@article{10387, abstract = {We report numerical simulations of membrane tubulation driven by large colloidal particles. Using Monte Carlo simulations we study how the process depends on particle size and binding strength, and present accurate free energy calculations to sort out how tube formation compares with the competing budding process. We find that tube formation is a result of the collective behavior of the particles adhering on the surface, and it occurs for binding strengths that are smaller than those required for budding. We also find that long linear aggregates of particles forming on the membrane surface act as nucleation seeds for tubulation by lowering the free energy barrier associated to the process.}, author = {Šarić, Anđela and Cacciuto, Angelo}, issn = {1079-7114}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, keywords = {general physics and astronomy}, number = {18}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Mechanism of membrane tube formation induced by adhesive nanocomponents}}, doi = {10.1103/physrevlett.109.188101}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{10388, abstract = {Using computer simulations, we show that lipid membranes can mediate linear aggregation of spherical nanoparticles binding to it for a wide range of biologically relevant bending rigidities. This result is in net contrast with the isotropic aggregation of nanoparticles on fluid interfaces or the expected clustering of isotropic insertions in biological membranes. We present a phase diagram indicating where linear aggregation is expected and compute explicitly the free-energy barriers associated with linear and isotropic aggregation. Finally, we provide simple scaling arguments to explain this phenomenology.}, author = {Šarić, Anđela and Cacciuto, Angelo}, issn = {1079-7114}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, keywords = {general physics and astronomy}, number = {11}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Fluid membranes can drive linear aggregation of adsorbed spherical nanoparticles}}, doi = {10.1103/physrevlett.108.118101}, volume = {108}, year = {2012}, } @article{1055, abstract = {In July, 2011, a 32-year-old man presented with thoracic pain radiating to the left arm and upper dorsum, shortness of breath, and palpitations. He had had upper back tension for 6 months. Medical history was unremarkable apart from moderate nicotine use (two pack-years). Echocardiography, electrocardiography, and laboratory tests were unremarkable, excluding a cardiac event. CT of the chest after chest radiography showed a large bulla of 16 cm diameter in the right hemithorax (figure A). We did not detect radiological evidence of underlying pulmonary disease. The bulla wall was unremarkable and no structures were seen within the bulla.}, author = {Erne, Barbara and Graff, Mareike and Klemm, Wolfram and Danzl, Johann G and Leschber, Gunda}, journal = {The Lancet}, number = {9849}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Bulla in the lung}}, doi = {10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60690-4}, volume = {380}, year = {2012}, } @article{1056, abstract = {We prepare and study a metastable attractive Mott-insulator state formed with bosonic atoms in a three-dimensional optical lattice. Starting from a Mott insulator with Cs atoms at weak repulsive interactions, we use a magnetic Feshbach resonance to tune the interactions to large attractive values and produce a metastable state pinned by attractive interactions with a lifetime on the order of 10 s. We probe the (de)excitation spectrum via lattice modulation spectroscopy, measuring the interaction dependence of two- and three-body bound-state energies. As a result of increased on-site three-body loss we observe resonance broadening and suppression of tunneling processes that produce three-body occupation.}, author = {Mark, Manfred and Haller, Elmar and Lauber, Katharina and Danzl, Johann G and Janisch, Alexander and Büchler, Hans and Daley, Andrew and Nägerl, Hanns}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {21}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Preparation and spectroscopy of a metastable mott-insulator state with attractive interactions}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.215302}, volume = {108}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{10750, abstract = {The goal of this work is to study the superconducting coherence length in the fluctuation regime in cuprate superconductors. In this work we present cantilever torque magnetometry measurements of micron-size BSCCO flakes patterned with arrays of nanometer scale rings or holes. Using ultrasensitive dynamic torque magnetometry, oscillations in magnetization are observed near Tc as a function of the applied magnetic flux threading the array. Special effort was made to detect the oscillations in magnetization at temperatures above Tc, where the Nernst effect and magnetization measurements suggest the possibility of pairing. To constrain the magnitude of the coherence length in the fluctuation regime, we will present the dependence of the amplitude of the h/2e period oscillations as a function of temperature and hole size.}, author = {Polshyn, Hryhoriy and Budakian, Raffi}, booktitle = {APS March Meeting 2012}, issn = {0003-0503}, location = {Boston, MA, United States}, number = {1}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Cantilever torque magnetometry study of multiply connected BSCCO arrays near Tc}}, volume = {57}, year = {2012}, } @inbook{10896, abstract = {Under physiological conditions the brain, via the purine salvage pathway, reuses the preformed purine bases hypoxanthine, derived from ATP degradation, and adenine (Ade), derived from polyamine synthesis, to restore its ATP pool. However, the massive degradation of ATP during ischemia, although providing valuable neuroprotective adenosine, results in the accumulation and loss of diffusible purine metabolites and thereby leads to a protracted reduction in the post-ischemic ATP pool size. In vivo, this may both limit the ability to deploy ATP-dependent reparative mechanisms and reduce the subsequent availability of adenosine, whilst in brain slices results in tissue with substantially lower levels of ATP than in vivo. In the present review, we describe the mechanisms by which brain tissue replenishes its ATP, how this can be improved with the clinically tolerated chemicals D-ribose and adenine, and the functional, and potential therapeutic, implications of doing so.}, author = {zur Nedden, Stephanie and Doney, Alexander S. and Frenguelli, Bruno G.