@article{12192, abstract = {Transposable elements (TEs), the movement of which can damage the genome, are epigenetically silenced in eukaryotes. Intriguingly, TEs are activated in the sperm companion cell – vegetative cell (VC) – of the flowering plant Arabidopsis thaliana. However, the extent and mechanism of this activation are unknown. Here we show that about 100 heterochromatic TEs are activated in VCs, mostly by DEMETER-catalyzed DNA demethylation. We further demonstrate that DEMETER access to some of these TEs is permitted by the natural depletion of linker histone H1 in VCs. Ectopically expressed H1 suppresses TEs in VCs by reducing DNA demethylation and via a methylation-independent mechanism. We demonstrate that H1 is required for heterochromatin condensation in plant cells and show that H1 overexpression creates heterochromatic foci in the VC progenitor cell. Taken together, our results demonstrate that the natural depletion of H1 during male gametogenesis facilitates DEMETER-directed DNA demethylation, heterochromatin relaxation, and TE activation.}, author = {He, Shengbo and Vickers, Martin and Zhang, Jingyi and Feng, Xiaoqi}, issn = {2050-084X}, journal = {eLife}, keywords = {General Immunology and Microbiology, General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Medicine, General Neuroscience}, publisher = {eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd}, title = {{Natural depletion of histone H1 in sex cells causes DNA demethylation, heterochromatin decondensation and transposon activation}}, doi = {10.7554/elife.42530}, volume = {8}, year = {2019}, } @article{12190, abstract = {Meiotic crossover frequency varies within genomes, which influences genetic diversity and adaptation. In turn, genetic variation within populations can act to modify crossover frequency in cis and trans. To identify genetic variation that controls meiotic crossover frequency, we screened Arabidopsis accessions using fluorescent recombination reporters. We mapped a genetic modifier of crossover frequency in Col × Bur populations of Arabidopsis to a premature stop codon within TBP-ASSOCIATED FACTOR 4b (TAF4b), which encodes a subunit of the RNA polymerase II general transcription factor TFIID. The Arabidopsis taf4b mutation is a rare variant found in the British Isles, originating in South-West Ireland. Using genetics, genomics, and immunocytology, we demonstrate a genome-wide decrease in taf4b crossovers, with strongest reduction in the sub-telomeric regions. Using RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) from purified meiocytes, we show that TAF4b expression is meiocyte enriched, whereas its paralog TAF4 is broadly expressed. Consistent with the role of TFIID in promoting gene expression, RNA-seq of wild-type and taf4b meiocytes identified widespread transcriptional changes, including in genes that regulate the meiotic cell cycle and recombination. Therefore, TAF4b duplication is associated with acquisition of meiocyte-specific expression and promotion of germline transcription, which act directly or indirectly to elevate crossovers. This identifies a novel mode of meiotic recombination control via a general transcription factor.}, author = {Lawrence, Emma J. and Gao, Hongbo and Tock, Andrew J. and Lambing, Christophe and Blackwell, Alexander R. and Feng, Xiaoqi and Henderson, Ian R.}, issn = {0960-9822}, journal = {Current Biology}, keywords = {General Agricultural and Biological Sciences, General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology}, number = {16}, pages = {2676--2686.e3}, publisher = {Elsevier BV}, title = {{Natural variation in TBP-ASSOCIATED FACTOR 4b controls meiotic crossover and germline transcription in Arabidopsis}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cub.2019.06.084}, volume = {29}, year = {2019}, } @inproceedings{12901, author = {Schlögl, Alois and Kiss, Janos and Elefante, Stefano}, booktitle = {AHPC19 - Austrian HPC Meeting 2019 }, location = {Grundlsee, Austria}, pages = {25}, publisher = {Institut für Mathematik und wissenschaftliches Rechnen der Universität Graz}, title = {{Is Debian suitable for running an HPC Cluster?}}, year = {2019}, } @inproceedings{6989, abstract = {When can a polyomino piece of paper be folded into a unit cube? Prior work studied tree-like polyominoes, but polyominoes with holes remain an intriguing open problem. We present sufficient conditions for a polyomino with hole(s) to fold into a cube, and conditions under which cube folding is impossible. In particular, we show that all but five special simple holes guarantee foldability. }, author = {Aichholzer, Oswin and Akitaya, Hugo A and Cheung, Kenneth C and Demaine, Erik D and Demaine, Martin L and Fekete, Sandor P and Kleist, Linda and Kostitsyna, Irina and Löffler, Maarten and Masárová, Zuzana and Mundilova, Klara and Schmidt, Christiane}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 31st Canadian Conference on Computational Geometry}, location = {Edmonton, Canada}, pages = {164--170}, publisher = {Canadian Conference on Computational Geometry}, title = {{Folding polyominoes with holes into a cube}}, year = {2019}, } @inproceedings{6884, abstract = {In two-player games on graphs, the players move a token through a graph to produce a finite or infinite path, which determines the qualitative winner or quantitative payoff of the game. We study bidding games in which the players bid for the right to move the token. Several bidding rules were studied previously. In Richman bidding, in each round, the players simultaneously submit bids, and the higher bidder moves the token and pays the other player. Poorman bidding is similar except that the winner of the bidding pays the "bank" rather than the other player. Taxman bidding spans the spectrum between Richman and poorman bidding. They are parameterized by a constant tau in [0,1]: portion tau of the winning bid is paid to the other player, and portion 1-tau to the bank. While finite-duration (reachability) taxman games have been studied before, we present, for the first time, results on infinite-duration taxman games. It was previously shown that both Richman and poorman infinite-duration games with qualitative objectives reduce to reachability games, and we show a similar result here. Our most interesting results concern quantitative taxman games, namely mean-payoff games, where poorman and Richman bidding differ significantly. A central quantity in these games is the ratio between the two players' initial budgets. While in poorman mean-payoff games, the optimal payoff of a player depends on the initial ratio, in Richman bidding, the payoff depends only on the structure of the game. In both games the optimal payoffs can be found using (different) probabilistic connections with random-turn games in which in each turn, instead of bidding, a coin is tossed to determine which player moves. While the value with Richman bidding equals the value of a random-turn game with an un-biased coin, with poorman bidding, the bias in the coin is the initial ratio of the budgets. We give a complete classification of mean-payoff taxman games that is based on a probabilistic connection: the value of a taxman bidding game with parameter tau and initial ratio r, equals the value of a random-turn game that uses a coin with bias F(tau, r) = (r+tau * (1-r))/(1+tau). Thus, we show that Richman bidding is the exception; namely, for every tau <1, the value of the game depends on the initial ratio. Our proof technique simplifies and unifies the previous proof techniques for both Richman and poorman bidding. }, author = {Avni, Guy and Henzinger, Thomas A and Zikelic, Dorde}, location = {Aachen, Germany}, publisher = {Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik}, title = {{Bidding mechanisms in graph games}}, doi = {10.4230/LIPICS.MFCS.2019.11}, volume = {138}, year = {2019}, } @misc{9726, abstract = {A detailed description of the two stochastic models, table of parameters, supplementary data for Figures 4 and 5, parameter dependence of the results, and an analysis on motors with different force–velocity functions (PDF)}, author = {Ucar, Mehmet C and Lipowsky, Reinhard}, publisher = {American Chemical Society }, title = {{Supplementary information - Collective force generation by molecular motors is determined by strain-induced unbinding}}, doi = {10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b04445.s001}, year = {2019}, } @article{6671, abstract = {In this paper we discuss three results. The first two concern general sets of positive reach: we first characterize the reach of a closed set by means of a bound on the metric distortion between the distance measured in the ambient Euclidean space and the shortest path distance measured in the set. Secondly, we prove that the intersection of a ball with radius less than the reach with the set is geodesically convex, meaning that the shortest path between any two points in the intersection lies itself in the intersection. For our third result we focus on manifolds with positive reach and give a bound on the angle between tangent spaces at two different points in terms of the reach and the distance between the two points.