TY - JOUR AB - Surface curvature both emerges from, and influences the behavior of, living objects at length scales ranging from cell membranes to single cells to tissues and organs. The relevance of surface curvature in biology is supported by numerous experimental and theoretical investigations in recent years. In this review, first, a brief introduction to the key ideas of surface curvature in the context of biological systems is given and the challenges that arise when measuring surface curvature are discussed. Giving an overview of the emergence of curvature in biological systems, its significance at different length scales becomes apparent. On the other hand, summarizing current findings also shows that both single cells and entire cell sheets, tissues or organisms respond to curvature by modulating their shape and their migration behavior. Finally, the interplay between the distribution of morphogens or micro-organisms and the emergence of curvature across length scales is addressed with examples demonstrating these key mechanistic principles of morphogenesis. Overall, this review highlights that curved interfaces are not merely a passive by-product of the chemical, biological, and mechanical processes but that curvature acts also as a signal that co-determines these processes. AU - Schamberger, Barbara AU - Ziege, Ricardo AU - Anselme, Karine AU - Ben Amar, Martine AU - Bykowski, Michał AU - Castro, André P.G. AU - Cipitria, Amaia AU - Coles, Rhoslyn A. AU - Dimova, Rumiana AU - Eder, Michaela AU - Ehrig, Sebastian AU - Escudero, Luis M. AU - Evans, Myfanwy E. AU - Fernandes, Paulo R. AU - Fratzl, Peter AU - Geris, Liesbet AU - Gierlinger, Notburga AU - Hannezo, Edouard B AU - Iglič, Aleš AU - Kirkensgaard, Jacob J.K. AU - Kollmannsberger, Philip AU - Kowalewska, Łucja AU - Kurniawan, Nicholas A. AU - Papantoniou, Ioannis AU - Pieuchot, Laurent AU - Pires, Tiago H.V. AU - Renner, Lars D. AU - Sageman-Furnas, Andrew O. AU - Schröder-Turk, Gerd E. AU - Sengupta, Anupam AU - Sharma, Vikas R. AU - Tagua, Antonio AU - Tomba, Caterina AU - Trepat, Xavier AU - Waters, Sarah L. AU - Yeo, Edwina F. AU - Roschger, Andreas AU - Bidan, Cécile M. AU - Dunlop, John W.C. ID - 12710 IS - 13 JF - Advanced Materials SN - 0935-9648 TI - Curvature in biological systems: Its quantification, emergence, and implications across the scales VL - 35 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Coherent flows of self-propelled particles are characterized by vortices and jets that sustain chaotic flows, referred to as active turbulence. Here, we reveal a crossover between defect-free active turbulence and active turbulence laden with topological defects. Interestingly, we show that concurrent to the crossover from defect-free to defect-laden active turbulence is the restoration of the previously broken SO(2) symmetry signaled by the fast decay of the two-point correlations. By stability analyses of the topological charge density field, we provide theoretical insights on the criterion for the crossover to the defect-laden active turbulent state. Despite the distinct symmetry features between these two active turbulence regimes, the flow fluctuations exhibit universal statistical scaling behaviors at large scales, while the spectrum of polarity fluctuations decays exponentially at small length scales compared to the active energy injection length. These findings reveal a dynamical crossover between distinct spatiotemporal organization patterns in polar active matter. AU - Andersen, Benjamin H. AU - Renaud, Julian B AU - Rønning, Jonas AU - Angheluta, Luiza AU - Doostmohammadi, Amin ID - 14377 IS - 6 JF - Physical Review Fluids KW - Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes KW - Modeling and Simulation KW - Computational Mechanics SN - 2469-990X TI - Symmetry-restoring crossover from defect-free to defect-laden turbulence in polar active matter VL - 8 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Photoisomerization of azobenzenes from their stable E isomer to the metastable Z state is the basis of numerous applications of these molecules. However, this reaction typically requires ultraviolet light, which limits applicability. In this study, we introduce disequilibration by sensitization under confinement (DESC), a supramolecular approach to induce the E-to-Z isomerization by using light of a desired color, including red. DESC relies on a combination of a macrocyclic host and a photosensitizer, which act together to selectively bind and sensitize E-azobenzenes for isomerization. The Z isomer lacks strong affinity for and is expelled from the host, which can then convert additional E-azobenzenes to the Z state. In this way, the host–photosensitizer complex converts photon energy into chemical energy in the form of out-of-equilibrium photostationary states, including ones that cannot be accessed through direct photoexcitation. AU - Gemen, Julius AU - Church, Jonathan R. AU - Ruoko, Tero-Petri