}, booktitle = {Adenosine}, editor = {Masino, Susan and Boison, Detlev}, isbn = {9781461439028}, pages = {109--129}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{The double-edged sword: Gaining Adenosine at the expense of ATP. How to balance the books}}, doi = {10.1007/978-1-4614-3903-5_6}, year = {2012}, } @article{11089, abstract = {The Nuclear Envelope (NE) contains over 100 different proteins that associate with nuclear components such as chromatin, the lamina and the transcription machinery. Mutations in genes encoding NE proteins have been shown to result in tissue-specific defects and disease, suggesting cell-type specific differences in NE composition and function. Consistent with these observations, recent studies have revealed unexpected functions for numerous NE associated proteins during cell differentiation and development. Here we review the latest insights into the roles played by the NE in cell differentiation, development, disease and aging, focusing primarily on inner nuclear membrane (INM) proteins and nuclear pore components.}, author = {Gomez-Cavazos, J Sebastian and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {0955-0674}, journal = {Current Opinion in Cell Biology}, keywords = {Cell Biology}, number = {6}, pages = {775--783}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Outfits for different occasions: tissue-specific roles of Nuclear Envelope proteins}}, doi = {10.1016/j.ceb.2012.08.008}, volume = {24}, year = {2012}, } @article{11091, abstract = {Neoplastic cells are often characterized by specific morphological abnormalities of the nuclear envelope (NE), which have been used for cancer diagnosis for more than a century. The NE is a double phospholipid bilayer that encapsulates the nuclear genome, regulates all nuclear trafficking of RNAs and proteins and prevents the passive diffusion of macromolecules between the nucleoplasm and the cytoplasm. Whether there is a consequence to the proper functioning of the cell and loss of structural integrity of the nucleus remains unclear. Using live cell imaging, we characterize a phenomenon wherein nuclei of several proliferating human cancer cell lines become temporarily ruptured during interphase. Strikingly, NE rupturing was associated with the mislocalization of nucleoplasmic and cytoplasmic proteins and, in the most extreme cases, the entrapment of cytoplasmic organelles in the nuclear interior. In addition, we observed the formation of micronuclei-like structures during interphase and the movement of chromatin out of the nuclear space. The frequency of these NE rupturing events was higher in cells in which the nuclear lamina, a network of intermediate filaments providing mechanical support to the NE, was not properly formed. Our data uncover the existence of a NE instability that has the potential to change the genomic landscape of cancer cells.}, author = {Vargas, Jesse D. and Hatch, Emily M. and Anderson, Daniel J. and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {1949-1042}, journal = {Nucleus}, keywords = {Cell Biology}, number = {1}, pages = {88--100}, publisher = {Taylor & Francis}, title = {{Transient nuclear envelope rupturing during interphase in human cancer cells}}, doi = {10.4161/nucl.18954}, volume = {3}, year = {2012}, } @article{11093, abstract = {Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) are built from ∼30 different proteins called nucleoporins or Nups. Previous studies have shown that several Nups exhibit cell-type-specific expression and that mutations in NPC components result in tissue-specific diseases. Here we show that a specific change in NPC composition is required for both myogenic and neuronal differentiation. The transmembrane nucleoporin Nup210 is absent in proliferating myoblasts and embryonic stem cells (ESCs) but becomes expressed and incorporated into NPCs during cell differentiation. Preventing Nup210 production by RNAi blocks myogenesis and the differentiation of ESCs into neuroprogenitors. We found that the addition of Nup210 to NPCs does not affect nuclear transport but is required for the induction of genes that are essential for cell differentiation. Our results identify a single change in NPC composition as an essential step in cell differentiation and establish a role for Nup210 in gene expression regulation and cell fate determination.}, author = {D'Angelo, Maximiliano A. and Gomez-Cavazos, J. Sebastian and Mei, Arianna and Lackner, Daniel H. and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {1534-5807}, journal = {Developmental Cell}, keywords = {Developmental Biology, Cell Biology, General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, Molecular Biology}, number = {2}, pages = {446--458}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{A change in nuclear pore complex composition regulates cell differentiation}}, doi = {10.1016/j.devcel.2011.11.021}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, } @article{11092, abstract = {To combat the functional decline of the proteome, cells use the process of protein turnover to replace potentially impaired polypeptides with new functional copies. We found that extremely long-lived proteins (ELLPs) did not turn over in postmitotic cells of the rat central nervous system. These ELLPs were associated with chromatin and the nuclear pore complex, the central transport channels that mediate all molecular trafficking in and out of the nucleus. The longevity of these proteins would be expected to expose them to potentially harmful metabolites, putting them at risk of accumulating damage over extended periods of time. Thus, it is possible that failure to maintain proper levels and functional integrity of ELLPs in nonproliferative cells might contribute to age-related deterioration in cell and tissue function.}, author = {Savas, Jeffrey N. and Toyama, Brandon H. and Xu, Tao and Yates, John R. and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {1095-9203}, journal = {Science}, keywords = {Multidisciplinary}, number = {6071}, pages = {942--942}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Extremely long-lived nuclear pore proteins in the rat brain}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1217421}, volume = {335}, year = {2012}, } @article{11090, abstract = {Nuclear export of mRNAs is thought to occur exclusively through nuclear pore complexes. In this issue of Cell, Speese et al. identify an alternate pathway for mRNA export in muscle cells where ribonucleoprotein complexes involved in forming neuromuscular junctions transit the nuclear envelope by fusing with and budding through the nuclear membrane.