TY - JOUR AB - Amplitude demodulation is a classical operation used in signal processing. For a long time, its effective applications in practice have been limited to narrowband signals. In this work, we generalize amplitude demodulation to wideband signals. We pose demodulation as a recovery problem of an oversampled corrupted signal and introduce special iterative schemes belonging to the family of alternating projection algorithms to solve it. Sensibly chosen structural assumptions on the demodulation outputs allow us to reveal the high inferential accuracy of the method over a rich set of relevant signals. This new approach surpasses current state-of-the-art demodulation techniques apt to wideband signals in computational efficiency by up to many orders of magnitude with no sacrifice in quality. Such performance opens the door for applications of the amplitude demodulation procedure in new contexts. In particular, the new method makes online and large-scale offline data processing feasible, including the calculation of modulator-carrier pairs in higher dimensions and poor sampling conditions, independent of the signal bandwidth. We illustrate the utility and specifics of applications of the new method in practice by using natural speech and synthetic signals. AU - Gabrielaitis, Mantas ID - 9828 JF - IEEE Transactions on Signal Processing SN - 1053-587X TI - Fast and accurate amplitude demodulation of wideband signals VL - 69 ER - TY - COMP AB - This archive contains the missing sweater mesh animations and displacement models for the code of "Mechanics-Aware Deformation of Yarn Pattern Geometry" Code Repository: https://git.ist.ac.at/gsperl/MADYPG AU - Sperl, Georg AU - Narain, Rahul AU - Wojtan, Christopher J ID - 9327 TI - Mechanics-Aware Deformation of Yarn Pattern Geometry (Additional Animation/Model Data) ER - TY - JOUR AB - We study an effective one-dimensional quantum model that includes friction and spin-orbit coupling (SOC), and show that the model exhibits spin polarization when both terms are finite. Most important, strong spin polarization can be observed even for moderate SOC, provided that the friction is strong. Our findings might help to explain the pronounced effect of chirality on spin distribution and transport in chiral molecules. In particular, our model implies static magnetic properties of a chiral molecule, which lead to Shiba-like states when a molecule is placed on a superconductor, in accordance with recent experimental data. AU - Volosniev, Artem AU - Alpern, Hen AU - Paltiel, Yossi AU - Millo, Oded AU - Lemeshko, Mikhail AU - Ghazaryan, Areg ID - 9770 IS - 2 JF - Physical Review B SN - 2469-9950 TI - Interplay between friction and spin-orbit coupling as a source of spin polarization VL - 104 ER - TY - JOUR AB - The Nearest neighbour search (NNS) is a fundamental problem in many application domains dealing with multidimensional data. In a concurrent setting, where dynamic modifications are allowed, a linearizable implementation of the NNS is highly desirable.This paper introduces the LockFree-kD-tree (LFkD-tree ): a lock-free concurrent kD-tree, which implements an abstract data type (ADT) that provides the operations Add, Remove, Contains, and NNS. Our implementation is linearizable. The operations in the LFkD-tree use single-word read and compare-and-swap (Image 1 ) atomic primitives, which are readily supported on available multi-core processors. We experimentally evaluate the LFkD-tree using several benchmarks comprising real-world and synthetic datasets. The experiments show that the presented design is scalable and achieves significant speed-up compared to the implementations of an existing sequential kD-tree and a recently proposed multidimensional indexing structure, PH-tree. AU - Chatterjee, Bapi AU - Walulya, Ivan AU - Tsigas, Philippas ID - 9827 JF - Theoretical Computer Science KW - Concurrent data structure KW - kD-tree KW - Nearest neighbor search KW - Similarity search KW - Lock-free KW - Linearizability SN - 0304-3975 TI - Concurrent linearizable nearest neighbour search in LockFree-kD-tree VL - 886 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Parent-of-origin–dependent