AU - Durandin, Nikita AU - Białek, Michał J. AU - Weissenfels, Maren AU - Feller, Moran AU - Kazes, Miri AU - Borin, Veniamin A. AU - Odaybat, Magdalena AU - Kalepu, Rishir AU - Diskin-Posner, Yael AU - Oron, Dan AU - Fuchter, Matthew J. AU - Priimagi, Arri AU - Schapiro, Igor AU - Klajn, Rafal ID - 13340 IS - 6664 JF - Science TI - Disequilibrating azoarenes by visible-light sensitization under confinement VL - 381 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The elasticity of disordered and polydisperse polymer networks is a fundamental problem of soft matter physics that is still open. Here, we self-assemble polymer networks via simulations of a mixture of bivalent and tri- or tetravalent patchy particles, which result in an exponential strand length distribution analogous to that of experimental randomly cross-linked systems. After assembly, the network connectivity and topology are frozen and the resulting system is characterized. We find that the fractal structure of the network depends on the number density at which the assembly has been carried out, but that systems with the same mean valence and same assembly density have the same structural properties. Moreover, we compute the long-time limit of the mean-squared displacement, also known as the (squared) localization length, of the cross-links and of the middle monomers of the strands, showing that the dynamics of long strands is well described by the tube model. Finally, we find a relation connecting these two localization lengths at high density and connect the cross-link localization length to the shear modulus of the system. AU - Sorichetti, Valerio AU - Ninarello, Andrea AU - Ruiz-Franco, José AU - Hugouvieux, Virginie AU - Zaccarelli, Emanuela AU - Micheletti, Cristian AU - Kob, Walter AU - Rovigatti, Lorenzo ID - 12705 IS - 7 JF - Journal of Chemical Physics SN - 0021-9606 TI - Structure and elasticity of model disordered, polydisperse, and defect-free polymer networks VL - 158 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We study turn-based stochastic zero-sum games with lexicographic preferences over objectives. Stochastic games are standard models in control, verification, and synthesis of stochastic reactive systems that exhibit both randomness as well as controllable and adversarial non-determinism. Lexicographic order allows one to consider multiple objectives with a strict preference order. To the best of our knowledge, stochastic games with lexicographic objectives have not been studied before. For a mixture of reachability and safety objectives, we show that deterministic lexicographically optimal strategies exist and memory is only required to remember the already satisfied and violated objectives. For a constant number of objectives, we show that the relevant decision problem is in NP∩coNP, matching the current known bound for single objectives; and in general the decision problem is PSPACE-hard and can be solved in NEXPTIME∩coNEXPTIME. We present an algorithm that computes the lexicographically optimal strategies via a reduction to the computation of optimal strategies in a sequence of single-objectives games. For omega-regular objectives, we restrict our analysis to one-player games, also known as Markov decision processes. We show that lexicographically optimal strategies exist and need either randomization or finite memory. We present an algorithm that solves the relevant decision problem in polynomial time. We have implemented our algorithms and report experimental results on various case studies. AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu AU - Katoen, Joost P AU - Mohr, Stefanie AU - Weininger, Maximilian AU - Winkler, Tobias ID - 12738 JF - Formal Methods in System Design TI - Stochastic games with lexicographic objectives ER - TY - GEN AB - The zip file includes source data used in the manuscript "CCR7 acts as both a sensor and a sink for CCL19 to coordinate collective leukocyte migration", as well as a representative Jupyter notebook to reproduce the main figures. Please see the preprint on bioRxiv and the DOI link there to access the final published version. Note the title change between the preprint and the published manuscript. A sample script for particle-based simulations of collective chemotaxis by self-generated gradients is also included (see Self-generated_chemotaxis_sample_script.ipynb) to generate exemplary cell trajectories. A detailed description of the simulation setup is provided in the supplementary information of the manuscipt. AU - Ucar, Mehmet C ID - 14279 TI - Source data for the manuscript "CCR7 acts as both a sensor and a sink for CCL19 to coordinate collective leukocyte migration" ER - TY - JOUR AB - We consider large non-Hermitian random matrices X with complex, independent, identically distributed centred entries and show that the linear statistics of their eigenvalues are asymptotically Gaussian for test functions having 2+ϵ derivatives. Previously this