}, author = {Hatch, Emily M. and HETZER, Martin W}, issn = {0092-8674}, journal = {Cell}, keywords = {General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology}, number = {4}, pages = {733--735}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{RNP export by nuclear envelope budding}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2012.04.018}, volume = {149}, year = {2012}, } @article{113, abstract = {Although liquids typically flow around intruding objects, a counterintuitive phenomenon occurs in dense suspensions of micrometre-sized particles: they become liquid-like when perturbed lightly, but harden when driven strongly. Rheological experiments have investigated how such thickening arises under shear, and linked it to hydrodynamic interactions or granular dilation. However, neither of these mechanisms alone can explain the ability of suspensions to generate very large, positive normal stresses under impact. To illustrate the phenomenon, such stresses can be large enough to allow a person to run across a suspension without sinking, and far exceed the upper limit observed under shear or extension. Here we show that these stresses originate from an impact-generated solidification front that transforms an initially compressible particle matrix into a rapidly growing jammed region, ultimately leading to extraordinary amounts of momentum absorption. Using high-speed videography, embedded force sensing and X-ray imaging, we capture the detailed dynamics of this process as it decelerates a metal rod hitting a suspension of cornflour (cornstarch) in water. We develop a model for the dynamic solidification and its effect on the surrounding suspension that reproduces the observed behaviour quantitatively. Our findings suggest that prior interpretations of the impact resistance as dominated by shear thickening need to be revisited.}, author = {Waitukaitis, Scott R and Jaeger, Heinrich}, journal = {Nature}, number = {7406}, pages = {205 -- 209}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Impact-activated solidification of dense suspensions via dynamic jamming fronts}}, doi = {10.1038/nature11187}, volume = {487}, year = {2012}, } @article{114, abstract = {We report on an investigation of the solidification of a cornstarch and water suspension during normal impact on its surface. We find that a finite time after impact, the suspension displays characteristics reminiscent of a solid, including localized stress transmission, the development of a yield stress, and some elastic energy storage. The time dependence of these characteristics depends on the thickness of the cornstarch layer, showing that the solidification is a dynamic process driven by the impacting object. These findings confirm previous speculations that rapidly applied normal stress transforms the normally fluid-like suspension into a temporarily jammed solid and draw a clear distinction between the effects of normal stress and shear stress in dense suspensions.}, author = {Waitukaitis, Scott R and Jaeger, Heinrich}, journal = {Revista Cubana de Fisica}, number = {1E}, pages = {1E31 -- 1E33}, publisher = {Universidad de La Habana}, title = {{Solidification of a cornstarch and water suspension}}, volume = {29}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{11656, abstract = {Suppose your sole interest in recommending a product to me is to maximize the amount paid to you by the seller for a sequence of recommendations. How should you recommend optimally if I become more inclined to ignore you with each irrelevant recommendation you make? Finding an answer to this question is a key challenge in all forms of marketing that rely on and explore social ties; ranging from personal recommendations to viral marketing. We prove that even if the recommendee regains her initial trust on each successful recommendation, the expected revenue the recommender can make over an infinite period due to payments by the seller is bounded. This can only be overcome when the recommendee also incrementally regains trust during periods without any recommendation. Here, we see a connection to "banner blindness," suggesting that showing fewer ads can lead to a higher long-term revenue.}, author = {Dütting, Paul and Henzinger, Monika H and Weber, Ingmar}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 21st ACM international conference on Information and knowledge management}, isbn = {9781450311564}, location = {Maui, HI, United States}, pages = {2268--2286}, publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery}, title = {{Maximizing revenue from strategic recommendations under decaying trust}}, doi = {10.1145/2396761.2398621}, year = {2012}, } @article{11751, abstract = {The Seebeck coefficients, electrical resistivities, total thermal conductivities, and magnetization are reported for temperatures between 5 and 350 K for n-type Bi0.88Sb0.12 nano-composite alloys made by Ho-doping at the 0, 1, and 3 % atomic levels. The alloys were prepared using a dc hot-pressing method, and are shown to be single phase for both Ho contents with grain sizes on the average of 900 nm. We find the parent compound has a maximum of ZT = 0.28 at 231 K, while doping 1 % Ho increases the maximum ZT to 0.31 at 221 K and the 3 % doped sample suppresses the maximum ZT = 0.24 at a temperature of 260 K.}, author = {Lukas, K. C. and Joshi, G. and Modic, Kimberly A and Ren, Z. F. and Opeil, C. P.}, issn = {1573-4803}, journal = {Journal of Materials Science}, number = {15}, pages = {5729--5734}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Thermoelectric properties of Ho-doped Bi0.88Sb0.12}}, doi = {10.1007/s10853-012-6463-6}, volume = {47}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{11794, abstract = {We study individual rational, Pareto optimal, and incentive compatible mechanisms for auctions with heterogeneous items and budget limits. For multi-dimensional valuations we show that there can be no deterministic mechanism with these properties for divisible items. We use this to show that there can also be no randomized mechanism that achieves this for either divisible or indivisible items. For single-dimensional valuations we show that there can be no deterministic mechanism with these properties for indivisible items, but that there is a randomized mechanism that achieves this for either divisible or indivisible items. The impossibility results hold for public budgets, while the mechanism allows private budgets, which is in both cases the harder variant to show. While all positive results are polynomial-time algorithms, all negative results hold independent of complexity considerations.}, author = {Dütting, Paul and Henzinger, Monika H and Starnberger, Martin}, booktitle = {8th International Workshop on Internet and Network Economics}, isbn = {9783642353109}, issn = {1611-3349}, location = {Liverpool, United Kingdom}, pages = {44–57}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Auctions with heterogeneous items and budget limits}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-35311-6_4}, volume = {7695}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{11795, abstract = {We study multiple keyword sponsored search auctions with budgets. Each keyword has multiple ad slots with a click-through rate. The bidders have additive valuations, which are linear in the click-through rates, and budgets, which are restricting their overall payments. Additionally, the number of slots per keyword assigned to a bidder is bounded. We show the following results: (1) We give the first mechanism for multiple keywords, where click-through rates differ among slots. Our mechanism is incentive compatible in expectation, individually rational in expectation, and Pareto optimal. (2) We study the combinatorial setting, where each bidder is only interested in a subset of the keywords. We give an incentive compatible, individually rational, Pareto optimal, and deterministic mechanism for identical click-through rates. (3) We give an impossibility result for incentive compatible, individually rational, Pareto optimal, and deterministic mechanisms for bidders with diminishing marginal valuations.