TY - CHAP AB - Immunolocalization is a valuable tool for cell biology research that allows to rapidly determine the localization and expression levels of endogenous proteins. In plants, whole-mount in situ immunolocalization remains a challenging method, especially in tissues protected by waxy layers and complex cell wall carbohydrates. Here, we present a robust method for whole-mount in situ immunolocalization in primary root meristems and lateral root primordia in Arabidopsis thaliana. For good epitope preservation, fixation is done in an alkaline paraformaldehyde/glutaraldehyde mixture. This fixative is suitable for detecting a wide range of proteins, including integral transmembrane proteins and proteins peripherally attached to the plasma membrane. From initiation until emergence from the primary root, lateral root primordia are surrounded by several layers of differentiated tissues with a complex cell wall composition that interferes with the efficient penetration of all buffers. Therefore, immunolocalization in early lateral root primordia requires a modified method, including a strong solvent treatment for removal of hydrophobic barriers and a specific cocktail of cell wall-degrading enzymes. The presented method allows for easy, reliable, and high-quality in situ detection of the subcellular localization of endogenous proteins in primary and lateral root meristems without the need of time-consuming crosses or making translational fusions to fluorescent proteins. AU - Karampelias, Michael AU - Tejos, Ricardo AU - Friml, Jirí AU - Vanneste, Steffen ED - Ristova, Daniela ED - Barbez, Elke ID - 411 T2 - Root Development. Methods and Protocols TI - Optimized whole mount in situ immunolocalization for Arabidopsis thaliana root meristems and lateral root primordia VL - 1761 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Inhibition of the endoplasmic reticulum stress pathway may hold the key to Zika virus-associated microcephaly treatment. AU - Novarino, Gaia ID - 456 IS - 423 JF - Science Translational Medicine TI - Zika-associated microcephaly: Reduce the stress and race for the treatment VL - 10 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In 2013, a publication repository was implemented at IST Austria and 2015 after a thorough preparation phase a data repository was implemented - both based on the Open Source Software EPrints. In this text, designed as field report, we will reflect on our experiences with Open Source Software in general and specifically with EPrints regarding technical aspects but also regarding their characteristics of the user community. The second part is a pleading for including the end users in the process of implementation, adaption and evaluation. AU - Petritsch, Barbara AU - Porsche, Jana ID - 53 IS - 1 JF - VÖB Mitteilungen TI - IST PubRep and IST DataRep: the institutional repositories at IST Austria VL - 71 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We consider the problem of consensus in the challenging classic model. In this model, the adversary is adaptive; it can choose which processors crash at any point during the course of the algorithm. Further, communication is via asynchronous message passing: there is no known upper bound on the time to send a message from one processor to another, and all messages and coin flips are seen by the adversary. We describe a new randomized consensus protocol with expected message complexity O(n2log2n) when fewer than n / 2 processes may fail by crashing. This is an almost-linear improvement over the best previously known protocol, and within logarithmic factors of a known Ω(n2) message lower bound. The protocol further ensures that no process sends more than O(nlog3n) messages in expectation, which is again within logarithmic factors of optimal. We also present a generalization of the algorithm to an arbitrary number of failures t, which uses expected O(nt+t2log2t) total messages. Our approach is to build a message-efficient, resilient mechanism for aggregating individual processor votes, implementing the message-passing equivalent of a weak shared coin. Roughly, in our protocol, a processor first announces its votes to small groups, then propagates them to increasingly larger groups as it generates more and more votes. To bound the number of messages that an individual process might have to send or receive, the protocol progressively increases the weight of generated votes. The main technical challenge is bounding the impact of votes that are still “in flight” (generated, but not fully propagated) on the final outcome of the shared coin, especially since such votes might have different weights. We achieve this by leveraging the structure of the algorithm, and a technical argument based on martingale concentration bounds. Overall, we show that it is possible to build an efficient message-passing implementation of a shared coin, and in the process (almost-optimally) solve the classic consensus problem in the asynchronous message-passing model. AU - Alistarh, Dan-Adrian AU - Aspnes, James AU - King, Valerie AU - Saia, Jared ID - 536 IS - 6 JF - Distributed Computing SN - 01782770 TI - Communication-efficient randomized consensus VL - 31 ER - TY - JOUR AB - We analyse the canonical Bogoliubov free energy functional in three dimensions at low temperatures in the dilute limit. We prove existence of a first-order phase transition and, in the limit (Formula presented.), we determine the critical temperature to be (Formula presented.) to leading order. Here, (Formula presented.) is the critical temperature of the free Bose gas, ρ is the density of the gas and a is the scattering length