-mediated release by KCTD8 and KCTD12b without GBR activation in rostral IPN. Finally, we examined the baclofen effects in rostral IPN of KCTD8 and KCTD12b KO mice, and found the facilitation of release remained in both KO mice, indicating that the peculiar effects of the GBR activation in this pathway do not depend on the selective expression of these KCTD subunits in ventral MHb. However, we found that presynaptic potentiation of evoked EPSC amplitude by baclofen falls to baseline after washout faster in KCTD12b KO mice than WT, KCTD8 KO and KCTD8/12b double KO mice. This result indicates that KCTD12b is involved in sustained potentiation of vesicle release by GBR activation, whereas KCTD8 is involved in its termination in the absence of KCTD12b. Consistent with these functional findings, replica labelling revealed an increase in density of KCTD8, but not Cav2.3 or GBR at active zone in rostral IPN of KCTD12b KO mice compared with that of WT mice, suggesting that increased association of KCTD8 with Cav2.3 facilitates the release probability and termination of the GBR effect in the absence of KCTD12b. In summary, our study provided new insights into the physiological roles of presynaptic Cav2.3, GBRs and their auxiliary subunits KCTDs at an evolutionary conserved neuronal circuit. Future studies will be required to identify the exact molecular mechanism underlying the GBR-mediated presynaptic potentiation on ventral MHb terminals. It remains to be determined whether the prominent presence of presynaptic KCTDs at active zone could exert similar neuromodulatory functions in different pathways of the brain. }, author = {Bhandari, Pradeep}, issn = {2663-337X}, keywords = {Cav2.3, medial habenula (MHb), interpeduncular nucleus (IPN)}, pages = {79}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{Localization and functional role of Cav2.3 in the medial habenula to interpeduncular nucleus pathway}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:7525}, year = {2020}, } @article{8586, abstract = {Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) of cellular specimens provides insights into biological processes and structures within a native context. However, a major challenge still lies in the efficient and reproducible preparation of adherent cells for subsequent cryo-EM analysis. This is due to the sensitivity of many cellular specimens to the varying seeding and culturing conditions required for EM experiments, the often limited amount of cellular material and also the fragility of EM grids and their substrate. Here, we present low-cost and reusable 3D printed grid holders, designed to improve specimen preparation when culturing challenging cellular samples directly on grids. The described grid holders increase cell culture reproducibility and throughput, and reduce the resources required for cell culturing. We show that grid holders can be integrated into various cryo-EM workflows, including micro-patterning approaches to control cell seeding on grids, and for generating samples for cryo-focused ion beam milling and cryo-electron tomography experiments. Their adaptable design allows for the generation of specialized grid holders customized to a large variety of applications.}, author = {Fäßler, Florian and Zens, Bettina and Hauschild, Robert and Schur, Florian KM}, issn = {1047-8477}, journal = {Journal of Structural Biology}, keywords = {electron microscopy, cryo-EM, EM sample preparation, 3D printing, cell culture}, number = {3}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{3D printed cell culture grid holders for improved cellular specimen preparation in cryo-electron microscopy}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jsb.2020.107633}, volume = {212}, year = {2020}, } @phdthesis{8657, abstract = {Synthesis of proteins – translation – is a fundamental process of life. Quantitative studies anchor translation into the context of bacterial physiology and reveal several mathematical relationships, called “growth laws,” which capture physiological feedbacks between protein synthesis and cell growth. Growth laws describe the dependency of the ribosome abundance as a function of growth rate, which can change depending on the growth conditions. Perturbations of translation reveal that bacteria employ a compensatory strategy in which the reduced translation capability results in increased expression of the translation machinery. Perturbations of translation are achieved in various ways; clinically interesting is the application of translation-targeting antibiotics – translation inhibitors. The antibiotic effects on bacterial physiology are often poorly understood. Bacterial responses to two or more simultaneously applied antibiotics are even more puzzling. The combined antibiotic effect determines the type of drug interaction, which ranges from synergy (the effect is stronger than expected) to antagonism (the effect is weaker) and suppression (one of the drugs loses its potency). In the first part of this work, we systematically measure the pairwise interaction network for translation inhibitors that interfere with different steps in translation. We find that the interactions are surprisingly diverse and tend to be more antagonistic. To explore the underlying mechanisms, we begin with a minimal biophysical model of combined antibiotic action. We base this model on the kinetics of antibiotic uptake and binding together with the physiological response described by the growth laws. The biophysical model explains some drug interactions, but not all; it specifically fails to predict suppression. In the second part of this work, we hypothesize that elusive suppressive drug interactions result from the interplay between ribosomes halted in different stages of translation. To elucidate this putative mechanism of drug interactions between translation inhibitors, we generate translation bottlenecks genetically using