}, author = {Colini-Baldeschi, Riccardo and Henzinger, Monika H and Leonardi, Stefano and Starnberger, Martin}, booktitle = {39th International Colloquium on Automata, Languages, and Programming}, isbn = {9783642315848}, issn = {0302-9743}, location = {Warwick, United Kingdom}, pages = {1–12}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{On multiple keyword sponsored search auctions with budgets}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-31585-5_1}, volume = {7392}, year = {2012}, } @article{11964, abstract = {A detailed investigation on the direct arylation of benzene with aryl bromides by using first-row transition metals under high-temperature/high-pressure (high-T/p) conditions is described. By employing a parallel reactor platform for rapid reaction screening and discovery at elevated temperatures, various metal/ligand/base combinations were evaluated for their ability to enable biaryl formation through C-H activation. The combination of cobalt(III) acetylacetonate and lithium bis(trimethylsilyl)amide was subjected to further process intensification at 200 °C (15 bar), allowing a significant reduction of the catalyst/base loading and a dramatic increase in catalytic efficiency (turnover frequency) by a factor of 1000 compared to traditional protocols. The high-throughput screening additionally identified novel nickel- and copper-based metal/ligand combinations that favored an amination pathway competing with C-H activation, with the addition of ligands, such as 1,10-phenanthroline, having a profound influence on the selectivity. In addition to metal-based catalysts, high-T/p process windows were also successfully applied to transition-metal-free systems, utilizing 1,10-phenanthroline as organocatalyst.}, author = {Pieber, Bartholomäus and Cantillo, David and Kappe, C. Oliver}, issn = {1521-3765}, journal = {Chemistry – A European Journal}, number = {16}, pages = {5047--5055}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{Direct arylation of benzene with aryl bromides using high‐temperature/high‐pressure process windows: Expanding the scope of C-H activation chemistry}}, doi = {10.1002/chem.201103748}, volume = {18}, year = {2012}, } @article{11963, abstract = {Peroxides and ethers in flow: 2-Carbonyl-substituted phenols and β-ketoesters react safely with ethers in a microreactor environment using a copper catalyst and an organic peroxide (TBHP). This protocol results in unsymmetrical acetal scaffolds not easily available otherwise (see scheme).}, author = {Kumar, G. Sathish and Pieber, Bartholomäus and Reddy, K. Rajender and Kappe, C. Oliver}, issn = {1521-3765}, journal = {Chemistry - A European Journal}, number = {20}, pages = {6124--6128}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{Copper-catalyzed formation of C-O bonds by direct α-C-H bond activation of ethers using stoichiometric amounts of peroxide in batch and continuous-flow formats}}, doi = {10.1002/chem.201200815}, volume = {18}, year = {2012}, } @article{12644, abstract = {In the Dry Andes of central Chile, summer water resources originate mostly from snowmelt and ice melt. We use the physically based, spatially distributed hydrological model TOPKAPI to study the exchange between glaciers and climate in the upper Aconcagua River Basin during the summer season and identify the model parameters that are robust and transferable and those that are more dependent on calibration. TOPKAPI has recently been adapted to incorporate an enhanced temperature index approach for snow and ice melting. We suggest a calibration procedure that allows calibration of parameters in three steps by separating parameters governing distinct processes. We evaluate the parameters' transferability in time and in space by applying the model at two spatial scales. TOPKAPI's ability to simulate the relevant processes is tested against meteorological, ablation, and glacier runoff data measured on Juncal Norte Glacier during two glacier ablation seasons. The model was applied successfully to the climatic setting of the Dry Andes once its parameters were recalibrated. We found a clear distinction between parameters that are stable in time and those that need recalibration. The parameters of the melt model are transferable from one season to the other, while the parameters governing the extrapolation of meteorological input data and the routing of glacier meltwater need recalibration from one season to the other. Sensitivity analysis revealed that the model is most sensitive to the temperature lapse rate governing the extrapolation of air temperature from point measurements to the glacier scale and to the melt parameter that multiplies the shortwave radiation balance.}, author = {Ragettli, S. and Pellicciotti, Francesca}, issn = {0043-1397}, journal = {Water Resources Research}, number = {3}, publisher = {American Geophysical Union}, title = {{Calibration of a physically based, spatially distributed hydrological model in a glacierized basin: On the use of knowledge from glaciometeorological processes to constrain model parameters}}, doi = {10.1029/2011wr010559}, volume = {48}, year = {2012}, } @article{12646, abstract = {Assessment of water resources from remote mountainous catchments plays a crucial role for the development of rural areas in or in the vicinity of mountain ranges. The scarcity of data, however, prevents the application of standard approaches that are based on data-driven models. The Hindu Kush–Karakoram–Himalaya mountain range is a crucial area in terms of water resources, but our understanding of the response of its high-elevation catchments to a changing climate is hindered by lack of hydro-meteorological and cryospheric data. Hydrological modeling is challenging here because internal inconsistencies—such as an underestimation of precipitation input that can be compensated for by an overestimation of meltwater—might be hidden due to the complexity of feedback mechanisms that govern melt and runoff generation in such basins. Data scarcity adds to this difficulty by preventing the application of systematic calibration procedures that would allow identification of the parameter set that could guarantee internal consistency in the simulation of the single hydrological components. In this work, we use simulations from the Hunza River Basin in the Karakoram region obtained with the hydrological model TOPKAPI to quantify the predictive power of discharge and snow-cover data sets, as well as the combination of both. We also show that short-term measurements of meteorological variables such as radiative fluxes, wind speed, relative humidity, and air temperature from glacio-meteorological experiments are crucial for a correct parameterization of surface melt processes. They enable detailed simulations of the energy fluxes governing glacier–atmosphere interaction and the resulting ablation through energy-balance modeling. These simulations are used to derive calibrated parameters for the simplified snow and glacier routines in TOPKAPI. We demonstrate that such parameters are stable in space and time in similar climatic regions, thus reducing the number of parameters requiring calibration.