of the pair-interaction potential V. We also prove asymptotic expansions for the free energy. In particular, we recover the Lee–Huang–Yang formula in the limit (Formula presented.). AU - Napiórkowski, Marcin M AU - Reuvers, Robin AU - Solovej, Jan ID - 554 IS - 1 JF - Communications in Mathematical Physics SN - 00103616 TI - The Bogoliubov free energy functional II: The dilute Limit VL - 360 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Primary neuronal cell culture preparations are widely used to investigate synaptic functions. This chapter describes a detailed protocol for the preparation of a neuronal cell culture in which giant calyx-type synaptic terminals are formed. This chapter also presents detailed protocols for utilizing the main technical advantages provided by such a preparation, namely, labeling and imaging of synaptic organelles and electrophysiological recordings directly from presynaptic terminals. AU - Dimitrov, Dimitar AU - Guillaud, Laurent AU - Eguchi, Kohgaku AU - Takahashi, Tomoyuki ED - Skaper, Stephen D. ID - 562 T2 - Neurotrophic Factors TI - Culture of mouse giant central nervous system synapses and application for imaging and electrophysiological analyses VL - 1727 ER - TY - CHAP AB - Graph-based games are an important tool in computer science. They have applications in synthesis, verification, refinement, and far beyond. We review graphbased games with objectives on infinite plays. We give definitions and algorithms to solve the games and to give a winning strategy. The objectives we consider are mostly Boolean, but we also look at quantitative graph-based games and their objectives. Synthesis aims to turn temporal logic specifications into correct reactive systems. We explain the reduction of synthesis to graph-based games (or equivalently tree automata) using synthesis of LTL specifications as an example. We treat the classical approach that uses determinization of parity automata and more modern approaches. AU - Bloem, Roderick AU - Chatterjee, Krishnendu AU - Jobstmann, Barbara ED - Henzinger, Thomas A ED - Clarke, Edmund M. ED - Veith, Helmut ED - Bloem, Roderick ID - 59 SN - 978-3-319-10574-1 T2 - Handbook of Model Checking TI - Graph games and reactive synthesis ER - TY - CHAP AB - Model checking is a computer-assisted method for the analysis of dynamical systems that can be modeled by state-transition systems. Drawing from research traditions in mathematical logic, programming languages, hardware design, and theoretical computer science, model checking is now widely used for the verification of hardware and software in industry. This chapter is an introduction and short survey of model checking. The chapter aims to motivate and link the individual chapters of the handbook, and to provide context for readers who are not familiar with model checking. AU - Clarke, Edmund AU - Henzinger, Thomas A AU - Veith, Helmut ED - Henzinger, Thomas A ID - 60 T2 - Handbook of Model Checking TI - Introduction to model checking ER - TY - CHAP AB - We prove that there is no strongly regular graph (SRG) with parameters (460; 153; 32; 60). The proof is based on a recent lower bound on the number of 4-cliques in a SRG and some applications of Euclidean representation of SRGs. AU - Bondarenko, Andriy AU - Mellit, Anton AU - Prymak, Andriy AU - Radchenko, Danylo AU - Viazovska, Maryna ID - 61 T2 - Contemporary Computational Mathematics TI - There is no strongly regular graph with parameters (460; 153; 32; 60) ER - TY - JOUR AB - Neurons develop elaborate morphologies that provide a model for understanding cellular architecture. By studying C. elegans sensory dendrites, we previously identified genes that act to promote the extension of ciliated sensory dendrites during embryogenesis. Interestingly, the nonciliated dendrite of the oxygen-sensing neuron URX is not affected by these genes, suggesting it develops through a distinct mechanism. Here, we use a visual forward genetic screen to identify mutants that affect URX dendrite morphogenesis. We find that disruption of the MAP kinase MAPK-15 or the βH-spectrin SMA-1 causes a phenotype opposite to what we had seen before: dendrites extend normally during embryogenesis but begin to overgrow as the animals reach adulthood, ultimately extending up to 150% of their normal length. SMA-1 is broadly expressed and acts non-cell-autonomously, while MAPK-15 is expressed in many sensory neurons including URX and acts cell-autonomously. MAPK-15 acts at the time of overgrowth, localizes at the dendrite ending, and requires its kinase activity, suggesting it acts locally in time and space to constrain dendrite growth. Finally, we find that the oxygen-sensing guanylate cyclase GCY-35, which normally localizes at the dendrite ending, is localized throughout the overgrown region, and that overgrowth can be suppressed by overexpressing GCY-35 or by genetically mimicking elevated cGMP signaling. These results suggest that overgrowth may correspond to expansion of a sensory compartment at the dendrite ending, reminiscent of the remodeling of sensory cilia or dendritic spines. Thus, in contrast to established pathways that promote dendrite growth during early development, our results reveal a distinct mechanism that constrains dendrite growth throughout the life of the animal, possibly by controlling the size of a sensory compartment at the dendrite ending. AU - McLachlan, Ian G. AU - Beets, Isabel AU - de Bono, Mario AU - Heiman, Maxwell G. ID - 6111 IS - 6 JF - PLOS Genetics SN - 1553-7404 TI - A neuronal MAP kinase constrains growth of a Caenorhabditis elegans sensory dendrite throughout the life of the organism VL - 14 ER -