}, author = {Boissonnat, Jean-Daniel and Lieutier, André and Wintraecken, Mathijs}, issn = {2367-1734}, journal = {Journal of Applied and Computational Topology}, number = {1-2}, pages = {29–58}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{The reach, metric distortion, geodesic convexity and the variation of tangent spaces}}, doi = {10.1007/s41468-019-00029-8}, volume = {3}, year = {2019}, } @article{301, abstract = {A representation formula for solutions of stochastic partial differential equations with Dirichlet boundary conditions is proved. The scope of our setting is wide enough to cover the general situation when the backward characteristics that appear in the usual formulation are not even defined in the Itô sense.}, author = {Gerencser, Mate and Gyöngy, István}, journal = {Stochastic Processes and their Applications}, number = {3}, pages = {995--1012}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{A Feynman–Kac formula for stochastic Dirichlet problems}}, doi = {10.1016/j.spa.2018.04.003}, volume = {129}, year = {2019}, } @article{80, abstract = {We consider an interacting, dilute Bose gas trapped in a harmonic potential at a positive temperature. The system is analyzed in a combination of a thermodynamic and a Gross–Pitaevskii (GP) limit where the trap frequency ω, the temperature T, and the particle number N are related by N∼ (T/ ω) 3→ ∞ while the scattering length is so small that the interaction energy per particle around the center of the trap is of the same order of magnitude as the spectral gap in the trap. We prove that the difference between the canonical free energy of the interacting gas and the one of the noninteracting system can be obtained by minimizing the GP energy functional. We also prove Bose–Einstein condensation in the following sense: The one-particle density matrix of any approximate minimizer of the canonical free energy functional is to leading order given by that of the noninteracting gas but with the free condensate wavefunction replaced by the GP minimizer.}, author = {Deuchert, Andreas and Seiringer, Robert and Yngvason, Jakob}, journal = {Communications in Mathematical Physics}, number = {2}, pages = {723--776}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Bose–Einstein condensation in a dilute, trapped gas at positive temperature}}, doi = {10.1007/s00220-018-3239-0}, volume = {368}, year = {2019}, } @article{5911, abstract = {Empirical data suggest that inversions in many species contain genes important for intraspecific divergence and speciation, yet mechanisms of evolution remain unclear. While genes inside an inversion are tightly linked, inversions are not static but evolve separately from the rest of the genome by new mutations, recombination within arrangements, and gene flux between arrangements. Inversion polymorphisms are maintained by different processes, for example, divergent or balancing selection, or a mix of multiple processes. Moreover, the relative roles of selection, drift, mutation, and recombination will change over the lifetime of an inversion and within its area of distribution. We believe inversions are central to the evolution of many species, but we need many more data and new models to understand the complex mechanisms involved.}, author = {Faria, Rui and Johannesson, Kerstin and Butlin, Roger K. and Westram, Anja M}, issn = {01695347}, journal = {Trends in Ecology and Evolution}, number = {3}, pages = {239--248}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Evolving inversions}}, doi = {10.1016/j.tree.2018.12.005}, volume = {34}, year = {2019}, } @article{439, abstract = {We count points over a finite field on wild character varieties,of Riemann surfaces for singularities with regular semisimple leading term. The new feature in our counting formulas is the appearance of characters of Yokonuma–Hecke algebras. Our result leads to the conjecture that the mixed Hodge polynomials of these character varieties agree with previously conjectured perverse Hodge polynomials of certain twisted parabolic Higgs moduli spaces, indicating the possibility of a P = W conjecture for a suitable wild Hitchin system.}, author = {Hausel, Tamas and Mereb, Martin and Wong, Michael}, issn = {1435-9855}, journal = {Journal of the European Mathematical Society}, number = {10}, pages = {2995--3052}, publisher = {European Mathematical Society}, title = {{Arithmetic and representation theory of wild character varieties}}, doi = {10.4171/JEMS/896}, volume = {21}, year = {2019}, } @article{105, abstract = {Clinical Utility Gene Card. 1. Name of Disease (Synonyms): Pontocerebellar hypoplasia type 9 (PCH9) and spastic paraplegia-63 (SPG63). 2. OMIM# of the Disease: 615809 and 615686. 3. Name of the Analysed Genes or DNA/Chromosome Segments: AMPD2 at 1p13.3. 4. OMIM# of the Gene(s): 102771.}, author = {Marsh, Ashley and Novarino, Gaia and Lockhart, Paul and Leventer, Richard}, journal = {European Journal of Human Genetics}, pages = {161--166}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{CUGC for pontocerebellar hypoplasia type 9 and spastic paraplegia-63}}, doi = {10.1038/s41431-018-0231-2}, volume = {27}, year = {2019}, } @article{65, abstract = {We provide an entropy formulation for porous medium-type equations with a stochastic, non-linear, spatially inhomogeneous forcing. Well-posedness and L1-contraction is obtained in the class of entropy solutions. Our scope allows for porous medium operators Δ(|u|m−1u) for all m∈(1,∞), and Hölder continuous diffusion nonlinearity with exponent 1/2.}, author = {Dareiotis, Konstantinos and Gerencser, Mate and Gess, Benjamin}, journal = {Journal of Differential Equations}, number = {6}, pages = {3732--3763}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Entropy solutions for stochastic porous media equations}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jde.2018.09.012}, volume = {266}, year = {2019}, } @article{5907, abstract = {Microalgae of the genus Chlorella vulgaris are candidates for the production of lipids for biofuel production. Besides that, Chlorella vulgaris is marketed as protein and vitamin rich food additive. Its potential as a novel expression system for recombinant proteins inspired us to study its asparagine-linked oligosaccharides (N-glycans) by mass spectrometry, chromatography and gas chromatography. Oligomannosidic N-glycans with up to nine mannoses were the structures found in culture collection strains as well as several commercial products. These glycans co-eluted with plant N-glycans in the highly shape selective porous graphitic carbon chromatography. Thus, Chlorella vulgaris generates oligomannosidic N-glycans of the structural type known from land plants and animals. In fact, Man5 (Man5GlcNAc2) served as substrate for GlcNAc-transferase I and a trace of an endogenous structure with terminal GlcNAc was seen. The unusual more linear Man5 structure recently found on glycoproteins of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii occurred - if at all - in traces only. Notably, a majority of the oligomannosidic glycans was multiply O-methylated with 3-O-methyl and 3,6-di-O-methyl mannoses at the non-reducing termini. This modification has so far been neither found on plant nor vertebrate N-glycans. It’s possible immunogenicity raises concerns as to the use of C. vulgaris for production of pharmaceutical glycoproteins.}, author = {Mócsai, Réka and Figl, Rudolf and Troschl, Clemens and Strasser, Richard and Svehla, Elisabeth and Windwarder, Markus and Thader, Andreas and Altmann, Friedrich}, journal = {Scientific Reports}, number = {1}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{N-glycans of the microalga Chlorella vulgaris are of the oligomannosidic type but highly methylated}}, doi = {10.1038/s41598-018-36884-1}, volume = {9}, year = {2019}, } @article{5908, abstract = {The interorganelle communication mediated by membrane contact sites (MCSs) is an evolutionary hallmark of eukaryotic cells. MCS connections enable the nonvesicular exchange of information between organelles and allow them to coordinate responses to changing cellular environments. In plants, the importance of MCS components in the responses to environmental stress has been widely established, but the molecular mechanisms regulating interorganelle connectivity during stress still remain opaque. In this report, we use the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana to show that ionic stress increases endoplasmic reticulum (ER)–plasma membrane (PM) connectivity by promoting the cortical expansion of synaptotagmin 1 (SYT1)-enriched ER–PM contact sites (S-EPCSs). We define differential roles for the cortical cytoskeleton in the regulation of S-EPCS dynamics and ER–PM connectivity, and we identify the accumulation of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PI(4,5)P2] at the PM as a molecular signal associated with the ER–PM connectivity changes. Our study highlights the functional conservation of EPCS components and PM phosphoinositides as modulators of ER–PM connectivity in eukaryotes, and uncovers unique aspects of the spatiotemporal regulation of ER–PM connectivity in plants.