in- ducible control of translation factors that regulate well-defined translation cycle steps. These perturbations accurately mimic antibiotic action and drug interactions, supporting that the interplay of different translation bottlenecks partially causes these interactions. We extend this approach by varying two translation bottlenecks simultaneously. This approach reveals the suppression of translocation inhibition by inhibited translation. We rationalize this effect by modeling dense traffic of ribosomes that move on transcripts in a translation factor-mediated manner. This model predicts a dissolution of traffic jams caused by inhibited translocation when the density of ribosome traffic is reduced by lowered initiation. We base this model on the growth laws and quantitative relationships between different translation and growth parameters. In the final part of this work, we describe a set of tools aimed at quantification of physiological and translation parameters. We further develop a simple model that directly connects the abundance of a translation factor with the growth rate, which allows us to extract physiological parameters describing initiation. We demonstrate the development of tools for measuring translation rate. This thesis showcases how a combination of high-throughput growth rate mea- surements, genetics, and modeling can reveal mechanisms of drug interactions. Furthermore, by a gradual transition from combinations of antibiotics to precise genetic interventions, we demonstrated the equivalency between genetic and chemi- cal perturbations of translation. These findings tile the path for quantitative studies of antibiotic combinations and illustrate future approaches towards the quantitative description of translation.}, author = {Kavcic, Bor}, isbn = {978-3-99078-011-4}, issn = {2663-337X}, pages = {271}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{Perturbations of protein synthesis: from antibiotics to genetics and physiology}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:8657}, year = {2020}, } @article{7473, abstract = {How structural and functional properties of synapses relate to each other is a fundamental question in neuroscience. Electrophysiology has elucidated mechanisms of synaptic transmission, and electron microscopy (EM) has provided insight into morphological properties of synapses. Here we describe an enhanced method for functional EM (“flash and freeze”), combining optogenetic stimulation with high-pressure freezing. We demonstrate that the improved method can be applied to intact networks in acute brain slices and organotypic slice cultures from mice. As a proof of concept, we probed vesicle pool changes during synaptic transmission at the hippocampal mossy fiber-CA3 pyramidal neuron synapse. Our findings show overlap of the docked vesicle pool and the functionally defined readily releasable pool and provide evidence of fast endocytosis at this synapse. Functional EM with acute slices and slice cultures has the potential to reveal the structural and functional mechanisms of transmission in intact, genetically perturbed, and disease-affected synapses.}, author = {Borges Merjane, Carolina and Kim, Olena and Jonas, Peter M}, issn = {0896-6273}, journal = {Neuron}, pages = {992--1006}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Functional electron microscopy (“Flash and Freeze”) of identified cortical synapses in acute brain slices}}, doi = {10.1016/j.neuron.2019.12.022}, volume = {105}, year = {2020}, } @article{8250, abstract = {Antibiotics that interfere with translation, when combined, interact in diverse and difficult-to-predict ways. Here, we explain these interactions by “translation bottlenecks”: points in the translation cycle where antibiotics block ribosomal progression. To elucidate the underlying mechanisms of drug interactions between translation inhibitors, we generate translation bottlenecks genetically using inducible control of translation factors that regulate well-defined translation cycle steps. These perturbations accurately mimic antibiotic action and drug interactions, supporting that the interplay of different translation bottlenecks causes these interactions. We further show that growth laws, combined with drug uptake and binding kinetics, enable the direct prediction of a large fraction of observed interactions, yet fail to predict suppression. However, varying two translation bottlenecks simultaneously supports that dense traffic of ribosomes and competition for translation factors account for the previously unexplained suppression. These results highlight the importance of “continuous epistasis” in bacterial physiology.}, author = {Kavcic, Bor and Tkačik, Gašper and Bollenbach, Tobias}, issn = {2041-1723}, journal = {Nature Communications}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Mechanisms of drug interactions between translation-inhibiting antibiotics}}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-020-17734-z}, volume = {11}, year = {2020}, } @unpublished{7673, abstract = {Combining drugs can improve the efficacy of treatments. However, predicting the effect of drug combinations is still challenging. The combined potency of drugs determines the drug interaction, which is classified as synergistic, additive, antagonistic, or suppressive. While probabilistic, non-mechanistic models exist, there is currently no biophysical model that can predict antibiotic interactions. Here, we present a physiologically relevant model of the combined action of antibiotics that inhibit protein synthesis by targeting the ribosome. This model captures the kinetics of antibiotic binding and transport, and uses bacterial growth laws to predict growth in the presence of antibiotic combinations. We find that this biophysical model can produce all drug interaction types except suppression. We show analytically that antibiotics which cannot bind to the ribosome simultaneously generally act as substitutes for one another, leading to additive drug interactions. Previously proposed null expectations for higher-order drug interactions follow as a limiting case of our model. We further extend the model to include the effects of direct physical or allosteric interactions between individual drugs on the ribosome. Notably, such direct interactions profoundly change the combined drug effect, depending on the kinetic parameters of the drugs used. The model makes additional predictions for the effects of resistance genes on drug interactions and for interactions between ribosome-targeting antibiotics and antibiotics with other targets. These findings enhance our understanding of the interplay between drug action and cell physiology and are a key step toward a general framework for predicting drug interactions.