}, author = {Pellicciotti, Francesca and Buergi, Cyrill and Immerzeel, Walter Willem and Konz, Markus and Shrestha, Arun B.}, issn = {1994-7151}, journal = {Mountain Research and Development}, number = {1}, pages = {39--50}, publisher = {International Mountain Society}, title = {{Challenges and uncertainties in hydrological modeling of remote Hindu Kush–Karakoram–Himalayan (HKH) basins: Suggestions for calibration strategies}}, doi = {10.1659/mrd-journal-d-11-00092.1}, volume = {32}, year = {2012}, } @article{12647, abstract = {Accurate quantification of the spatial distribution of precipitation in mountain regions is crucial for assessments of water resources and for the understanding of high-altitude hydrology, yet it is one of the largest unknowns due to the lack of high-altitude observations. The Hunza basin in Pakistan contains very large glacier systems, which, given the melt, cannot persist unless precipitation (snow input) is much higher than what is observed at the meteorological stations, mostly located in mountain valleys. Several studies, therefore, suggest strong positive vertical precipitation lapse rates; in the present study, we quantify this lapse rate by using glaciers as a proxy. We assume a neutral mass balance for the glaciers for the period from 2001 to 2003, and we inversely model the precipitation lapse by balancing the total accumulation in the catchment area and the ablation over the glacier area for the 50 largest glacier systems in the Hunza basin in the Karakoram. Our results reveal a vertical precipitation lapse rate that equals 0.21 ± 0.12% m−1, with a maximum precipitation at an elevation of 5500 masl. We showed that the total annual basin precipitation (828 mm) is 260% higher than what is estimated based on interpolated observations (319 mm); this has major consequences for hydrological modeling and water resource assessments in general. Our results were validated by using previously published studies on individual glaciers as well as the water balance of the Hunza basin. The approach is more widely applicable in mountain ranges where precipitation measurements at high altitude are lacking.}, author = {Immerzeel, Walter Willem and Pellicciotti, Francesca and Shrestha, Arun B.}, issn = {1994-7151}, journal = {Mountain Research and Development}, keywords = {General Environmental Science, Development, Environmental Chemistry}, number = {1}, pages = {30--38}, publisher = {International Mountain Society}, title = {{Glaciers as a proxy to quantify the spatial distribution of precipitation in the Hunza basin}}, doi = {10.1659/mrd-journal-d-11-00097.1}, volume = {32}, year = {2012}, } @article{12648, abstract = {Distributed glacier melt models generally assume that the glacier surface consists of bare exposed ice and snow. In reality, many glaciers are wholly or partially covered in layers of debris that tend to suppress ablation rates. In this paper, an existing physically based point model for the ablation of debris-covered ice is incorporated in a distributed melt model and applied to Haut Glacier d'Arolla, Switzerland, which has three large patches of debris cover on its surface. The model is based on a 10 m resolution digital elevation model (DEM) of the area; each glacier pixel in the DEM is defined as either bare or debris-covered ice, and may be covered in snow that must be melted off before ice ablation is assumed to occur. Each debris-covered pixel is assigned a debris thickness value using probability distributions based on over 1000 manual thickness measurements. Locally observed meteorological data are used to run energy balance calculations in every pixel, using an approach suitable for snow, bare ice or debris-covered ice as appropriate. The use of the debris model significantly reduces the total ablation in the debris-covered areas, however the precise reduction is sensitive to the temperature extrapolation used in the model distribution because air near the debris surface tends to be slightly warmer than over bare ice. Overall results suggest that the debris patches, which cover 10% of the glacierized area, reduce total runoff from the glacierized part of the basin by up to 7%.}, author = {Reid, T. D. and Carenzo, M. and Pellicciotti, Francesca and Brock, B. W.}, issn = {0148-0227}, journal = {Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres}, keywords = {Paleontology, Space and Planetary Science, Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous), Atmospheric Science, Earth-Surface Processes, Geochemistry and Petrology, Soil Science, Water Science and Technology, Ecology, Aquatic Science, Forestry, Oceanography, Geophysics}, number = {D18}, publisher = {American Geophysical Union}, title = {{Including debris cover effects in a distributed model of glacier ablation}}, doi = {10.1029/2012jd017795}, volume = {117}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{1384, abstract = {Software model checking, as an undecidable problem, has three possible outcomes: (1) the program satisfies the specification, (2) the program does not satisfy the specification, and (3) the model checker fails. The third outcome usually manifests itself in a space-out, time-out, or one component of the verification tool giving up; in all of these failing cases, significant computation is performed by the verification tool before the failure, but no result is reported. We propose to reformulate the model-checking problem as follows, in order to have the verification tool report a summary of the performed work even in case of failure: given a program and a specification, the model checker returns a condition Ψ - usually a state predicate - such that the program satisfies the specification under the condition Ψ - that is, as long as the program does not leave the states in which Ψ is satisfied. In our experiments, we investigated as one major application of conditional model checking the sequential combination of model checkers with information passing. We give the condition that one model checker produces, as input to a second conditional model checker, such that the verification problem for the second is restricted to the part of the state space that is not covered by the condition, i.e., the second model checker works on the problems that the first model checker could not solve. Our experiments demonstrate that repeated application of conditional model checkers, passing information from one model checker to the next, can significantly improve the verification results and performance, i.e., we can now verify programs that we could not verify before.