}, author = {Lee, Eunkyoung and Vanneste, Steffen and Pérez-Sancho, Jessica and Benitez-Fuente, Francisco and Strelau, Matthew and Macho, Alberto P. and Botella, Miguel A. and Friml, Jiří and Rosado, Abel}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America}, number = {4}, pages = {1420--1429}, publisher = {National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Ionic stress enhances ER–PM connectivity via phosphoinositide-associated SYT1 contact site expansion in Arabidopsis}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1818099116}, volume = {116}, year = {2019}, } @article{5680, abstract = {Pollinators display a remarkable diversity of foraging strategies with flowering plants, from primarily mutualistic interactions to cheating through nectar robbery. Despite numerous studies on the effect of nectar robbing on components of plant fitness, its contribution to reproductive isolation is unclear. We experimentally tested the impact of different pollinator strategies in a natural hybrid zone between two subspecies of Antirrhinum majus with alternate flower colour guides. On either side of a steep cline in flower colour between Antirrhinum majus pseudomajus (magenta) and A. m. striatum (yellow), we quantified the behaviour of all floral visitors at different time points during the flowering season. Using long-run camera surveys, we quantify the impact of nectar robbing on the number of flowers visited per inflorescence and the flower probing time. We further experimentally tested the effect of nectar robbing on female reproductive success by manipulating the intensity of robbing. While robbing increased over time the number of legitimate visitors tended to decrease concomitantly. We found that the number of flowers pollinated on a focal inflorescence decreased with the number of prior robbing events. However, in the manipulative experiment, fruit set and fruit volume did not vary significantly between low robbing and control treatments. Our findings challenge the idea that robbers have a negative impact on plant fitness through female function. This study also adds to our understanding of the components of pollinator-mediated reproductive isolation and the maintenance of Antirrhinum hybrid zones.}, author = {Andalo, Christophe and Burrus, Monique and Paute, Sandrine and Lauzeral, Christine and Field, David}, issn = {23818115}, journal = {Botany Letters}, number = {1}, pages = {80--92}, publisher = {Taylor and Francis}, title = {{Prevalence of legitimate pollinators and nectar robbers and the consequences for fruit set in an Antirrhinum majus hybrid zone}}, doi = {10.1080/23818107.2018.1545142}, volume = {166}, year = {2019}, } @article{5790, abstract = {The partial representation extension problem is a recently introduced generalization of the recognition problem. A circle graph is an intersection graph of chords of a circle. We study the partial representation extension problem for circle graphs, where the input consists of a graph G and a partial representation R′ giving some predrawn chords that represent an induced subgraph of G. The question is whether one can extend R′ to a representation R of the entire graph G, that is, whether one can draw the remaining chords into a partially predrawn representation to obtain a representation of G. Our main result is an O(n3) time algorithm for partial representation extension of circle graphs, where n is the number of vertices. To show this, we describe the structure of all representations of a circle graph using split decomposition. This can be of independent interest.}, author = {Chaplick, Steven and Fulek, Radoslav and Klavík, Pavel}, issn = {03649024}, journal = {Journal of Graph Theory}, number = {4}, pages = {365--394}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{Extending partial representations of circle graphs}}, doi = {10.1002/jgt.22436}, volume = {91}, year = {2019}, } @article{405, abstract = {We investigate the quantum Jensen divergences from the viewpoint of joint convexity. It turns out that the set of the functions which generate jointly convex quantum Jensen divergences on positive matrices coincides with the Matrix Entropy Class which has been introduced by Chen and Tropp quite recently.}, author = {Virosztek, Daniel}, journal = {Linear Algebra and Its Applications}, pages = {67--78}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Jointly convex quantum Jensen divergences}}, doi = {10.1016/j.laa.2018.03.002}, volume = {576}, year = {2019}, } @article{175, abstract = {An upper bound sieve for rational points on suitable varieties isdeveloped, together with applications tocounting rational points in thin sets,to local solubility in families, and to the notion of “friable” rational pointswith respect to divisors. In the special case of quadrics, sharper estimates areobtained by developing a version of the Selberg sieve for rational points.}, author = {Browning, Timothy D and Loughran, Daniel}, issn = {10886850}, journal = {Transactions of the American Mathematical Society}, number = {8}, pages = {5757--5785}, publisher = {American Mathematical Society}, title = {{Sieving rational points on varieties}}, doi = {10.1090/tran/7514}, volume = {371}, year = {2019}, } @article{319, abstract = {We study spaces of modelled distributions with singular behaviour near the boundary of a domain that, in the context of the theory of regularity structures, allow one to give robust solution theories for singular stochastic PDEs with boundary conditions. The calculus of modelled distributions established in Hairer (Invent Math 198(2):269–504, 2014. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00222-014-0505-4) is extended to this setting. We formulate and solve fixed point problems in these spaces with a class of kernels that is sufficiently large to cover in particular the Dirichlet and Neumann heat kernels. These results are then used to provide solution theories for the KPZ equation with Dirichlet and Neumann boundary conditions and for the 2D generalised parabolic Anderson model with Dirichlet boundary conditions. In the case of the KPZ equation with Neumann boundary conditions, we show that, depending on the class of mollifiers one considers, a “boundary renormalisation” takes place. In other words, there are situations in which a certain boundary condition is applied to an approximation to the KPZ equation, but the limiting process is the Hopf–Cole solution to the KPZ equation with a different boundary condition.}, author = {Gerencser, Mate and Hairer, Martin}, issn = {14322064}, journal = {Probability Theory and Related Fields}, number = {3-4}, pages = {697–758}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Singular SPDEs in domains with boundaries}}, doi = {10.1007/s00440-018-0841-1}, volume = {173}, year = {2019}, } @article{429, abstract = {We consider real symmetric or complex hermitian random matrices with correlated entries. We prove local laws for the resolvent and universality of the local eigenvalue statistics in the bulk of the spectrum. The correlations have fast decay but are otherwise of general form. The key novelty is the detailed stability analysis of the corresponding matrix valued Dyson equation whose solution is the deterministic limit of the resolvent.}, author = {Ajanki, Oskari H and Erdös, László and Krüger, Torben H}, issn = {14322064}, journal = {Probability Theory and Related Fields}, number = {1-2}, pages = {293–373}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Stability of the matrix Dyson equation and random matrices with correlations}}, doi = {10.1007/s00440-018-0835-z}, volume = {173}, year = {2019}, } @inproceedings{5947, abstract = {Graph algorithms applied in many applications, including social networks, communication networks, VLSI design, graphics, and several others, require dynamic modifications - addition and removal of vertices and/or edges - in the graph. This paper presents a novel concurrent non-blocking algorithm to implement a dynamic unbounded directed graph in a shared-memory machine. The addition and removal operations of vertices and edges are lock-free. For a finite sized graph, the lookup operations are wait-free. Most significant component of the presented algorithm is the reachability query in a concurrent graph. The reachability queries in our algorithm are obstruction-free and thus impose minimal additional synchronization cost over other operations. We prove that each of the data structure operations are linearizable. We extensively evaluate a sample C/C++ implementation of the algorithm through a number of micro-benchmarks. The experimental results show that the proposed algorithm scales well with the number of threads and on an average provides 5 to 7x performance improvement over a concurrent graph implementation using coarse-grained locking.