}, author = {Kavcic, Bor and Tkačik, Gašper and Bollenbach, Tobias}, booktitle = {bioRxiv}, publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory}, title = {{A minimal biophysical model of combined antibiotic action}}, doi = {10.1101/2020.04.18.047886}, year = {2020}, } @article{8002, abstract = {Wound healing in plant tissues, consisting of rigid cell wall-encapsulated cells, represents a considerable challenge and occurs through largely unknown mechanisms distinct from those in animals. Owing to their inability to migrate, plant cells rely on targeted cell division and expansion to regenerate wounds. Strict coordination of these wound-induced responses is essential to ensure efficient, spatially restricted wound healing. Single-cell tracking by live imaging allowed us to gain mechanistic insight into the wound perception and coordination of wound responses after laser-based wounding in Arabidopsis root. We revealed a crucial contribution of the collapse of damaged cells in wound perception and detected an auxin increase specific to cells immediately adjacent to the wound. This localized auxin increase balances wound-induced cell expansion and restorative division rates in a dose-dependent manner, leading to tumorous overproliferation when the canonical TIR1 auxin signaling is disrupted. Auxin and wound-induced turgor pressure changes together also spatially define the activation of key components of regeneration, such as the transcription regulator ERF115. Our observations suggest that the wound signaling involves the sensing of collapse of damaged cells and a local auxin signaling activation to coordinate the downstream transcriptional responses in the immediate wound vicinity.}, author = {Hörmayer, Lukas and Montesinos López, Juan C and Marhavá, Petra and Benková, Eva and Yoshida, Saiko and Friml, Jiří}, issn = {1091-6490}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, number = {26}, publisher = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Wounding-induced changes in cellular pressure and localized auxin signalling spatially coordinate restorative divisions in roots}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.2003346117}, volume = {117}, year = {2020}, } @phdthesis{7680, abstract = {Proteins and their complex dynamic interactions regulate cellular mechanisms from sensing and transducing extracellular signals, to mediating genetic responses, and sustaining or changing cell morphology. To manipulate these protein-protein interactions (PPIs) that govern the behavior and fate of cells, synthetically constructed, genetically encoded tools provide the means to precisely target proteins of interest (POIs), and control their subcellular localization and activity in vitro and in vivo. Ideal synthetic tools react to an orthogonal cue, i.e. a trigger that does not activate any other endogenous process, thereby allowing manipulation of the POI alone. In optogenetics, naturally occurring photosensory domain from plants, algae and bacteria are re-purposed and genetically fused to POIs. Illumination with light of a specific wavelength triggers a conformational change that can mediate PPIs, such as dimerization or oligomerization. By using light as a trigger, these tools can be activated with high spatial and temporal precision, on subcellular and millisecond scales. Chemogenetic tools consist of protein domains that recognize and bind small molecules. By genetic fusion to POIs, these domains can mediate PPIs upon addition of their specific ligands, which are often synthetically designed to provide highly specific interactions and exhibit good bioavailability. Most optogenetic tools to mediate PPIs are based on well-studied photoreceptors responding to red, blue or near-UV light, leaving a striking gap in the green band of the visible light spectrum. Among both optogenetic and chemogenetic tools, there is an abundance of methods to induce PPIs, but tools to disrupt them require UV illumination, rely on covalent linkage and subsequent enzymatic cleavage or initially result in protein clustering of unknown stoichiometry. This work describes how the recently structurally and photochemically characterized green-light responsive cobalamin-binding domains (CBDs) from bacterial transcription factors were re-purposed to function as a green-light responsive optogenetic tool. In contrast to previously engineered optogenetic tools, CBDs do not induce PPI, but rather confer a PPI already upon expression, which can be rapidly disrupted by illumination. This was employed to mimic inhibition of constitutive activity of a growth factor receptor, and successfully implement for cell signalling in mammalian cells and in vivo to rescue development in zebrafish. This work further describes the development and application of a chemically induced de-dimerizer (CDD) based on a recently identified and structurally described bacterial oxyreductase. CDD forms a dimer upon expression in absence of its cofactor, the flavin derivative F420. Safety and of domain expression and ligand exposure are demonstrated in vitro and in vivo in zebrafish. The system is further applied to inhibit cell signalling output from a chimeric receptor upon F420 treatment. CBDs and CDD expand the repertoire of synthetic tools by providing novel mechanisms of mediating PPIs, and by recognizing previously not utilized cues. In the future, they can readily be combined with existing synthetic tools to functionally manipulate PPIs in vitro and in vivo.