gene expression in mammals and flowering plants results from differing chromatin imprints (genomic imprinting) between maternally and paternally inherited alleles. Imprinted gene expression in the endosperm of seeds is associated with localized hypomethylation of maternally but not paternally inherited DNA, with certain small RNAs also displaying parent-of-origin–specific expression. To understand the evolution of imprinting mechanisms in Oryza sativa (rice), we analyzed imprinting divergence among four cultivars that span both japonica and indica subspecies: Nipponbare, Kitaake, 93-11, and IR64. Most imprinted genes are imprinted across cultivars and enriched for functions in chromatin and transcriptional regulation, development, and signaling. However, 4 to 11% of imprinted genes display divergent imprinting. Analyses of DNA methylation and small RNAs revealed that endosperm-specific 24-nt small RNA–producing loci show weak RNA-directed DNA methylation, frequently overlap genes, and are imprinted four times more often than genes. However, imprinting divergence most often correlated with local DNA methylation epimutations (9 of 17 assessable loci), which were largely stable within subspecies. Small insertion/deletion events and transposable element insertions accompanied 4 of the 9 locally epimutated loci and associated with imprinting divergence at another 4 of the remaining 8 loci. Correlating epigenetic and genetic variation occurred at key regulatory regions—the promoter and transcription start site of maternally biased genes, and the promoter and gene body of paternally biased genes. Our results reinforce models for the role of maternal-specific DNA hypomethylation in imprinting of both maternally and paternally biased genes, and highlight the role of transposition and epimutation in rice imprinting evolution. AU - Rodrigues, Jessica A. AU - Hsieh, Ping-Hung AU - Ruan, Deling AU - Nishimura, Toshiro AU - Sharma, Manoj K. AU - Sharma, Rita AU - Ye, XinYi AU - Nguyen, Nicholas D. AU - Nijjar, Sukhranjan AU - Ronald, Pamela C. AU - Fischer, Robert L. AU - Zilberman, Daniel ID - 9877 IS - 29 JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences SN - 0027-8424 TI - Divergence among rice cultivars reveals roles for transposition and epimutation in ongoing evolution of genomic imprinting VL - 118 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Myocardial regeneration is restricted to early postnatal life, when mammalian cardiomyocytes still retain the ability to proliferate. The molecular cues that induce cell cycle arrest of neonatal cardiomyocytes towards terminally differentiated adult heart muscle cells remain obscure. Here we report that the miR-106b~25 cluster is higher expressed in the early postnatal myocardium and decreases in expression towards adulthood, especially under conditions of overload, and orchestrates the transition of cardiomyocyte hyperplasia towards cell cycle arrest and hypertrophy by virtue of its targetome. In line, gene delivery of miR-106b~25 to the mouse heart provokes cardiomyocyte proliferation by targeting a network of negative cell cycle regulators including E2f5, Cdkn1c, Ccne1 and Wee1. Conversely, gene-targeted miR-106b~25 null mice display spontaneous hypertrophic remodeling and exaggerated remodeling to overload by derepression of the prohypertrophic transcription factors Hand2 and Mef2d. Taking advantage of the regulatory function of miR-106b~25 on cardiomyocyte hyperplasia and hypertrophy, viral gene delivery of miR-106b~25 provokes nearly complete regeneration of the adult myocardium after ischemic injury. Our data demonstrate that exploitation of conserved molecular programs can enhance the regenerative capacity of the injured heart. AU - Raso, Andrea AU - Dirkx, Ellen AU - Sampaio-Pinto, Vasco AU - el Azzouzi, Hamid AU - Cubero, Ryan J AU - Sorensen, Daniel W. AU - Ottaviani, Lara AU - Olieslagers, Servé AU - Huibers, Manon M. AU - de Weger, Roel AU - Siddiqi, Sailay AU - Moimas, Silvia AU - Torrini, Consuelo AU - Zentillin, Lorena AU - Braga, Luca AU - Nascimento, Diana S. AU - da Costa Martins, Paula A. AU - van Berlo, Jop H. AU - Zacchigna, Serena