}, author = {Chatterjee, Bapi and Peri, Sathya and Sa, Muktikanta and Singhal, Nandini}, booktitle = {ACM International Conference Proceeding Series}, isbn = {978-1-4503-6094-4 }, location = {Bangalore, India}, pages = {168--177}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{A simple and practical concurrent non-blocking unbounded graph with linearizable reachability queries}}, doi = {10.1145/3288599.3288617}, year = {2019}, } @article{5857, abstract = {A thrackle is a graph drawn in the plane so that every pair of its edges meet exactly once: either at a common end vertex or in a proper crossing. We prove that any thrackle of n vertices has at most 1.3984n edges. Quasi-thrackles are defined similarly, except that every pair of edges that do not share a vertex are allowed to cross an odd number of times. It is also shown that the maximum number of edges of a quasi-thrackle on n vertices is [Formula presented](n−1), and that this bound is best possible for infinitely many values of n.}, author = {Fulek, Radoslav and Pach, János}, issn = {0166218X}, journal = {Discrete Applied Mathematics}, number = {4}, pages = {266--231}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Thrackles: An improved upper bound}}, doi = {10.1016/j.dam.2018.12.025}, volume = {259}, year = {2019}, } @article{5944, abstract = {Understanding the thermodynamics of the duplication process is a fundamental step towards a comprehensive physical theory of biological systems. However, the immense complexity of real cells obscures the fundamental tensions between energy gradients and entropic contributions that underlie duplication. The study of synthetic, feasible systems reproducing part of the key ingredients of living entities but overcoming major sources of biological complexity is of great relevance to deepen the comprehension of the fundamental thermodynamic processes underlying life and its prevalence. In this paper an abstract—yet realistic—synthetic system made of small synthetic protocell aggregates is studied in detail. A fundamental relation between free energy and entropic gradients is derived for a general, non-equilibrium scenario, setting the thermodynamic conditions for the occurrence and prevalence of duplication phenomena. This relation sets explicitly how the energy gradients invested in creating and maintaining structural—and eventually, functional—elements of the system must always compensate the entropic gradients, whose contributions come from changes in the translational, configurational, and macrostate entropies, as well as from dissipation due to irreversible transitions. Work/energy relations are also derived, defining lower bounds on the energy required for the duplication event to take place. A specific example including real ternary emulsions is provided in order to grasp the orders of magnitude involved in the problem. It is found that the minimal work invested over the system to trigger a duplication event is around ~ 10−13J , which results, in the case of duplication of all the vesicles contained in a liter of emulsion, in an amount of energy around ~ 1kJ . Without aiming to describe a truly biological process of duplication, this theoretical contribution seeks to explicitly define and identify the key actors that participate in it.}, author = {Corominas-Murtra, Bernat}, issn = {20751729}, journal = {Life}, number = {1}, publisher = {MDPI}, title = {{Thermodynamics of duplication thresholds in synthetic protocell systems}}, doi = {10.3390/life9010009}, volume = {9}, year = {2019}, } @article{6029, abstract = {Protein micropatterning has become an important tool for many biomedical applications as well as in academic research. Current techniques that allow to reduce the feature size of patterns below 1 μm are, however, often costly and require sophisticated equipment. We present here a straightforward and convenient method to generate highly condensed nanopatterns of proteins without the need for clean room facilities or expensive equipment. Our approach is based on nanocontact printing and allows for the fabrication of protein patterns with feature sizes of 80 nm and periodicities down to 140 nm. This was made possible by the use of the material X-poly(dimethylsiloxane) (X-PDMS) in a two-layer stamp layout for protein printing. In a proof of principle, different proteins at various scales were printed and the pattern quality was evaluated by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and super-resolution fluorescence microscopy.}, author = {Lindner, Marco and Tresztenyak, Aliz and Fülöp, Gergö and Jahr, Wiebke and Prinz, Adrian and Prinz, Iris and Danzl, Johann G and Schütz, Gerhard J. and Sevcsik, Eva}, issn = {22962646}, journal = {Frontiers in Chemistry}, publisher = {Frontiers Media S.A.}, title = {{A fast and simple contact printing approach to generate 2D protein nanopatterns}}, doi = {10.3389/fchem.2018.00655}, volume = {6}, year = {2019}, } @article{6028, abstract = {We give a construction allowing us to build local renormalized solutions to general quasilinear stochastic PDEs within the theory of regularity structures, thus greatly generalizing the recent results of [1, 5, 11]. Loosely speaking, our construction covers quasilinear variants of all classes of equations for which the general construction of [3, 4, 7] applies, including in particular one‐dimensional systems with KPZ‐type nonlinearities driven by space‐time white noise. In a less singular and more specific case, we furthermore show that the counterterms introduced by the renormalization procedure are given by local functionals of the solution. The main feature of our construction is that it allows exploitation of a number of existing results developed for the semilinear case, so that the number of additional arguments it requires is relatively small.}, author = {Gerencser, Mate and Hairer, Martin}, journal = {Communications on Pure and Applied Mathematics}, number = {9}, pages = {1983--2005}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{A solution theory for quasilinear singular SPDEs}}, doi = {10.1002/cpa.21816}, volume = {72}, year = {2019}, } @inproceedings{5948, abstract = {We study the termination problem for nondeterministic probabilistic programs. We consider the bounded termination problem that asks whether the supremum of the expected termination time over all schedulers is bounded. First, we show that ranking supermartingales (RSMs) are both sound and complete for proving bounded termination over nondeterministic probabilistic programs. For nondeterministic probabilistic programs a previous result claimed that RSMs are not complete for bounded termination, whereas our result corrects the previous flaw and establishes completeness with a rigorous proof. Second, we present the first sound approach to establish lower bounds on expected termination time through RSMs.}, author = {Fu, Hongfei and Chatterjee, Krishnendu}, booktitle = {International Conference on Verification, Model Checking, and Abstract Interpretation}, location = {Cascais, Portugal}, pages = {468--490}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Termination of nondeterministic probabilistic programs}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-11245-5_22}, volume = {11388}, year = {2019}, } @article{5945, abstract = {In developing organisms, spatially prescribed cell identities are thought to be determined by the expression levels of multiple genes. Quantitative tests of this idea, however, require a theoretical framework capable of exposing the rules and precision of cell specification over developmental time. We use the gap gene network in the early fly embryo as an example to show how expression levels of the four gap genes can be jointly decoded into an optimal specification of position with 1% accuracy. The decoder correctly predicts, with no free parameters, the dynamics of pair-rule expression patterns at different developmental time points and in various mutant backgrounds. Precise cellular identities are thus available at the earliest stages of development, contrasting the prevailing view of positional information being slowly refined across successive layers of the patterning network. Our results suggest that developmental enhancers closely approximate a mathematically optimal decoding strategy.