}, author = {Kainrath, Stephanie}, issn = {2663-337X}, pages = {98}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{Synthetic tools for optogenetic and chemogenetic inhibition of cellular signals}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:7680}, year = {2020}, } @phdthesis{8620, abstract = {The development of the human brain occurs through a tightly regulated series of dynamic and adaptive processes during prenatal and postnatal life. A disruption of this strictly orchestrated series of events can lead to a number of neurodevelopmental conditions, including Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASDs). ASDs are a very common, etiologically and phenotypically heterogeneous group of disorders sharing the core symptoms of social interaction and communication deficits and restrictive and repetitive interests and behaviors. They are estimated to affect one in 59 individuals in the U.S. and, over the last three decades, mutations in more than a hundred genetic loci have been convincingly linked to ASD pathogenesis. Yet, for the vast majority of these ASD-risk genes their role during brain development and precise molecular function still remain elusive. De novo loss of function mutations in the ubiquitin ligase-encoding gene Cullin 3 (CUL3) lead to ASD. In the study described here, we used Cul3 mouse models to evaluate the consequences of Cul3 mutations in vivo. Our results show that Cul3 heterozygous knockout mice exhibit deficits in motor coordination as well as ASD-relevant social and cognitive impairments. Cul3+/-, Cul3+/fl Emx1-Cre and Cul3fl/fl Emx1-Cre mutant brains display cortical lamination abnormalities due to defective migration of post-mitotic excitatory neurons, as well as reduced numbers of excitatory and inhibitory neurons. In line with the observed abnormal cortical organization, Cul3 heterozygous deletion is associated with decreased spontaneous excitatory and inhibitory activity in the cortex. At the molecular level we show that Cul3 regulates cytoskeletal and adhesion protein abundance in the mouse embryonic cortex. Abnormal regulation of cytoskeletal proteins in Cul3 mutant neural cells results in atypical organization of the actin mesh at the cell leading edge. Of note, heterozygous deletion of Cul3 in adult mice does not induce the majority of the behavioral defects observed in constitutive Cul3 haploinsufficient animals, pointing to a critical time-window for Cul3 deficiency. In conclusion, our data indicate that Cul3 plays a critical role in the regulation of cytoskeletal proteins and neuronal migration. ASD-associated defects and behavioral abnormalities are primarily due to dosage sensitive Cul3 functions at early brain developmental stages.}, author = {Morandell, Jasmin}, issn = {2663-337X}, pages = {138}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{Illuminating the role of Cul3 in autism spectrum disorder pathogenesis}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:8620}, year = {2020}, } @phdthesis{8340, abstract = {Mitochondria are sites of oxidative phosphorylation in eukaryotic cells. Oxidative phosphorylation operates by a chemiosmotic mechanism made possible by redox-driven proton pumping machines which establish a proton motive force across the inner mitochondrial membrane. This electrochemical proton gradient is used to drive ATP synthesis, which powers the majority of cellular processes such as protein synthesis, locomotion and signalling. In this thesis I investigate the structures and molecular mechanisms of two inner mitochondrial proton pumping enzymes, respiratory complex I and transhydrogenase. I present the first high-resolution structure of the full transhydrogenase from any species, and a significantly improved structure of complex I. Improving the resolution from 3.3 Å available previously to up to 2.3 Å in this thesis allowed us to model bound water molecules, crucial in the proton pumping mechanism. For both enzymes, up to five cryo-EM datasets with different substrates and inhibitors bound were solved to delineate the catalytic cycle and understand the proton pumping mechanism. In transhydrogenase, the proton channel is gated by reversible detachment of the NADP(H)-binding domain which opens the proton channel to the opposite sites of the membrane. In complex I, the proton channels are gated by reversible protonation of key glutamate and lysine residues and breaking of the water wire connecting the proton pumps with the quinone reduction site. The tight coupling between the redox and the proton pumping reactions in transhydrogenase is achieved by controlling the NADP(H) exchange which can only happen when the NADP(H)-binding domain interacts with the membrane domain. In complex I, coupling is achieved by cycling of the whole complex between the closed state, in which quinone can get reduced, and the open state, in which NADH can induce quinol ejection from the binding pocket. On the basis of these results I propose detailed mechanisms for catalytic cycles of transhydrogenase and complex I that are consistent with a large amount of previous work. In both enzymes, conformational and electrostatic mechanisms contribute to the overall catalytic process. Results presented here could be used for better understanding of the human pathologies arising from deficiencies of complex I or transhydrogenase and could be used to develop novel therapies.