AU - Giacca, Mauro AU - De Windt, Leon J. ID - 9874 JF - Nature Communications TI - A microRNA program regulates the balance between cardiomyocyte hyperplasia and hypertrophy and stimulates cardiac regeneration VL - 12 ER - TY - JOUR AB - A few years ago, flow equations were introduced as a technique for calculating the ground-state energies of cold Bose gases with and without impurities. In this paper, we extend this approach to compute observables other than the energy. As an example, we calculate the densities, and phase fluctuations of one-dimensional Bose gases with one and two impurities. For a single mobile impurity, we use flow equations to validate the mean-field results obtained upon the Lee-Low-Pines transformation. We show that the mean-field approximation is accurate for all values of the boson-impurity interaction strength as long as the phase coherence length is much larger than the healing length of the condensate. For two static impurities, we calculate impurity-impurity interactions induced by the Bose gas. We find that leading order perturbation theory fails when boson-impurity interactions are stronger than boson-boson interactions. The mean-field approximation reproduces the flow equation results for all values of the boson-impurity interaction strength as long as boson-boson interactions are weak. AU - Brauneis, Fabian AU - Hammer, Hans-Werner AU - Lemeshko, Mikhail AU - Volosniev, Artem ID - 9769 IS - 1 JF - SciPost Physics TI - Impurities in a one-dimensional Bose gas: The flow equation approach VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Evolutionary adaptation is a major source of antibiotic resistance in bacterial pathogens. Evolution-informed therapy aims to constrain resistance by accounting for bacterial evolvability. Sequential treatments with antibiotics that target different bacterial processes were previously shown to limit adaptation through genetic resistance trade-offs and negative hysteresis. Treatment with homogeneous sets of antibiotics is generally viewed to be disadvantageous, as it should rapidly lead to cross-resistance. We here challenged this assumption by determining the evolutionary response of Pseudomonas aeruginosa to experimental sequential treatments involving both heterogenous and homogeneous antibiotic sets. To our surprise, we found that fast switching between only β-lactam antibiotics resulted in increased extinction of bacterial populations. We demonstrate that extinction is favored by low rates of spontaneous resistance emergence and low levels of spontaneous cross-resistance among the antibiotics in sequence. The uncovered principles may help to guide the optimized use of available antibiotics in highly potent, evolution-informed treatment designs. AU - Batra, Aditi AU - Römhild, Roderich AU - Rousseau, Emilie AU - Franzenburg, Sören AU - Niemann, Stefan AU - Schulenburg, Hinrich ID - 9746 JF - eLife TI - High potency of sequential therapy with only beta-lactam antibiotics VL - 10 ER - TY - JOUR AB - A modern day light microscope has evolved from a tool devoted to making primarily empirical observations to what is now a sophisticated , quantitative device that is an integral part of both physical and life science research. Nowadays, microscopes are found in nearly every experimental laboratory. However, despite their prevalent use in capturing and quantifying scientific phenomena, neither a thorough understanding of the principles underlying quantitative imaging techniques nor appropriate knowledge of how to calibrate, operate and maintain microscopes can be taken for granted. This is clearly demonstrated by the well-documented and widespread difficulties that are routinely encountered in evaluating acquired data and reproducing scientific experiments. Indeed, studies have shown that more than 70% of researchers have tried and failed to repeat another scientist's experiments, while more than half have even failed to reproduce their own experiments. One factor behind the reproducibility crisis of experiments published in scientific journals is the frequent underreporting of imaging methods caused by a lack of awareness and/or a lack of knowledge