}, author = {Petkova, Mariela D. and Tkacik, Gasper and Bialek, William and Wieschaus, Eric F. and Gregor, Thomas}, journal = {Cell}, number = {4}, pages = {844--855.e15}, publisher = {Cell Press}, title = {{Optimal decoding of cellular identities in a genetic network}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2019.01.007}, volume = {176}, year = {2019}, } @article{5943, abstract = {The hairpin instability of a jet in a crossflow (JICF) for a low jet-to-crossflow velocity ratio is investigated experimentally for a velocity ratio range of R ∈ (0.14, 0.75) and crossflow Reynolds numbers ReD ∈ (260, 640). From spectral analysis we characterize the Strouhal number and amplitude of the hairpin instability as a function of R and ReD. We demonstrate that the dynamics of the hairpins is well described by the Landau model, and, hence, that the instability occurs through Hopf bifurcation, similarly to other hydrodynamical oscillators such as wake behind different bluff bodies. Using the Landau model, we determine the precise threshold values of hairpin shedding. We also study the spatial dependence of this hydrodynamical instability, which shows a global behaviour.}, author = {Klotz, Lukasz and Gumowski, Konrad and Wesfreid, José Eduardo}, journal = {Journal of Fluid Mechanics}, pages = {386--406}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, title = {{Experiments on a jet in a crossflow in the low-velocity-ratio regime}}, doi = {10.1017/jfm.2018.974}, volume = {863}, year = {2019}, } @inproceedings{6042, abstract = {Static program analyzers are increasingly effective in checking correctness properties of programs and reporting any errors found, often in the form of error traces. However, developers still spend a significant amount of time on debugging. This involves processing long error traces in an effort to localize a bug to a relatively small part of the program and to identify its cause. In this paper, we present a technique for automated fault localization that, given a program and an error trace, efficiently narrows down the cause of the error to a few statements. These statements are then ranked in terms of their suspiciousness. Our technique relies only on the semantics of the given program and does not require any test cases or user guidance. In experiments on a set of C benchmarks, we show that our technique is effective in quickly isolating the cause of error while out-performing other state-of-the-art fault-localization techniques.}, author = {Christakis, Maria and Heizmann, Matthias and Mansur, Muhammad Numair and Schilling, Christian and Wüstholz, Valentin}, booktitle = {25th International Conference on Tools and Algorithms for the Construction and Analysis of Systems }, location = {Prague, Czech Republic}, pages = {226--243}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Semantic fault localization and suspiciousness ranking}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-030-17462-0_13}, volume = {11427}, year = {2019}, } @inproceedings{6035, abstract = {We present JuliaReach, a toolbox for set-based reachability analysis of dynamical systems. JuliaReach consists of two main packages: Reachability, containing implementations of reachability algorithms for continuous and hybrid systems, and LazySets, a standalone library that implements state-of-the-art algorithms for calculus with convex sets. The library offers both concrete and lazy set representations, where the latter stands for the ability to delay set computations until they are needed. The choice of the programming language Julia and the accompanying documentation of our toolbox allow researchers to easily translate set-based algorithms from mathematics to software in a platform-independent way, while achieving runtime performance that is comparable to statically compiled languages. Combining lazy operations in high dimensions and explicit computations in low dimensions, JuliaReach can be applied to solve complex, large-scale problems.}, author = {Bogomolov, Sergiy and Forets, Marcelo and Frehse, Goran and Potomkin, Kostiantyn and Schilling, Christian}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 22nd International Conference on Hybrid Systems: Computation and Control}, isbn = {9781450362825}, keywords = {reachability analysis, hybrid systems, lazy computation}, location = {Montreal, QC, Canada}, pages = {39--44}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{JuliaReach: A toolbox for set-based reachability}}, doi = {10.1145/3302504.3311804}, volume = {22}, year = {2019}, } @article{6052, abstract = {Expansion microscopy is a relatively new approach to super-resolution imaging that uses expandable hydrogels to isotropically increase the physical distance between fluorophores in biological samples such as cell cultures or tissue slices. The classic gel recipe results in an expansion factor of ~4×, with a resolution of 60–80 nm. We have recently developed X10 microscopy, which uses a gel that achieves an expansion factor of ~10×, with a resolution of ~25 nm. Here, we provide a step-by-step protocol for X10 expansion microscopy. A typical experiment consists of seven sequential stages: (i) immunostaining, (ii) anchoring, (iii) polymerization, (iv) homogenization, (v) expansion, (vi) imaging, and (vii) validation. The protocol presented here includes recommendations for optimization, pitfalls and their solutions, and detailed guidelines that should increase reproducibility. Although our protocol focuses on X10 expansion microscopy, we detail which of these suggestions are also applicable to classic fourfold expansion microscopy. We exemplify our protocol using primary hippocampal neurons from rats, but our approach can be used with other primary cells or cultured cell lines of interest. This protocol will enable any researcher with basic experience in immunostainings and access to an epifluorescence microscope to perform super-resolution microscopy with X10. The procedure takes 3 d and requires ~5 h of actively handling the sample for labeling and expansion, and another ~3 h for imaging and analysis.}, author = {Truckenbrodt, Sven M and Sommer, Christoph M and Rizzoli, Silvio O and Danzl, Johann G}, journal = {Nature Protocols}, number = {3}, pages = {832–863}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{A practical guide to optimization in X10 expansion microscopy}}, doi = {10.1038/s41596-018-0117-3}, volume = {14}, year = {2019}, } @article{6025, abstract = {Non-canonical Wnt signaling plays a central role for coordinated cell polarization and directed migration in metazoan development. While spatiotemporally restricted activation of non-canonical Wnt-signaling drives cell polarization in epithelial tissues, it remains unclear whether such instructive activity is also critical for directed mesenchymal cell migration. Here, we developed a light-activated version of the non-canonical Wnt receptor Frizzled 7 (Fz7) to analyze how restricted activation of non-canonical Wnt signaling affects directed anterior axial mesendoderm (prechordal plate, ppl) cell migration within the zebrafish gastrula. We found that Fz7 signaling is required for ppl cell protrusion formation and migration and that spatiotemporally restricted ectopic activation is capable of redirecting their migration. Finally, we show that uniform activation of Fz7 signaling in ppl cells fully rescues defective directed cell migration in fz7 mutant embryos. Together, our findings reveal that in contrast to the situation in epithelial cells, non-canonical Wnt signaling functions permissively rather than instructively in directed mesenchymal cell migration during gastrulation.}, author = {Capek, Daniel and Smutny, Michael and Tichy, Alexandra Madelaine and Morri, Maurizio and Janovjak, Harald L and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, journal = {eLife}, publisher = {eLife Sciences Publications}, title = {{Light-activated Frizzled7 reveals a permissive role of non-canonical wnt signaling in mesendoderm cell migration}}, doi = {10.7554/eLife.42093}, volume = {8}, year = {2019}, } @article{6022, abstract = {The evolution of new species is made easier when traits under divergent ecological selection are also mating cues. Such ecological mating cues are now considered more common than previously thought, but we still know little about the genetic changes underlying their evolution or more generally about the genetic basis for assortative mating behaviors. Both tight physical linkage and the existence of large-effect preference loci will strengthen genetic associations between behavioral and ecological barriers, promoting the evolution of assortative mating. The warning patterns of Heliconius melpomene and H. cydno are under disruptive selection due to increased predation of nonmimetic hybrids and are used during mate recognition. We carried out a genome-wide quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis of preference behaviors between these species and showed that divergent male preference has a simple genetic basis. We identify three QTLs that together explain a large proportion (approximately 60%) of the difference in preference behavior observed between the parental species. One of these QTLs is just 1.2 (0-4.8) centiMorgans (cM) from the major color pattern gene optix, and, individually, all three have a large effect on the preference phenotype. Genomic divergence between H. cydno and H. melpomene is high but broadly heterogenous, and admixture is reduced at the preference-optix color pattern locus but not the other preference QTLs. The simple genetic architecture we reveal will facilitate the evolution and maintenance of new species despite ongoing gene flow by coupling behavioral and ecological aspects of reproductive isolation.