}, author = {Kampjut, Domen}, isbn = {978-3-99078-008-4}, issn = {2663-337X}, pages = {242}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{Molecular mechanisms of mitochondrial redox-coupled proton pumping enzymes}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:8340}, year = {2020}, } @unpublished{7800, abstract = {De novo loss of function mutations in the ubiquitin ligase-encoding gene Cullin3 (CUL3) lead to autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Here, we used Cul3 mouse models to evaluate the consequences of Cul3 mutations in vivo. Our results show that Cul3 haploinsufficient mice exhibit deficits in motor coordination as well as ASD-relevant social and cognitive impairments. Cul3 mutant brain displays cortical lamination abnormalities due to defective neuronal migration and reduced numbers of excitatory and inhibitory neurons. In line with the observed abnormal columnar organization, Cul3 haploinsufficiency is associated with decreased spontaneous excitatory and inhibitory activity in the cortex. At the molecular level, employing a quantitative proteomic approach, we show that Cul3 regulates cytoskeletal and adhesion protein abundance in mouse embryos. Abnormal regulation of cytoskeletal proteins in Cul3 mutant neuronal cells results in atypical organization of the actin mesh at the cell leading edge, likely causing the observed migration deficits. In contrast to these important functions early in development, Cul3 deficiency appears less relevant at adult stages. In fact, induction of Cul3 haploinsufficiency in adult mice does not result in the behavioral defects observed in constitutive Cul3 haploinsufficient animals. Taken together, our data indicate that Cul3 has a critical role in the regulation of cytoskeletal proteins and neuronal migration and that ASD-associated defects and behavioral abnormalities are primarily due to Cul3 functions at early developmental stages.}, author = {Morandell, Jasmin and Schwarz, Lena A and Basilico, Bernadette and Tasciyan, Saren and Nicolas, Armel and Sommer, Christoph M and Kreuzinger, Caroline and Knaus, Lisa and Dobler, Zoe and Cacci, Emanuele and Danzl, Johann G and Novarino, Gaia}, booktitle = {bioRxiv}, publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory}, title = {{Cul3 regulates cytoskeleton protein homeostasis and cell migration during a critical window of brain development}}, doi = {10.1101/2020.01.10.902064 }, year = {2020}, } @article{8131, abstract = {The possibility to generate construct valid animal models enabled the development and testing of therapeutic strategies targeting the core features of autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). At the same time, these studies highlighted the necessity of identifying sensitive developmental time windows for successful therapeutic interventions. Animal and human studies also uncovered the possibility to stratify the variety of ASDs in molecularly distinct subgroups, potentially facilitating effective treatment design. Here, we focus on the molecular pathways emerging as commonly affected by mutations in diverse ASD-risk genes, on their role during critical windows of brain development and the potential treatments targeting these biological processes.}, author = {Basilico, Bernadette and Morandell, Jasmin and Novarino, Gaia}, issn = {18790380}, journal = {Current Opinion in Genetics and Development}, number = {12}, pages = {126--137}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Molecular mechanisms for targeted ASD treatments}}, doi = {10.1016/j.gde.2020.06.004}, volume = {65}, year = {2020}, } @article{8434, abstract = {Efficient migration on adhesive surfaces involves the protrusion of lamellipodial actin networks and their subsequent stabilization by nascent adhesions. The actin-binding protein lamellipodin (Lpd) is thought to play a critical role in lamellipodium protrusion, by delivering Ena/VASP proteins onto the growing plus ends of actin filaments and by interacting with the WAVE regulatory complex, an activator of the Arp2/3 complex, at the leading edge. Using B16-F1 melanoma cell lines, we demonstrate that genetic ablation of Lpd compromises protrusion efficiency and coincident cell migration without altering essential parameters of lamellipodia, including their maximal rate of forward advancement and actin polymerization. We also confirmed lamellipodia and migration phenotypes with CRISPR/Cas9-mediated Lpd knockout Rat2 fibroblasts, excluding cell type-specific effects. Moreover, computer-aided analysis of cell-edge morphodynamics on B16-F1 cell lamellipodia revealed that loss of Lpd correlates with reduced temporal protrusion maintenance as a prerequisite of nascent adhesion formation. We conclude that Lpd optimizes protrusion and nascent adhesion formation by counteracting frequent, chaotic retraction and membrane ruffling.This article has an associated First Person interview with the first author of the paper. }, author = {Dimchev, Georgi A and Amiri, Behnam and Humphries, Ashley C. and Schaks, Matthias and Dimchev, Vanessa and Stradal, Theresia E. B. and Faix, Jan and Krause, Matthias and Way, Michael and Falcke, Martin and Rottner, Klemens}, issn = {1477-9137}, journal = {Journal of Cell Science}, keywords = {Cell Biology}, number = {7}, publisher = {The Company of Biologists}, title = {{Lamellipodin tunes cell migration by stabilizing protrusions and promoting adhesion formation}}, doi = {10.1242/jcs.239020}, volume = {133}, year = {2020}, } @article{7889, abstract = {Autoluminescent plants engineered to express a bacterial bioluminescence gene cluster in plastids have not been widely adopted because of low light output. We engineered tobacco plants with a fungal bioluminescence system that converts caffeic acid (present in all plants) into luciferin and report self-sustained luminescence that is visible to the naked eye. Our findings could underpin development of a suite of imaging tools for plants.