}, author = {Beyer, Dirk and Henzinger, Thomas A and Keremoglu, Mehmet and Wendler, Philipp}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the ACM SIGSOFT 20th International Symposium on the Foundations of Software Engineering}, location = {Cary, NC, USA}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Conditional model checking: A technique to pass information between verifiers}}, doi = {10.1145/2393596.2393664}, year = {2012}, } @article{1472, abstract = {For G = GL 2, PGL 2, SL 2 we prove that the perverse filtration associated with the Hitchin map on the rational cohomology of the moduli space of twisted G-Higgs bundles on a compact Riemann surface C agrees with the weight filtration on the rational cohomology of the twisted G character variety of C when the cohomologies are identified via non-Abelian Hodge theory. The proof is accomplished by means of a study of the topology of the Hitchin map over the locus of integral spectral curves.}, author = {De Cataldo, Mark A and Tamas Hausel and Migliorini, Luca}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics}, number = {3}, pages = {1329 -- 1407}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, title = {{Topology of hitchin systems and Hodge theory of character varieties: The case A 1}}, doi = {10.4007/annals.2012.175.3.7}, volume = {175}, year = {2012}, } @article{1471, abstract = {Given a possibly reducible and non-reduced spectral cover π: X → C over a smooth projective complex curve C we determine the group of connected components of the Prym variety Prym(X/C). As an immediate application we show that the finite group of n-torsion points of the Jacobian of C acts trivially on the cohomology of the twisted SL n-Higgs moduli space up to the degree which is predicted by topological mirror symmetry. In particular this yields a new proof of a result of Harder-Narasimhan, showing that this finite group acts trivially on the cohomology of the twisted SL n stable bundle moduli space.}, author = {Tamas Hausel and Pauly, Christian}, journal = {Geometry and Topology}, number = {3}, pages = {1609 -- 1638}, publisher = {University of Warwick}, title = {{Prym varieties of spectral covers}}, doi = {10.2140/gt.2012.16.1609}, volume = {16}, year = {2012}, } @article{171, abstract = {For given non-zero integers a, b, q we investigate the density of solutions (x, y) ∈ ℤ2 to the binary cubic congruence ax2 + by3 ≡ 0 mod q, and use it to establish the Manin conjecture for a singular del Pezzo surface of degree 2 defined over ℚ.}, author = {Timothy Browning and Baier, Stephan}, journal = {Journal fur die Reine und Angewandte Mathematik}, number = {680}, pages = {1 -- 65}, publisher = {Walter de Gruyter}, title = {{Inhomogeneous cubic congruences and rational points on del Pezzo surfaces}}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1515/crelle.2012.039}, volume = {2013}, year = {2012}, } @article{1725, abstract = {The spatial organization of cell fates during development involves the interpretation of morphogen gradients by cellular signaling cascades and transcriptional networks. Recent studies use biophysical models, genetics, and quantitative imaging to unravel how tissue-level morphogen behavior arises from subcellular events. Moreover, data from several systems show that morphogen gradients, downstream signaling, and the activity of cell-intrinsic transcriptional networks change dynamically during pattern formation. Studies from Drosophila and now also vertebrates suggest that transcriptional network dynamics are central to the generation of gene expression patterns. Together, this leads to the view that pattern formation is an emergent behavior that results from the coordination of events occurring across molecular, cellular, and tissue scales. The development of novel approaches to study this complex process remains a challenge.}, author = {Anna Kicheva and Cohen, Michael H and Briscoe, James}, journal = {Science}, number = {6104}, pages = {210 -- 212}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Developmental pattern formation: Insights from physics and biology}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1225182}, volume = {338}, year = {2012}, } @article{1757, abstract = {Self-assembled Ge wires with a height of only 3 unit cells and a length of up to 2 micrometers were grown on Si(001) by means of a catalyst-free method based on molecular beam epitaxy. The wires grow horizontally along either the [100] or the [010] direction. On atomically flat surfaces, they exhibit a highly uniform, triangular cross section. A simple thermodynamic model accounts for the existence of a preferential base width for longitudinal expansion, in quantitative agreement with the experimental findings. Despite the absence of intentional doping, the first transistor-type devices made from single wires show low-resistive electrical contacts and single-hole transport at sub-Kelvin temperatures. In view of their exceptionally small and self-defined cross section, these Ge wires hold promise for the realization of hole systems with exotic properties and provide a new development route for silicon-based nanoelectronics.}, author = {Zhang, Jianjun and Georgios Katsaros and Montalenti, Francesco and Scopece, Daniele and Rezaev, Roman O and Mickel, Christine H and Rellinghaus, Bernd and Miglio, Leo P and De Franceschi, Silvano and Rastelli, Armando and Schmidt, Oliver G}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {8}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Monolithic growth of ultrathin Ge nanowires on Si(001) }}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.085502}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{1758, abstract = {We studied the low-energy states of spin-1/2 quantum dots defined in InAs/InP nanowires and coupled to aluminum superconducting leads. By varying the superconducting gap Δ with a magnetic field B we investigated the transition from strong coupling Δ≪T K to weak-coupling Δ≫T K, where T K is the Kondo temperature. Below the critical field, we observe a persisting zero-bias Kondo resonance that vanishes only for low B or higher temperatures, leaving the room to more robust subgap structures at bias voltages between Δ and 2Δ. For strong and approximately symmetric tunnel couplings, a Josephson supercurrent is observed in addition to the Kondo peak. We ascribe the coexistence of a Kondo resonance and a superconducting gap to a significant density of intragap quasiparticle states, and the finite-bias subgap structures to tunneling through Shiba states. Our results, supported by numerical calculations, own relevance also in relation to tunnel-spectroscopy experiments aiming at the observation of Majorana fermions in hybrid nanostructures.