}, author = {Merrill, Richard M. and Rastas, Pasi and Martin, Simon H. and Melo Hurtado, Maria C and Barker, Sarah and Davey, John and Mcmillan, W. Owen and Jiggins, Chris D.}, journal = {PLoS Biology}, number = {2}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Genetic dissection of assortative mating behavior}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pbio.2005902}, volume = {17}, year = {2019}, } @article{6023, abstract = {Multicellular development requires coordinated cell polarization relative to body axes, and translation to oriented cell division 1–3 . In plants, it is unknown how cell polarities are connected to organismal axes and translated to division. Here, we identify Arabidopsis SOSEKI proteins that integrate apical–basal and radial organismal axes to localize to polar cell edges. Localization does not depend on tissue context, requires cell wall integrity and is defined by a transferrable, protein-specific motif. A Domain of Unknown Function in SOSEKI proteins resembles the DIX oligomerization domain in the animal Dishevelled polarity regulator. The DIX-like domain self-interacts and is required for edge localization and for influencing division orientation, together with a second domain that defines the polar membrane domain. Our work shows that SOSEKI proteins locally interpret global polarity cues and can influence cell division orientation. Furthermore, this work reveals that, despite fundamental differences, cell polarity mechanisms in plants and animals converge on a similar protein domain.}, author = {Yoshida, Saiko and Van Der Schuren, Alja and Van Dop, Maritza and Van Galen, Luc and Saiga, Shunsuke and Adibi, Milad and Möller, Barbara and Ten Hove, Colette A. and Marhavy, Peter and Smith, Richard and Friml, Jiří and Weijers, Dolf}, journal = {Nature Plants}, number = {2}, pages = {160--166}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{A SOSEKI-based coordinate system interprets global polarity cues in arabidopsis}}, doi = {10.1038/s41477-019-0363-6}, volume = {5}, year = {2019}, } @article{6053, abstract = {Recent technical developments in the fields of quantum electromechanics and optomechanics have spawned nanoscale mechanical transducers with the sensitivity to measure mechanical displacements at the femtometre scale and the ability to convert electromagnetic signals at the single photon level. A key challenge in this field is obtaining strong coupling between motion and electromagnetic fields without adding additional decoherence. Here we present an electromechanical transducer that integrates a high-frequency (0.42 GHz) hypersonic phononic crystal with a superconducting microwave circuit. The use of a phononic bandgap crystal enables quantum-level transduction of hypersonic mechanical motion and concurrently eliminates decoherence caused by acoustic radiation. Devices with hypersonic mechanical frequencies provide a natural pathway for integration with Josephson junction quantum circuits, a leading quantum computing technology, and nanophotonic systems capable of optical networking and distributing quantum information.}, author = {Kalaee, Mahmoud and Mirhosseini, Mohammad and Dieterle, Paul B. and Peruzzo, Matilda and Fink, Johannes M and Painter, Oskar}, issn = {1748-3395}, journal = {Nature Nanotechnology}, number = {4}, pages = {334–339}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Quantum electromechanics of a hypersonic crystal}}, doi = {10.1038/s41565-019-0377-2}, volume = {14}, year = {2019}, } @article{6050, abstract = {We answer a question of David Hilbert: given two circles it is not possible in general to construct their centers using only a straightedge. On the other hand, we give infinitely many families of pairs of circles for which such construction is possible. }, author = {Akopyan, Arseniy and Fedorov, Roman}, journal = {Proceedings of the American Mathematical Society}, pages = {91--102}, publisher = {AMS}, title = {{Two circles and only a straightedge}}, doi = {10.1090/proc/14240}, volume = {147}, year = {2019}, } @misc{9801, author = {Merrill, Richard M. and Rastas, Pasi and Martin, Simon H. and Melo Hurtado, Maria C and Barker, Sarah and Davey, John and Mcmillan, W. Owen and Jiggins, Chris D.}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Raw behavioral data}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pbio.2005902.s006}, year = {2019}, } @article{6095, abstract = {Both classical and recent studies suggest that chromosomal inversion polymorphisms are important in adaptation and speciation. However, biases in discovery and reporting of inversions make it difficult to assess their prevalence and biological importance. Here, we use an approach based on linkage disequilibrium among markers genotyped for samples collected across a transect between contrasting habitats to detect chromosomal rearrangements de novo. We report 17 polymorphic rearrangements in a single locality for the coastal marine snail, Littorina saxatilis. Patterns of diversity in the field and of recombination in controlled crosses provide strong evidence that at least the majority of these rearrangements are inversions. Most show clinal changes in frequency between habitats, suggestive of divergent selection, but only one appears to be fixed for different arrangements in the two habitats. Consistent with widespread evidence for balancing selection on inversion polymorphisms, we argue that a combination of heterosis and divergent selection can explain the observed patterns and should be considered in other systems spanning environmental gradients.}, author = {Faria, Rui and Chaube, Pragya and Morales, Hernán E. and Larsson, Tomas and Lemmon, Alan R. and Lemmon, Emily M. and Rafajlović, Marina and Panova, Marina and Ravinet, Mark and Johannesson, Kerstin and Westram, Anja M and Butlin, Roger K.}, issn = {1365-294X}, journal = {Molecular Ecology}, number = {6}, pages = {1375--1393}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{Multiple chromosomal rearrangements in a hybrid zone between Littorina saxatilis ecotypes}}, doi = {10.1111/mec.14972}, volume = {28}, year = {2019}, } @article{6049, abstract = {In this article it is shown that large systems with many interacting units endowing multiple phases display self-oscillations in the presence of linear feedback between the control and order parameters, where an Andronov–Hopf bifurcation takes over the phase transition. This is simply illustrated through the mean field Landau theory whose feedback dynamics turn out to be described by the Van der Pol equation and it is then validated for the fully connected Ising model following heat bath dynamics. Despite its simplicity, this theory accounts potentially for a rich range of phenomena: here it is applied to describe in a stylized way (i) excess demand-price cycles due to strong herding in a simple agent-based market model; (ii) congestion waves in queuing networks triggered by user feedback to delays in overloaded conditions; and (iii) metabolic network oscillations resulting from cell growth control in a bistable phenotypic landscape.}, author = {De Martino, Daniele}, journal = {Journal of Physics A: Mathematical and Theoretical}, number = {4}, publisher = {IOP Publishing}, title = {{Feedback-induced self-oscillations in large interacting systems subjected to phase transitions}}, doi = {10.1088/1751-8121/aaf2dd}, volume = {52}, year = {2019}, } @article{6091, abstract = {Cortical networks are characterized by sparse connectivity, with synapses found at only a subset of axo-dendritic contacts. Yet within these networks, neurons can exhibit high connection probabilities, suggesting that cell-intrinsic factors, not proximity, determine connectivity. Here, we identify ephrin-B3 (eB3) as a factor that determines synapse density by mediating a cell-cell competition that requires ephrin-B-EphB signaling. In a microisland culture system designed to isolate cell-cell competition, we find that eB3 determines winning and losing neurons in a contest for synapses. In a Mosaic Analysis with Double Markers (MADM) genetic mouse model system in vivo the relative levels of eB3 control spine density in layer 5 and 6 neurons. MADM cortical neurons in vitro reveal that eB3 controls synapse density independently of action potential-driven activity. Our findings illustrate a new class of competitive mechanism mediated by trans-synaptic organizing proteins which control the number of synapses neurons receive relative to neighboring neurons.}, author = {Henderson, Nathan T. and Le Marchand, Sylvain J. and Hruska, Martin and Hippenmeyer, Simon and Luo, Liqun and Dalva, Matthew B.