}, author = {Mitiouchkina, Tatiana and Mishin, Alexander S. and Gonzalez Somermeyer, Louisa and Markina, Nadezhda M. and Chepurnyh, Tatiana V. and Guglya, Elena B. and Karataeva, Tatiana A. and Palkina, Kseniia A. and Shakhova, Ekaterina S. and Fakhranurova, Liliia I. and Chekova, Sofia V. and Tsarkova, Aleksandra S. and Golubev, Yaroslav V. and Negrebetsky, Vadim V. and Dolgushin, Sergey A. and Shalaev, Pavel V. and Shlykov, Dmitry and Melnik, Olesya A. and Shipunova, Victoria O. and Deyev, Sergey M. and Bubyrev, Andrey I. and Pushin, Alexander S. and Choob, Vladimir V. and Dolgov, Sergey V. and Kondrashov, Fyodor and Yampolsky, Ilia V. and Sarkisyan, Karen S.}, issn = {1546-1696}, journal = {Nature Biotechnology}, pages = {944--946}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Plants with genetically encoded autoluminescence}}, doi = {10.1038/s41587-020-0500-9}, volume = {38}, year = {2020}, } @unpublished{9750, abstract = {Tension of the actomyosin cell cortex plays a key role in determining cell-cell contact growth and size. The level of cortical tension outside of the cell-cell contact, when pulling at the contact edge, scales with the total size to which a cell-cell contact can grow1,2. Here we show in zebrafish primary germ layer progenitor cells that this monotonic relationship only applies to a narrow range of cortical tension increase, and that above a critical threshold, contact size inversely scales with cortical tension. This switch from cortical tension increasing to decreasing progenitor cell-cell contact size is caused by cortical tension promoting E-cadherin anchoring to the actomyosin cytoskeleton, thereby increasing clustering and stability of E-cadherin at the contact. Once tension-mediated E-cadherin stabilization at the contact exceeds a critical threshold level, the rate by which the contact expands in response to pulling forces from the cortex sharply drops, leading to smaller contacts at physiologically relevant timescales of contact formation. Thus, the activity of cortical tension in expanding cell-cell contact size is limited by tension stabilizing E-cadherin-actin complexes at the contact.}, author = {Slovakova, Jana and Sikora, Mateusz K and Caballero Mancebo, Silvia and Krens, Gabriel and Kaufmann, Walter and Huljev, Karla and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, booktitle = {bioRxiv}, pages = {41}, publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory}, title = {{Tension-dependent stabilization of E-cadherin limits cell-cell contact expansion}}, doi = {10.1101/2020.11.20.391284}, year = {2020}, } @article{7885, abstract = {Eukaryotic cells migrate by coupling the intracellular force of the actin cytoskeleton to the environment. While force coupling is usually mediated by transmembrane adhesion receptors, especially those of the integrin family, amoeboid cells such as leukocytes can migrate extremely fast despite very low adhesive forces1. Here we show that leukocytes cannot only migrate under low adhesion but can also transmit forces in the complete absence of transmembrane force coupling. When confined within three-dimensional environments, they use the topographical features of the substrate to propel themselves. Here the retrograde flow of the actin cytoskeleton follows the texture of the substrate, creating retrograde shear forces that are sufficient to drive the cell body forwards. Notably, adhesion-dependent and adhesion-independent migration are not mutually exclusive, but rather are variants of the same principle of coupling retrograde actin flow to the environment and thus can potentially operate interchangeably and simultaneously. As adhesion-free migration is independent of the chemical composition of the environment, it renders cells completely autonomous in their locomotive behaviour.}, author = {Reversat, Anne and Gärtner, Florian R and Merrin, Jack and Stopp, Julian A and Tasciyan, Saren and Aguilera Servin, Juan L and De Vries, Ingrid and Hauschild, Robert and Hons, Miroslav and Piel, Matthieu and Callan-Jones, Andrew and Voituriez, Raphael and Sixt, Michael K}, issn = {14764687}, journal = {Nature}, pages = {582–585}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Cellular locomotion using environmental topography}}, doi = {10.1038/s41586-020-2283-z}, volume = {582}, year = {2020}, } @article{7426, abstract = {This paper presents a novel abstraction technique for analyzing Lyapunov and asymptotic stability of polyhedral switched systems. A polyhedral switched system is a hybrid system in which the continuous dynamics is specified by polyhedral differential inclusions, the invariants and guards are specified by polyhedral sets and the switching between the modes do not involve reset of variables. A finite state weighted graph abstracting the polyhedral switched system is constructed from a finite partition of the state–space, such that the satisfaction of certain graph conditions, such as the absence of cycles with product of weights on the edges greater than (or equal) to 1, implies the stability of the system. However, the graph is in general conservative and hence, the violation of the graph conditions does not imply instability. If the analysis fails to establish stability due to the conservativeness in the approximation, a counterexample (cycle with product of edge weights greater than or equal to 1) indicating a potential reason for the failure is returned. Further, a more precise approximation of the switched system can be constructed by considering a finer partition of the state–space in the construction of the finite weighted graph. We present experimental results on analyzing stability of switched systems using the above method.