of the applied technique. Whereas quality control procedures for some methods used in biomedical research, such as genomics (e.g. DNA sequencing, RNA-seq) or cytometry, have been introduced (e.g. ENCODE), this issue has not been tackled for optical microscopy instrumentation and images. Although many calibration standards and protocols have been published, there is a lack of awareness and agreement on common standards and guidelines for quality assessment and reproducibility. In April 2020, the QUality Assessment and REProducibility for instruments and images in Light Microscopy (QUAREP-LiMi) initiative was formed. This initiative comprises imaging scientists from academia and industry who share a common interest in achieving a better understanding of the performance and limitations of microscopes and improved quality control (QC) in light microscopy. The ultimate goal of the QUAREP-LiMi initiative is to establish a set of common QC standards, guidelines, metadata models and tools, including detailed protocols, with the ultimate aim of improving reproducible advances in scientific research. This White Paper (1) summarizes the major obstacles identified in the field that motivated the launch of the QUAREP-LiMi initiative; (2) identifies the urgent need to address these obstacles in a grassroots manner, through a community of stakeholders including, researchers, imaging scientists, bioimage analysts, bioimage informatics developers, corporate partners, funding agencies, standards organizations, scientific publishers and observers of such; (3) outlines the current actions of the QUAREP-LiMi initiative and (4) proposes future steps that can be taken to improve the dissemination and acceptance of the proposed guidelines to manage QC. To summarize, the principal goal of the QUAREP-LiMi initiative is to improve the overall quality and reproducibility of light microscope image data by introducing broadly accepted standard practices and accurately captured image data metrics. AU - Nelson, Glyn AU - Boehm, Ulrike AU - Bagley, Steve AU - Bajcsy, Peter AU - Bischof, Johanna AU - Brown, Claire M. AU - Dauphin, Aurélien AU - Dobbie, Ian M. AU - Eriksson, John E. AU - Faklaris, Orestis AU - Fernandez-Rodriguez, Julia AU - Ferrand, Alexia AU - Gelman, Laurent AU - Gheisari, Ali AU - Hartmann, Hella AU - Kukat, Christian AU - Laude, Alex AU - Mitkovski, Miso AU - Munck, Sebastian AU - North, Alison J. AU - Rasse, Tobias M. AU - Resch-Genger, Ute AU - Schuetz, Lucas C. AU - Seitz, Arne AU - Strambio-De-Castillia, Caterina AU - Swedlow, Jason R. AU - Alexopoulos, Ioannis AU - Aumayr, Karin AU - Avilov, Sergiy AU - Bakker, Gert Jan AU - Bammann, Rodrigo R. AU - Bassi, Andrea AU - Beckert, Hannes AU - Beer, Sebastian AU - Belyaev, Yury AU - Bierwagen, Jakob AU - Birngruber, Konstantin A. AU - Bosch, Manel AU - Breitlow, Juergen AU - Cameron, Lisa A. AU - Chalfoun, Joe AU - Chambers, James J. AU - Chen, Chieh Li AU - Conde-Sousa, Eduardo AU - Corbett, Alexander D. AU - Cordelieres, Fabrice P. AU - Nery, Elaine Del AU - Dietzel, Ralf AU - Eismann, Frank AU - Fazeli, Elnaz AU - Felscher, Andreas AU - Fried, Hans AU - Gaudreault, Nathalie AU - Goh, Wah Ing AU - Guilbert, Thomas AU - Hadleigh, Roland AU - Hemmerich, Peter AU - Holst, Gerhard A. AU - Itano, Michelle S. AU - Jaffe, Claudia B. AU - Jambor, Helena K. AU - Jarvis, Stuart C. AU - Keppler, Antje AU - Kirchenbuechler, David AU - Kirchner, Marcel AU - Kobayashi, Norio AU - Krens, Gabriel AU - Kunis, Susanne AU - Lacoste, Judith AU - Marcello, Marco AU - Martins, Gabriel G. AU - Metcalf, Daniel J. AU - Mitchell, Claire A. AU - Moore, Joshua AU - Mueller, Tobias AU - Nelson, Michael S. AU - Ogg, Stephen AU - Onami, Shuichi AU - Palmer, Alexandra L. AU - Paul-Gilloteaux, Perrine AU - Pimentel, Jaime A. AU - Plantard, Laure AU - Podder, Santosh AU - Rexhepaj, Elton AU - Royon, Arnaud AU - Saari, Markku A. AU - Schapman, Damien AU - Schoonderwoert, Vincent AU - Schroth-Diez, Britta AU - Schwartz, Stanley AU - Shaw, Michael AU - Spitaler, Martin AU - Stoeckl, Martin T. AU - Sudar, Damir AU - Teillon, Jeremie AU - Terjung, Stefan AU - Thuenauer, Roland AU - Wilms, Christian D. AU - Wright, Graham D. AU - Nitschke, Roland ID - 9911 IS - 1 JF - Journal of Microscopy SN - 0022-2720 TI - QUAREP-LiMi: A community-driven initiative to establish guidelines for quality assessment and reproducibility for instruments and images in light microscopy VL - 284 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Endometriosis is a common gynecological disorder characterized by ectopic growth of endometrium outside the uterus and is associated with chronic pain and infertility. We investigated the role of the long intergenic noncoding RNA 01133 (LINC01133) in endometriosis, an lncRNA that has been implicated in several types of cancer. We found that LINC01133 is upregulated in ectopic endometriotic lesions. As expression appeared higher in the epithelial endometrial layer, we performed a siRNA knockdown of LINC01133 in an endometriosis epithelial cell line. Phenotypic assays indicated that LINC01133 may promote proliferation and suppress cellular migration, and affect the cytoskeleton and morphology of the cells. Gene ontology analysis of differentially expressed genes indicated that cell proliferation and migration pathways were affected in line with the observed phenotype. We validated upregulation of p21 and downregulation of Cyclin A at the protein level, which together with the quantification of the DNA content using fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis indicated that the observed effects on cellular proliferation may be due to changes in cell cycle. Further, we found testis-specific protein kinase 1 (TESK1) kinase upregulation corresponding with phosphorylation and inactivation of actin severing protein Cofilin, which could explain changes in the cytoskeleton and cellular migration. These results indicate that endometriosis is associated with LINC01133 upregulation, which may affect pathogenesis via the cellular proliferation and migration pathways. AU - Yotova, Iveta AU - Hudson, Quanah J. AU - Pauler, Florian AU - Proestling, Katharina AU - Haslinger, Isabella AU - Kuessel, Lorenz AU - Perricos, Alexandra AU - Husslein, Heinrich AU - Wenzl, René ID - 9906 IS - 16 JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences SN - 16616596 TI - LINC01133 inhibits invasion and promotes proliferation in an endometriosis epithelial cell line VL - 22 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Adult height inspired the first biometrical and quantitative genetic studies and is a test-case trait for understanding heritability. The studies of height led to formulation of the classical polygenic model, that has a profound influence on the way we view and analyse complex traits. An essential part of the classical model is an assumption of additivity of effects and normality of the distribution of the residuals. However, it may be expected that the normal approximation will become insufficient in bigger studies. Here, we demonstrate that when the height of hundreds of thousands of individuals is analysed, the model complexity needs to be increased to include non-additive interactions between sex, environment and genes. Alternatively, the use of log-normal approximation allowed us to still use the additive effects model. These findings are important for future genetic and methodologic studies that make use of adult height as an exemplar trait. AU - Slavskii, Sergei A. AU - Kuznetsov, Ivan A. AU - Shashkova, Tatiana I. AU - Bazykin, Georgii A. AU - Axenovich, Tatiana I. AU - Kondrashov, Fyodor AU - Aulchenko, Yurii S. ID - 9910 IS - 7 JF - European Journal of Human Genetics SN - 10184813 TI - The limits of normal approximation for adult height VL - 29 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In the customary random matrix model for transport in quantum dots with M internal degrees of freedom coupled to a chaotic environment via 𝑁≪𝑀 channels, the density 𝜌 of transmission eigenvalues is computed from a specific invariant ensemble for which explicit formula for the joint probability density of all eigenvalues is available. We revisit this problem in the large N regime allowing for (i) arbitrary ratio 𝜙:=𝑁/𝑀≤1; and (ii) general distributions for the matrix elements of the