}, journal = {eLife}, publisher = {eLife Sciences Publications}, title = {{Ephrin-B3 controls excitatory synapse density through cell-cell competition for EphBs}}, doi = {10.7554/eLife.41563}, volume = {8}, year = {2019}, } @article{6046, abstract = {Sudden stress often triggers diverse, temporally structured gene expression responses in microbes, but it is largely unknown how variable in time such responses are and if genes respond in the same temporal order in every single cell. Here, we quantified timing variability of individual promoters responding to sublethal antibiotic stress using fluorescent reporters, microfluidics, and time‐lapse microscopy. We identified lower and upper bounds that put definite constraints on timing variability, which varies strongly among promoters and conditions. Timing variability can be interpreted using results from statistical kinetics, which enable us to estimate the number of rate‐limiting molecular steps underlying different responses. We found that just a few critical steps control some responses while others rely on dozens of steps. To probe connections between different stress responses, we then tracked the temporal order and response time correlations of promoter pairs in individual cells. Our results support that, when bacteria are exposed to the antibiotic nitrofurantoin, the ensuing oxidative stress and SOS responses are part of the same causal chain of molecular events. In contrast, under trimethoprim, the acid stress response and the SOS response are part of different chains of events running in parallel. Our approach reveals fundamental constraints on gene expression timing and provides new insights into the molecular events that underlie the timing of stress responses.}, author = {Mitosch, Karin and Rieckh, Georg and Bollenbach, Mark Tobias}, journal = {Molecular systems biology}, number = {2}, publisher = {Embo Press}, title = {{Temporal order and precision of complex stress responses in individual bacteria}}, doi = {10.15252/msb.20188470}, volume = {15}, year = {2019}, } @article{6105, abstract = { Hosts can alter their strategy towards pathogens during their lifetime; that is, they can show phenotypic plasticity in immunity or life history. Immune priming is one such example, where a previous encounter with a pathogen confers enhanced protection upon secondary challenge, resulting in reduced pathogen load (i.e., resistance) and improved host survival. However, an initial encounter might also enhance tolerance, particularly to less virulent opportunistic pathogens that establish persistent infections. In this scenario, individuals are better able to reduce the negative fecundity consequences that result from a high pathogen burden. Finally, previous exposure may also lead to life‐history adjustments, such as terminal investment into reproduction. Using different Drosophila melanogaster host genotypes and two bacterial pathogens, Lactococcus lactis and Pseudomonas entomophila, we tested whether previous exposure results in resistance or tolerance and whether it modifies immune gene expression during an acute‐phase infection (one day post‐challenge). We then asked whether previous pathogen exposure affects chronic‐phase pathogen persistence and longer‐term survival (28 days post‐challenge). We predicted that previous exposure would increase host resistance to an early stage bacterial infection while it might come at a cost to host fecundity tolerance. We reasoned that resistance would be due in part to stronger immune gene expression after challenge. We expected that previous exposure would improve long‐term survival, that it would reduce infection persistence, and we expected to find genetic variation in these responses. We found that previous exposure to P. entomophila weakened host resistance to a second infection independent of genotype and had no effect on immune gene expression. Fecundity tolerance showed genotypic variation but was not influenced by previous exposure. However, L. lactis persisted as a chronic infection, whereas survivors cleared the more pathogenic P. entomophila infection. To our knowledge, this is the first study that addresses host tolerance to bacteria in relation to previous exposure, taking a multi‐faceted approach to address the topic. Our results suggest that previous exposure comes with transient costs to resistance during the early stage of infection in this host–pathogen system and that infection persistence may be bacterium‐specific. }, author = {Kutzer, Megan and Kurtz, Joachim and Armitage, Sophie A.O.}, issn = {13652656}, journal = {Journal of Animal Ecology}, number = {4}, pages = {566--578}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{A multi-faceted approach testing the effects of previous bacterial exposure on resistance and tolerance}}, doi = {10.1111/1365-2656.12953}, volume = {88}, year = {2019}, } @article{6088, abstract = {P-Glycoprotein (ABCB1) and breast cancer resistance protein (ABCG2) are two efflux transporters at the blood–brain barrier (BBB), which effectively restrict brain distribution of diverse drugs, such as tyrosine kinase inhibitors. There is a crucial need for pharmacological ABCB1 and ABCG2 inhibition protocols for a more effective treatment of brain diseases. In the present study, seven marketed drugs (osimertinib, erlotinib, nilotinib, imatinib, lapatinib, pazopanib, and cyclosporine A) and one nonmarketed drug (tariquidar), with known in vitro ABCB1/ABCG2 inhibitory properties, were screened for their inhibitory potency at the BBB in vivo. Positron emission tomography (PET) using the model ABCB1/ABCG2 substrate [11C]erlotinib was performed in mice. Tested inhibitors were administered as i.v. bolus injections at 30 min before the start of the PET scan, followed by a continuous i.v. infusion for the duration of the PET scan. Five of the tested drugs increased total distribution volume of [11C]erlotinib in the brain (VT,brain) compared to vehicle-treated animals (tariquidar, + 69%; erlotinib, + 19% and +23% for the 21.5 mg/kg and the 43 mg/kg dose, respectively; imatinib, + 22%; lapatinib, + 25%; and cyclosporine A, + 49%). For all drugs, increases in [11C]erlotinib brain distribution were lower than in Abcb1a/b(−/−)Abcg2(−/−) mice (+149%), which suggested that only partial ABCB1/ABCG2 inhibition was reached at the mouse BBB. The plasma concentrations of the tested drugs at the time of the PET scan were higher than clinically achievable plasma concentrations. Some of the tested drugs led to significant increases in blood radioactivity concentrations measured at the end of the PET scan (erlotinib, + 103% and +113% for the 21.5 mg/kg and the 43 mg/kg dose, respectively; imatinib, + 125%; and cyclosporine A, + 101%), which was most likely caused by decreased hepatobiliary excretion of radioactivity. Taken together, our data suggest that some marketed tyrosine kinase inhibitors may be repurposed to inhibit ABCB1 and ABCG2 at the BBB. From a clinical perspective, moderate increases in brain delivery despite the administration of high i.v. doses as well as peripheral drug–drug interactions due to transporter inhibition in clearance organs question the translatability of this concept.}, author = {Traxl, Alexander and Mairinger, Severin and Filip, Thomas and Sauberer, Michael and Stanek, Johann and Poschner, Stefan and Jäger, Walter and Zoufal, Viktoria and Novarino, Gaia and Tournier, Nicolas and Bauer, Martin and Wanek, Thomas and Langer, Oliver}, journal = {Molecular Pharmaceutics}, number = {3}, pages = {1282--1293}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, title = {{Inhibition of ABCB1 and ABCG2 at the mouse blood-brain barrier with marketed drugs to improve brain delivery of the model ABCB1/ABCG2 substrate [11C]erlotinib}}, doi = {10.1021/acs.molpharmaceut.8b01217}, volume = {16}, year = {2019}, } @article{6087, abstract = {Cell fate specification by lateral inhibition typically involves contact signaling through the Delta-Notch signaling pathway. However, whether this is the only signaling mode mediating lateral inhibition remains unclear. Here we show that in zebrafish oogenesis, a group of cells within the granulosa cell layer at the oocyte animal pole acquire elevated levels of the transcriptional coactivator TAZ in their nuclei. One of these cells, the future micropyle precursor cell (MPC), accumulates increasingly high levels of nuclear TAZ and grows faster than its surrounding cells, mechanically compressing those cells, which ultimately lose TAZ from their nuclei. Strikingly, relieving neighbor-cell compression by MPC ablation or aspiration restores nuclear TAZ accumulation in neighboring cells, eventually leading to MPC re-specification from these cells. Conversely, MPC specification is defective in taz−/− follicles. These findings uncover a novel mode of lateral inhibition in cell fate specification based on mechanical signals controlling TAZ activity.