}, author = {Garcia Soto, Miriam and Prabhakar, Pavithra}, issn = {1751-570X}, journal = {Nonlinear Analysis: Hybrid Systems}, number = {5}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Abstraction based verification of stability of polyhedral switched systems}}, doi = {10.1016/j.nahs.2020.100856}, volume = {36}, year = {2020}, } @phdthesis{8983, abstract = {Metabolic adaptation is a critical feature of migrating cells. It tunes the metabolic programs of migrating cells to allow them to efficiently exert their crucial roles in development, inflammatory responses and tumor metastasis. Cell migration through physically challenging contexts requires energy. However, how the metabolic reprogramming that underlies in vivo cell invasion is controlled is still unanswered. In my PhD project, I identify a novel conserved metabolic shift in Drosophila melanogaster immune cells that by modulating their bioenergetic potential controls developmentally programmed tissue invasion. We show that this regulation requires a novel conserved nuclear protein, named Atossa. Atossa enhances the transcription of a set of proteins, including an RNA helicase Porthos and two metabolic enzymes, each of which increases the tissue invasion of leading Drosophila macrophages and can rescue the atossa mutant phenotype. Porthos selectively regulates the translational efficiency of a subset of mRNAs containing a 5’-UTR cis-regulatory TOP-like sequence. These 5’TOPL mRNA targets encode mitochondrial-related proteins, including subunits of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) components III and V and other metabolic-related proteins. Porthos powers up mitochondrial OXPHOS to engender a sufficient ATP supply, which is required for tissue invasion of leading macrophages. Atossa’s two vertebrate orthologs rescue the invasion defect. In my PhD project, I elucidate that Atossa displays a conserved developmental metabolic control to modulate metabolic capacities and the cellular energy state, through altered transcription and translation, to aid the tissue infiltration of leading cells into energy demanding barriers.}, author = {Emtenani, Shamsi}, issn = {2663-337X}, pages = {141}, publisher = {Institute of Science and Technology Austria}, title = {{Metabolic regulation of Drosophila macrophage tissue invasion}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:8983}, year = {2020}, } @unpublished{8557, abstract = {The infiltration of immune cells into tissues underlies the establishment of tissue resident macrophages, and responses to infections and tumors. Yet the mechanisms immune cells utilize to negotiate tissue barriers in living organisms are not well understood, and a role for cortical actin has not been examined. Here we find that the tissue invasion of Drosophila macrophages, also known as plasmatocytes or hemocytes, utilizes enhanced cortical F-actin levels stimulated by the Drosophila member of the fos proto oncogene transcription factor family (Dfos, Kayak). RNA sequencing analysis and live imaging show that Dfos enhances F-actin levels around the entire macrophage surface by increasing mRNA levels of the membrane spanning molecular scaffold tetraspanin TM4SF, and the actin cross-linking filamin Cheerio which are themselves required for invasion. Cortical F-actin levels are critical as expressing a dominant active form of Diaphanous, a actin polymerizing Formin, can rescue the Dfos Dominant Negative macrophage invasion defect. In vivo imaging shows that Dfos is required to enhance the efficiency of the initial phases of macrophage tissue entry. Genetic evidence argues that this Dfos-induced program in macrophages counteracts the constraint produced by the tension of surrounding tissues and buffers the mechanical properties of the macrophage nucleus from affecting tissue entry. We thus identify tuning the cortical actin cytoskeleton through Dfos as a key process allowing efficient forward movement of an immune cell into surrounding tissues.}, author = {Belyaeva, Vera and Wachner, Stephanie and Gridchyn, Igor and Linder, Markus and Emtenani, Shamsi and György, Attila and Sibilia, Maria and Siekhaus, Daria E}, booktitle = {bioRxiv}, title = {{Cortical actin properties controlled by Drosophila Fos aid macrophage infiltration against surrounding tissue resistance}}, doi = {10.1101/2020.09.18.301481}, year = {2020}, } @unpublished{8831, abstract = {Holes in planar Ge have high mobilities, strong spin-orbit interaction and electrically tunable g-factors, and are therefore emerging as a promising candidate for hybrid superconductorsemiconductor devices. This is further motivated by the observation of supercurrent transport in planar Ge Josephson Field effect transistors (JoFETs). A key challenge towards hybrid germanium quantum technology is the design of high quality interfaces and superconducting contacts that are robust against magnetic fields. By combining the assets of Al, which has a long superconducting coherence, and Nb, which has a significant superconducting gap, we form low-disordered JoFETs with large ICRN products that are capable of withstanding high magnetic fields. We furthermore demonstrate the ability of phase-biasing individual JoFETs opening up an avenue to explore topological superconductivity in planar Ge. The persistence of superconductivity in the reported hybrid devices beyond 1.8 T paves the way towards integrating spin qubits and proximity-induced superconductivity on the same chip.