result was known only for a few special cases; either the test functions were required to be analytic [72], or the distribution of the matrix elements needed to be Gaussian [73], or at least match the Gaussian up to the first four moments [82, 56]. We find the exact dependence of the limiting variance on the fourth cumulant that was not known before. The proof relies on two novel ingredients: (i) a local law for a product of two resolvents of the Hermitisation of X with different spectral parameters and (ii) a coupling of several weakly dependent Dyson Brownian motions. These methods are also the key inputs for our analogous results on the linear eigenvalue statistics of real matrices X that are presented in the companion paper [32]. AU - Cipolloni, Giorgio AU - Erdös, László AU - Schröder, Dominik J ID - 10405 IS - 5 JF - Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics SN - 0010-3640 TI - Central limit theorem for linear eigenvalue statistics of non-Hermitian random matrices VL - 76 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Mathematical models often aim to describe a complicated mechanism in a cohesive and simple manner. However, reaching perfect balance between being simple enough or overly simplistic is a challenging task. Frequently, game-theoretic models have an underlying assumption that players, whenever they choose to execute a specific action, do so perfectly. In fact, it is rare that action execution perfectly coincides with intentions of individuals, giving rise to behavioural mistakes. The concept of incompetence of players was suggested to address this issue in game-theoretic settings. Under the assumption of incompetence, players have non-zero probabilities of executing a different strategy from the one they chose, leading to stochastic outcomes of the interactions. In this article, we survey results related to the concept of incompetence in classic as well as evolutionary game theory and provide several new results. We also suggest future extensions of the model and argue why it is important to take into account behavioural mistakes when analysing interactions among players in both economic and biological settings. AU - Graham, Thomas AU - Kleshnina, Maria AU - Filar, Jerzy A. ID - 10770 JF - Dynamic Games and Applications SN - 2153-0785 TI - Where do mistakes lead? A survey of games with incompetent players VL - 13 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We study direct integrals of quadratic and Dirichlet forms. We show that each quasi-regular Dirichlet space over a probability space admits a unique representation as a direct integral of irreducible Dirichlet spaces, quasi-regular for the same underlying topology. The same holds for each quasi-regular strongly local Dirichlet space over a metrizable Luzin σ-finite Radon measure space, and admitting carré du champ operator. In this case, the representation is only projectively unique. AU - Dello Schiavo, Lorenzo ID - 10145 JF - Potential Analysis SN - 0926-2601 TI - Ergodic decomposition of Dirichlet forms via direct integrals and applications VL - 58 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The study of RNAs has become one of the most influential research fields in contemporary biology and biomedicine. In the last few years, new sequencing technologies have produced an explosion of new and exciting discoveries in the field but have also given rise to many open questions. Defining these questions, together with old, long-standing gaps in our knowledge, is the spirit of this article. The breadth of topics within RNA biology research is vast, and every aspect of the biology of these molecules contains countless exciting open questions. Here, we asked 12 groups to discuss their most compelling question among some plant RNA biology topics. The following vignettes cover RNA alternative splicing; RNA dynamics; RNA translation; RNA structures; R-loops; epitranscriptomics; long non-coding RNAs; small RNA production and their functions in crops; small RNAs during gametogenesis and in cross-kingdom RNA interference; and RNA-directed DNA methylation. In each section, we will present the current state-of-the-art in plant RNA biology research before asking the questions that will surely motivate future discoveries in the field. We hope this article will spark a debate about the future perspective on RNA biology and provoke novel reflections in the reader. AU - Manavella, Pablo A AU - Godoy Herz, Micaela A AU - Kornblihtt, Alberto R AU - Sorenson, Reed AU - Sieburth, Leslie E AU - Nakaminami, Kentaro AU - Seki, Motoaki AU - Ding, Yiliang AU - Sun, Qianwen AU - Kang, Hunseung AU - Ariel, Federico D AU - Crespi, Martin AU - Giudicatti, Axel J AU - Cai, Qiang AU - Jin, Hailing AU - Feng, Xiaoqi AU - Qi, Yijun AU - Pikaard, Craig S ID - 12669 IS - 6 JF - The Plant Cell KW - Cell Biology KW - Plant Science SN - 1040-4651 TI - Beyond transcription: compelling open questions in plant RNA biology VL - 35 ER -