}, author = {Lee, Eduardo J and Jiang, Xiaocheng and Aguado, Ramón and Georgios Katsaros and Lieber, Charles M and De Franceschi, Silvano}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {18}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Zero-bias anomaly in a nanowire quantum dot coupled to superconductors}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.186802}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{1756, abstract = {We report on the electronic transport properties of multiple-gate devices fabricated from undoped silicon nanowires. Understanding and control of the relevant transport mechanisms was achieved by means of local electrostatic gating and temperature-dependent measurements. The roles of the source/drain contacts and of the silicon channel could be independently evaluated and tuned. Wrap gates surrounding the silicide-silicon contact interfaces were proved to be effective in inducing a full suppression of the contact Schottky barriers, thereby enabling carrier injection down to liquid helium temperature. By independently tuning the effective Schottky barrier heights, a variety of reconfigurable device functionalities could be obtained. In particular, the same nanowire device could be configured to work as a Schottky barrier transistor, a Schottky diode, or a p-n diode with tunable polarities. This versatility was eventually exploited to realize a NAND logic gate with gain well above one.}, author = {Mongillo, Massimo and Spathis, Panayotis N and Georgios Katsaros and Gentile, Pascal and De Franceschi, Silvano}, journal = {Nano Letters}, number = {6}, pages = {3074 -- 3079}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, title = {{Multifunctional devices and logic gates with undoped silicon nanowires}}, doi = {10.1021/nl300930m}, volume = {12}, year = {2012}, } @article{1783, abstract = {Nonlinearity and entanglement are two important properties by which physical systems can be identified as nonclassical. We study the dynamics of the resonant interaction of up to N=3 two-level systems and a single mode of the electromagnetic field sharing a single excitation dynamically. We observe coherent vacuum Rabi oscillations and their nonlinear √N speedup by tracking the populations of all qubits and the resonator in time. We use quantum state tomography to show explicitly that the dynamics generates maximally entangled states of the W class in a time limited only by the collective interaction rate. We use an entanglement witness and the 3-tangle to characterize the state whose fidelity F=78% is limited in our experiments by crosstalk arising during the simultaneous qubit manipulations which is absent in a sequential approach with F=91%.}, author = {Mlynek, Jonas A and Abdumalikov, Abdufarrukh A and Johannes Fink and Steffen, L. Kraig and Baur, Matthias P and Lang, C and Van Loo, Arjan F and Wallraff, Andreas}, journal = {Physical Review A - Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics}, number = {5}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Demonstrating W-type entanglement of Dicke states in resonant cavity quantum electrodynamics}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevA.86.053838}, volume = {86}, year = {2012}, } @article{1782, abstract = {Steering a quantum harmonic oscillator state along cyclic trajectories leads to a path-dependent geometric phase. Here we describe its experimental observation in an electronic harmonic oscillator. We use a superconducting qubit as a nonlinear probe of the phase, which is otherwise unobservable due to the linearity of the oscillator. We show that the geometric phase is, for a variety of cyclic paths, proportional to the area enclosed in the quadrature plane. At the transition to the nonadiabatic regime, we study corrections to the phase and dephasing of the qubit caused by qubit-resonator entanglement. In particular, we identify parameters for which this dephasing mechanism is negligible even in the nonadiabatic regime. The demonstrated controllability makes our system a versatile tool to study geometric phases in open quantum systems and to investigate their potential for quantum information processing.}, author = {Pechal, M and Berger, Stefan T and Abdumalikov, Abdufarrukh A and Johannes Fink and Mlynek, Jonas A and Steffen, L. Kraig and Wallraff, Andreas and Filipp, Stefan}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {17}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Geometric phase and nonadiabatic effects in an electronic harmonic oscillator}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.170401}, volume = {108}, year = {2012}, } @article{1784, abstract = {A localized qubit entangled with a propagating quantum field is well suited to study nonlocal aspects of quantum mechanics and may also provide a channel to communicate between spatially separated nodes in a quantum network. Here, we report the on-demand generation and characterization of Bell-type entangled states between a superconducting qubit and propagating microwave fields composed of zero-, one-, and two-photon Fock states. Using low noise linear amplification and efficient data acquisition we extract all relevant correlations between the qubit and the photon states and demonstrate entanglement with high fidelity.}, author = {Eichler, Christopher and Lang, C and Johannes Fink and Govenius, J and Filipp, Stefan and Wallraff, Andreas}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {24}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Observation of entanglement between itinerant microwave photons and a superconducting qubit}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.240501}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{1801, abstract = {Brain circuits are assembled from a large variety of morphologically and functionally diverse cell types. It is not known how the intermingled cell types of an individual adult brain region differ in their expressed genomes. Here we describe an atlas of cell type transcriptomes in one brain region, the mouse retina. We found that each adult cell type expressed a specific set of genes, including a unique set of transcription factors, forming a 'barcode' for cell identity. Cell type transcriptomes carried enough information to categorize cells into morphological classes and types. Several genes that were specifically expressed in particular retinal circuit elements, such as inhibitory neuron types, are associated with eye diseases. The resource described here allows gene expression to be compared across adult retinal cell types, experimenting with specific transcription factors to differentiate stem or somatic cells to retinal cell types, and predicting cellular targets of newly discovered disease-associated genes.