}, author = {Aggarwal, Kushagra and Hofmann, Andrea C and Jirovec, Daniel and Prieto Gonzalez, Ivan and Sammak, Amir and Botifoll, Marc and Marti-Sanchez, Sara and Veldhorst, Menno and Arbiol, Jordi and Scappucci, Giordano and Katsaros, Georgios}, booktitle = {arXiv}, title = {{Enhancement of proximity induced superconductivity in planar Germanium}}, year = {2020}, } @article{8532, abstract = {The molecular anatomy of synapses defines their characteristics in transmission and plasticity. Precise measurements of the number and distribution of synaptic proteins are important for our understanding of synapse heterogeneity within and between brain regions. Freeze–fracture replica immunogold electron microscopy enables us to analyze them quantitatively on a two-dimensional membrane surface. Here, we introduce Darea software, which utilizes deep learning for analysis of replica images and demonstrate its usefulness for quick measurements of the pre- and postsynaptic areas, density and distribution of gold particles at synapses in a reproducible manner. We used Darea for comparing glutamate receptor and calcium channel distributions between hippocampal CA3-CA1 spine synapses on apical and basal dendrites, which differ in signaling pathways involved in synaptic plasticity. We found that apical synapses express a higher density of α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors and a stronger increase of AMPA receptors with synaptic size, while basal synapses show a larger increase in N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors with size. Interestingly, AMPA and NMDA receptors are segregated within postsynaptic sites and negatively correlated in density among both apical and basal synapses. In the presynaptic sites, Cav2.1 voltage-gated calcium channels show similar densities in apical and basal synapses with distributions consistent with an exclusion zone model of calcium channel-release site topography.}, author = {Kleindienst, David and Montanaro-Punzengruber, Jacqueline-Claire and Bhandari, Pradeep and Case, Matthew J and Fukazawa, Yugo and Shigemoto, Ryuichi}, issn = {14220067}, journal = {International Journal of Molecular Sciences}, number = {18}, publisher = {MDPI}, title = {{Deep learning-assisted high-throughput analysis of freeze-fracture replica images applied to glutamate receptors and calcium channels at hippocampal synapses}}, doi = {10.3390/ijms21186737}, volume = {21}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{7810, abstract = {Interprocedural data-flow analyses form an expressive and useful paradigm of numerous static analysis applications, such as live variables analysis, alias analysis and null pointers analysis. The most widely-used framework for interprocedural data-flow analysis is IFDS, which encompasses distributive data-flow functions over a finite domain. On-demand data-flow analyses restrict the focus of the analysis on specific program locations and data facts. This setting provides a natural split between (i) an offline (or preprocessing) phase, where the program is partially analyzed and analysis summaries are created, and (ii) an online (or query) phase, where analysis queries arrive on demand and the summaries are used to speed up answering queries. In this work, we consider on-demand IFDS analyses where the queries concern program locations of the same procedure (aka same-context queries). We exploit the fact that flow graphs of programs have low treewidth to develop faster algorithms that are space and time optimal for many common data-flow analyses, in both the preprocessing and the query phase. We also use treewidth to develop query solutions that are embarrassingly parallelizable, i.e. the total work for answering each query is split to a number of threads such that each thread performs only a constant amount of work. Finally, we implement a static analyzer based on our algorithms, and perform a series of on-demand analysis experiments on standard benchmarks. Our experimental results show a drastic speed-up of the queries after only a lightweight preprocessing phase, which significantly outperforms existing techniques.}, author = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Goharshady, Amir Kafshdar and Ibsen-Jensen, Rasmus and Pavlogiannis, Andreas}, booktitle = {European Symposium on Programming}, isbn = {9783030449131}, issn = {16113349}, location = {Dublin, Ireland}, pages = {112--140}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Optimal and perfectly parallel algorithms for on-demand data-flow analysis}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-44914-8_5}, volume = {12075}, year = {2020}, } @inproceedings{8728, abstract = {Discrete-time Markov Chains (MCs) and Markov Decision Processes (MDPs) are two standard formalisms in system analysis. Their main associated quantitative objectives are hitting probabilities, discounted sum, and mean payoff. Although there are many techniques for computing these objectives in general MCs/MDPs, they have not been thoroughly studied in terms of parameterized algorithms, particularly when treewidth is used as the parameter. This is in sharp contrast to qualitative objectives for MCs, MDPs and graph games, for which treewidth-based algorithms yield significant complexity improvements. In this work, we show that treewidth can also be used to obtain faster algorithms for the quantitative problems. For an MC with n states and m transitions, we show that each of the classical quantitative objectives can be computed in O((n+m)⋅t2) time, given a tree decomposition of the MC with width t. Our results also imply a bound of O(κ⋅(n+m)⋅t2) for each objective on MDPs, where κ is the number of strategy-iteration refinements required for the given input and objective. Finally, we make an experimental evaluation of our new algorithms on low-treewidth MCs and MDPs obtained from the DaCapo benchmark suite. Our experiments show that on low-treewidth MCs and MDPs, our algorithms outperform existing well-established methods by one or more orders of magnitude.}, author = {Asadi, Ali and Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Goharshady, Amir Kafshdar and Mohammadi, Kiarash and Pavlogiannis, Andreas}, booktitle = {Automated Technology for Verification and Analysis}, isbn = {9783030591519}, issn = {1611-3349}, location = {Hanoi, Vietnam}, pages = {253--270}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Faster algorithms for quantitative analysis of MCs and MDPs with small treewidth}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-59152-6_14}, volume = {12302}, year = {2020}, }