Hamiltonian of the quantum dot. In the limit 𝜙→0, we recover the formula for the density 𝜌 that Beenakker (Rev Mod Phys 69:731–808, 1997) has derived for a special matrix ensemble. We also prove that the inverse square root singularity of the density at zero and full transmission in Beenakker’s formula persists for any 𝜙<1 but in the borderline case 𝜙=1 an anomalous 𝜆−2/3 singularity arises at zero. To access this level of generality, we develop the theory of global and local laws on the spectral density of a large class of noncommutative rational expressions in large random matrices with i.i.d. entries. AU - Erdös, László AU - Krüger, Torben H AU - Nemish, Yuriy ID - 9912 JF - Annales Henri Poincaré SN - 1424-0637 TI - Scattering in quantum dots via noncommutative rational functions VL - 22 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Extending on ideas of Lewin, Lieb, and Seiringer [Phys. Rev. B 100, 035127 (2019)], we present a modified “floating crystal” trial state for jellium (also known as the classical homogeneous electron gas) with density equal to a characteristic function. This allows us to show that three definitions of the jellium energy coincide in dimensions d ≥ 2, thus extending the result of Cotar and Petrache [“Equality of the Jellium and uniform electron gas next-order asymptotic terms for Coulomb and Riesz potentials,” arXiv: 1707.07664 (2019)] and Lewin, Lieb, and Seiringer [Phys. Rev. B 100, 035127 (2019)] that the three definitions coincide in dimension d ≥ 3. We show that the jellium energy is also equivalent to a “renormalized energy” studied in a series of papers by Serfaty and others, and thus, by the work of Bétermin and Sandier [Constr. Approximation 47, 39–74 (2018)], we relate the jellium energy to the order n term in the logarithmic energy of n points on the unit 2-sphere. We improve upon known lower bounds for this renormalized energy. Additionally, we derive formulas for the jellium energy of periodic configurations. AU - Lauritsen, Asbjørn Bækgaard ID - 9891 IS - 8 JF - Journal of Mathematical Physics KW - Mathematical Physics KW - Statistical and Nonlinear Physics SN - 0022-2488 TI - Floating Wigner crystal and periodic jellium configurations VL - 62 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Roots are composed of different root types and, in the dicotyledonous Arabidopsis, typically consist of a primary root that branches into lateral roots. Adventitious roots emerge from non-root tissue and are formed upon wounding or other types of abiotic stress. Here, we investigated adventitious root (AR) formation in Arabidopsis hypocotyls under conditions of altered abscisic acid (ABA) signaling. Exogenously applied ABA suppressed AR formation at 0.25 µM or higher doses. AR formation was less sensitive to the synthetic ABA analog pyrabactin (PB). However, PB was a more potent inhibitor at concentrations above 1 µM, suggesting that it was more selective in triggering a root inhibition response. Analysis of a series of phosphonamide and phosphonate pyrabactin analogs suggested that adventitious root formation and lateral root branching are differentially regulated by ABA signaling. ABA biosynthesis and signaling mutants affirmed a general inhibitory role of ABA and point to PYL1 and PYL2 as candidate ABA receptors that regulate AR inhibition. AU - Zeng, Yinwei AU - Verstraeten, Inge AU - Trinh, Hoang Khai AU - Heugebaert, Thomas AU - Stevens, Christian V. AU - Garcia-Maquilon, Irene AU - Rodriguez, Pedro L. AU - Vanneste, Steffen AU - Geelen, Danny ID - 9909 IS - 8 JF - Genes TI - Arabidopsis hypocotyl adventitious root formation is suppressed by ABA signaling VL - 12 ER - TY - JOUR AB - DivIVA is a protein initially identified as a spatial regulator of cell division in the model organism Bacillus subtilis, but its homologues are present in many other Gram-positive bacteria, including Clostridia species. Besides its role as topological regulator of the Min system during bacterial cell division, DivIVA is involved in chromosome segregation during sporulation, genetic competence, and cell wall synthesis. DivIVA localizes to regions of high membrane curvature, such as the cell