}, author = {Xia, Peng and Gütl, Daniel J and Zheden, Vanessa and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, journal = {Cell}, number = {6}, pages = {1379--1392.e14}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Lateral inhibition in cell specification mediated by mechanical signals modulating TAZ activity}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2019.01.019}, volume = {176}, year = {2019}, } @misc{9806, abstract = {1. Hosts can alter their strategy towards pathogens during their lifetime, i.e., they can show phenotypic plasticity in immunity or life history. Immune priming is one such example, where a previous encounter with a pathogen confers enhanced protection upon secondary challenge, resulting in reduced pathogen load (i.e. resistance) and improved host survival. However, an initial encounter might also enhance tolerance, particularly to less virulent opportunistic pathogens that establish persistent infections. In this scenario, individuals are better able to reduce the negative fitness consequences that result from a high pathogen load. Finally, previous exposure may also lead to life history adjustments, such as terminal investment into reproduction. 2. Using different Drosophila melanogaster host genotypes and two bacterial pathogens, Lactococcus lactis and Pseudomonas entomophila, we tested if previous exposure results in resistance or tolerance and whether it modifies immune gene expression during an acute-phase infection (one day post-challenge). We then asked if previous pathogen exposure affects chronic-phase pathogen persistence and longer-term survival (28 days post-challenge). 3. We predicted that previous exposure would increase host resistance to an early stage bacterial infection while it might come at a cost to host fecundity tolerance. We reasoned that resistance would be due in part to stronger immune gene expression after challenge. We expected that previous exposure would improve long-term survival, that it would reduce infection persistence, and we expected to find genetic variation in these responses. 4. We found that previous exposure to P. entomophila weakened host resistance to a second infection independent of genotype and had no effect on immune gene expression. Fecundity tolerance showed genotypic variation but was not influenced by previous exposure. However, L. lactis persisted as a chronic infection, whereas survivors cleared the more pathogenic P. entomophila infection. 5. To our knowledge, this is the first study that addresses host tolerance to bacteria in relation to previous exposure, taking a multi-faceted approach to address the topic. Our results suggest that previous exposure comes with transient costs to resistance during the early stage of infection in this host-pathogen system and that infection persistence may be bacterium-specific.}, author = {Kutzer, Megan and Kurtz, Joachim and Armitage, Sophie A.O.}, publisher = {Dryad}, title = {{Data from: A multi-faceted approach testing the effects of previous bacterial exposure on resistance and tolerance}}, doi = {10.5061/dryad.9kj41f0}, year = {2019}, } @article{6086, abstract = {We show that linear analytic cocycles where all Lyapunov exponents are negative infinite are nilpotent. For such one-frequency cocycles we show that they can be analytically conjugated to an upper triangular cocycle or a Jordan normal form. As a consequence, an arbitrarily small analytic perturbation leads to distinct Lyapunov exponents. Moreover, in the one-frequency case where the th Lyapunov exponent is finite and the st negative infinite, we obtain a simple criterion for domination in which case there is a splitting into a nilpotent part and an invertible part.}, author = {Sadel, Christian and Xu, Disheng}, journal = {Ergodic Theory and Dynamical Systems}, number = {4}, pages = {1082--1098}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, title = {{Singular analytic linear cocycles with negative infinite Lyapunov exponents}}, doi = {10.1017/etds.2017.52}, volume = {39}, year = {2019}, } @article{6102, abstract = {Light is a union of electric and magnetic fields, and nowhere is the complex relationship between these fields more evident than in the near fields of nanophotonic structures. There, complicated electric and magnetic fields varying over subwavelength scales are generally present, which results in photonic phenomena such as extraordinary optical momentum, superchiral fields, and a complex spatial evolution of optical singularities. An understanding of such phenomena requires nanoscale measurements of the complete optical field vector. Although the sensitivity of near- field scanning optical microscopy to the complete electromagnetic field was recently demonstrated, a separation of different components required a priori knowledge of the sample. Here, we introduce a robust algorithm that can disentangle all six electric and magnetic field components from a single near-field measurement without any numerical modeling of the structure. As examples, we unravel the fields of two prototypical nanophotonic structures: a photonic crystal waveguide and a plasmonic nanowire. These results pave the way for new studies of complex photonic phenomena at the nanoscale and for the design of structures that optimize their optical behavior.}, author = {Le Feber, B. and Sipe, J. E. and Wulf, Matthias and Kuipers, L. and Rotenberg, N.}, issn = {20477538}, journal = {Light: Science and Applications}, number = {1}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{A full vectorial mapping of nanophotonic light fields}}, doi = {10.1038/s41377-019-0124-3}, volume = {8}, year = {2019}, } @article{6104, abstract = {Abiotic stress poses constant challenges for plant survival and is a serious problem for global agricultural productivity. On a molecular level, stress conditions result in elevation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production causing oxidative stress associated with oxidation of proteins and nucleic acids as well as impairment of membrane functions. Adaptation of root growth to ROS accumulation is facilitated through modification of auxin and cytokinin hormone homeostasis. Here, we report that in Arabidopsis root meristem, ROS-induced changes of auxin levels correspond to decreased abundance of PIN auxin efflux carriers at the plasma membrane (PM). Specifically, increase in H2O2 levels affects PIN2 endocytic recycling. We show that the PIN2 intracellular trafficking during adaptation to oxidative stress requires the function of the ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF)-guanine-nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) BEN1, an actin-associated regulator of the trafficking from the PM to early endosomes and, presumably, indirectly, trafficking to the vacuoles. We propose that H2O2 levels affect the actin dynamics thus modulating ARF-GEF-dependent trafficking of PIN2. This mechanism provides a way how root growth acclimates to stress and adapts to a changing environment.}, author = {Zwiewka, Marta and Bielach, Agnieszka and Tamizhselvan, Prashanth and Madhavan, Sharmila and Ryad, Eman Elrefaay and Tan, Shutang and Hrtyan, Mónika and Dobrev, Petre and Vanková, Radomira and Friml, Jiří and Tognetti, Vanesa B.}, issn = {1471-9053}, journal = {Plant and Cell Physiology}, number = {2}, pages = {255--273}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, title = {{Root adaptation to H2O2-induced oxidative stress by ARF-GEF BEN1- and cytoskeleton-mediated PIN2 trafficking}}, doi = {10.1093/pcp/pcz001}, volume = {60}, year = {2019}, } @article{6191, abstract = {The formation of self-organized patterns is key to the morphogenesis of multicellular organisms, although a comprehensive theory of biological pattern formation is still lacking. Here, we propose a minimal model combining tissue mechanics with morphogen turnover and transport to explore routes to patterning. Our active description couples morphogen reaction and diffusion, which impact cell differentiation and tissue mechanics, to a two-phase poroelastic rheology, where one tissue phase consists of a poroelastic cell network and the other one of a permeating extracellular fluid, which provides a feedback by actively transporting morphogens. While this model encompasses previous theories approximating tissues to inert monophasic media, such as Turing’s reaction–diffusion model, it overcomes some of their key limitations permitting pattern formation via any two-species biochemical kinetics due to mechanically induced cross-diffusion flows. Moreover, we describe a qualitatively different advection-driven Keller–Segel instability which allows for the formation of patterns with a single morphogen and whose fundamental mode pattern robustly scales with tissue size. We discuss the potential relevance of these findings for tissue morphogenesis.}, author = {Recho, Pierre and Hallou, Adrien and Hannezo, Edouard B}, issn = {10916490}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America}, number = {12}, pages = {5344--5349}, publisher = {National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Theory of mechanochemical patterning in biphasic biological tissues}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1813255116}, volume = {116}, year = {2019}, }