poles and cell division site, where it recruits distinct binding partners. Previously, it was suggested that negative curvature sensing is the main mechanism by which DivIVA binds to these specific regions. Here, we show that Clostridioides difficile DivIVA binds preferably to membranes containing negatively charged phospholipids, especially cardiolipin. Strikingly, we observed that upon binding, DivIVA modifies the lipid distribution and induces changes to lipid bilayers containing cardiolipin. Our observations indicate that DivIVA might play a more complex and so far unknown active role during the formation of the cell division septal membrane. AU - Labajová, Naďa AU - Baranova, Natalia S. AU - Jurásek, Miroslav AU - Vácha, Robert AU - Loose, Martin AU - Barák, Imrich ID - 9907 IS - 15 JF - International Journal of Molecular Sciences SN - 16616596 TI - Cardiolipin-containing lipid membranes attract the bacterial cell division protein diviva VL - 22 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Vaccines are thought to be the best available solution for controlling the ongoing SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. However, the emergence of vaccine-resistant strains may come too rapidly for current vaccine developments to alleviate the health, economic and social consequences of the pandemic. To quantify and characterize the risk of such a scenario, we created a SIR-derived model with initial stochastic dynamics of the vaccine-resistant strain to study the probability of its emergence and establishment. Using parameters realistically resembling SARS-CoV-2 transmission, we model a wave-like pattern of the pandemic and consider the impact of the rate of vaccination and the strength of non-pharmaceutical intervention measures on the probability of emergence of a resistant strain. As expected, we found that a fast rate of vaccination decreases the probability of emergence of a resistant strain. Counterintuitively, when a relaxation of non-pharmaceutical interventions happened at a time when most individuals of the population have already been vaccinated the probability of emergence of a resistant strain was greatly increased. Consequently, we show that a period of transmission reduction close to the end of the vaccination campaign can substantially reduce the probability of resistant strain establishment. Our results suggest that policymakers and individuals should consider maintaining non-pharmaceutical interventions and transmission-reducing behaviours throughout the entire vaccination period. AU - Rella, Simon AU - Kulikova, Yuliya A. AU - Dermitzakis, Emmanouil T. AU - Kondrashov, Fyodor ID - 9905 IS - 1 JF - Scientific Reports TI - Rates of SARS-CoV-2 transmission and vaccination impact the fate of vaccine-resistant strains VL - 11 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Eigenstate thermalization in quantum many-body systems implies that eigenstates at high energy are similar to random vectors. Identifying systems where at least some eigenstates are nonthermal is an outstanding question. In this Letter we show that interacting quantum models that have a nullspace—a degenerate subspace of eigenstates at zero energy (zero modes), which corresponds to infinite temperature, provide a route to nonthermal eigenstates. We analytically show the existence of a zero mode which can be represented as a matrix product state for a certain class of local Hamiltonians. In the more general case we use a subspace disentangling algorithm to generate an orthogonal basis of zero modes characterized by increasing entanglement entropy. We show evidence for an area-law entanglement scaling of the least-entangled zero mode in the broad parameter regime, leading to a conjecture that all local Hamiltonians with the nullspace feature zero modes with area-law entanglement scaling and, as such, break the strong thermalization hypothesis. Finally, we find zero modes in constrained models and propose a setup for observing their experimental signatures. AU - Karle, Volker AU - Serbyn, Maksym AU - Michailidis, Alexios ID - 9903 IS - 6 JF - Physical Review Letters SN - 0031-9007 TI - Area-law entangled eigenstates from nullspaces of local Hamiltonians VL - 127 ER - TY - JOUR AB - Proper control of division orientation and symmetry, largely determined by spindle positioning, is essential to development and homeostasis. Spindle positioning has been extensively studied in cells dividing in two-dimensional (2D) environments and in epithelial tissues, where proteins such as NuMA (also known as NUMA1) orient division along the interphase long axis of the cell. However, little is known about how cells control spindle positioning in three-dimensional (3D) environments, such as early mammalian embryos and a variety of adult tissues. Here, we use mouse embryonic stem cells (ESCs), which grow in 3D colonies, as a model to investigate division in 3D. We observe that, at the periphery of 3D colonies, ESCs display high spindle mobility and divide asymmetrically. Our data suggest that enhanced spindle movements are due to unequal distribution of the cell–cell junction protein E-cadherin between future daughter cells. Interestingly, when cells progress towards differentiation, division becomes more symmetric, with more elongated shapes in metaphase and enhanced cortical NuMA recruitment in anaphase. Altogether, this study suggests that in 3D contexts, the geometry of the cell and its contacts with neighbors control division orientation and symmetry. AU - Chaigne, Agathe AU - Smith, Matthew B. AU - Cavestany, R. L. AU - Hannezo, Edouard B AU - Chalut, Kevin J. AU - Paluch, Ewa K. ID - 9952 IS - 14 JF - Journal of Cell Science SN - 00219533 TI - Three-dimensional geometry controls division symmetry in stem cell colonies VL - 134 ER - TY - JOUR AB - About eight million animal species are estimated to live on Earth, and all except those belonging to one subphylum are invertebrates. Invertebrates are incredibly diverse in their morphologies, life histories, and in the range of the ecological niches that they occupy. A great variety of modes of reproduction and sex determination systems is also observed among them, and their mosaic-distribution across the phylogeny shows that transitions between them occur frequently and rapidly. Genetic conflict in its various forms is a long-standing theory to explain what drives those evolutionary transitions. Here, we review (1) the different modes of reproduction among invertebrate species, highlighting sexual reproduction as the probable ancestral state; (2) the paradoxical diversity of sex determination systems; (3) the different types of genetic conflicts that could drive the evolution of such different systems. AU - Picard, Marion A L AU - Vicoso, Beatriz AU - Bertrand, Stéphanie AU - Escriva, Hector ID - 9908 IS - 8 JF - Genes TI - Diversity of modes of reproduction and sex determination systems in invertebrates, and the putative contribution of genetic conflict VL - 12 ER - TY - JOUR AB - In 2020, many in-person scientific events were canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, creating a vacuum in networking and knowledge exchange between scientists. To fill this void in scientific communication, a group of early career nanocrystal enthusiasts launched the virtual seminar series, News in Nanocrystals, in the summer of 2020. By the end of the year, the series had attracted over 850 participants from 46 countries. In this Nano Focus, we describe the process of organizing the News in Nanocrystals seminar series; discuss its growth, emphasizing what the organizers have learned in terms of diversity and accessibility; and provide an outlook for the next steps and future opportunities. This summary and analysis of experiences and learned lessons are intended to inform the broader scientific community, especially those who are looking for avenues to continue fostering discussion and scientific engagement virtually, both during the pandemic and after. AU - Baranov, Dmitry AU - Šverko, Tara AU - Moot, Taylor AU - Keller, Helena R. AU - Klein, Megan D. AU - Vishnu, E. K. AU - Balazs, Daniel AU - Shulenberger, Katherine E. ID - 9829 IS - 7 JF - ACS Nano SN - 19360851 TI - News in Nanocrystals seminar: Self-assembly of early career researchers toward globally accessible nanoscience VL - 15 ER -