}, author = {Sandra Siegert and Cabuy, Erik and Scherf, Brigitte G and Kohler, Hubertus and Panda, Satchidananda and Le, Yunzheng and Fehling, Hans J and Gaidatzis, Dimos and Stadler, Michael B and Roska, Botond M}, journal = {Nature Neuroscience}, number = {3}, pages = {487 -- 495}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Transcriptional code and disease map for adult retinal cell types}}, doi = {10.1038/nn.3032}, volume = {15}, year = {2012}, } @misc{1976, abstract = {Complex I is a key enzyme of the respiratory chain in many organisms. This multi-protein complex with an intricate evolutionary history originated from the unification of prebuilt modules of hydrogenases and transporters. Using recently determined crystallographic structures of complex I we reanalyzed evolutionarily related complexes that couple oxidoreduction to trans-membrane ion translocation. Our analysis points to the previously unnoticed structural homology of the electron input module of formate dehydrogenlyases and subunit NuoG of complex I. We also show that all related to complex I hydrogenases likely operate via a conformation driven mechanism with structural changes generated in the conserved coupling site located at the interface of subunits NuoB/D/H. The coupling apparently originated once in evolutionary history, together with subunit NuoH joining hydrogenase and transport modules. Analysis of quinone oxidoreduction properties and the structure of complex I allows us to suggest a fully reversible coupling mechanism. Our model predicts that: 1) proton access to the ketone groups of the bound quinone is rigorously controlled by the protein, 2) the negative electric charge of the anionic ubiquinol head group is a major driving force for conformational changes.}, author = {Efremov, Rouslan G and Leonid Sazanov}, booktitle = {Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Bioenergetics}, number = {10}, pages = {1785 -- 1795}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{The coupling mechanism of respiratory complex i - A structural and evolutionary perspective}}, doi = {10.1016/j.bbabio.2012.02.015}, volume = {1817}, year = {2012}, } @article{1972, abstract = {Outer membrane protein F, a major component of the Escherichia coli outer membrane, was crystallized for the first time in lipidic mesophase of monoolein in novel space groups, P1 and H32. Due to ease of its purification and crystallization OmpF can be used as a benchmark protein for establishing membrane protein crystallization in meso, as a "membrane lyzozyme" The packing of porin trimers in the crystals of space group H32 is similar to natural outer membranes, providing the first high-resolution insight into the close to native packing of OmpF. Surprisingly, interaction between trimers is mediated exclusively by lipids, without direct protein-protein contacts. Multiple ordered lipids are observed and many of them occupy identical positions independently of the space group, identifying preferential interaction sites of lipid acyl chains. Presence of ordered aliphatic chains close to a positively charged area on the porin surface suggests a position for a lipopolysaccharide binding site on the surface of the major E. coli porins.}, author = {Efremov, Rouslan G and Leonid Sazanov}, journal = {Journal of Structural Biology}, number = {3}, pages = {311 -- 318}, publisher = {Academic Press}, title = {{Structure of Escherichia coli OmpF porin from lipidic mesophase}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jsb.2012.03.005}, volume = {178}, year = {2012}, } @article{1987, abstract = {In the living cell, proteins are able to organize space much larger than their dimensions. In return, changes of intracellular space can influence biochemical reactions, allowing cells to sense their size and shape. Despite the possibility to reconstitute protein self-organization with only a few purified components, we still lack knowledge of how geometrical boundaries affect spatiotemporal protein patterns. Following a minimal systems approach, we used purified proteins and photolithographically patterned membranes to study the influence of spatial confinement on the self-organization of the Min system, a spatial regulator of bacterial cytokinesis, in vitro. We found that the emerging protein pattern responds even to the lateral, two-dimensional geometry of the membrane such that, as in the three-dimensional cell, Min protein waves travel along the longest axis of the membrane patch. This shows that for spatial sensing the Min system does not need to be enclosed in a three-dimensional compartment. Using a computational model we quantitatively analyzed our experimental findings and identified persistent binding of MinE to the membrane as requirement for the Min system to sense geometry. Our results give insight into the interplay between geometrical confinement and biochemical patterns emerging from a nonlinear reaction-diffusion system. }, author = {Schweizer, Jakob and Martin Loose and Bonny, Mike and Kruse, Karsten and Mönch, Ingolf and Schwille, Petra }, journal = {PNAS}, number = {38}, pages = {15283 -- 15288}, publisher = {National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Geometry sensing by self-organized protein patterns}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1206953109}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2048, abstract = {Leakage resilient cryptography attempts to incorporate side-channel leakage into the black-box security model and designs cryptographic schemes that are provably secure within it. Informally, a scheme is leakage-resilient if it remains secure even if an adversary learns a bounded amount of arbitrary information about the schemes internal state. Unfortunately, most leakage resilient schemes are unnecessarily complicated in order to achieve strong provable security guarantees. As advocated by Yu et al. [CCS’10], this mostly is an artefact of the security proof and in practice much simpler construction may already suffice to protect against realistic side-channel attacks. In this paper, we show that indeed for simpler constructions leakage-resilience can be obtained when we aim for relaxed security notions where the leakage-functions and/or the inputs to the primitive are chosen non-adaptively. For example, we show that a three round Feistel network instantiated with a leakage resilient PRF yields a leakage resilient PRP if the inputs are chosen non-adaptively (This complements the result of Dodis and Pietrzak [CRYPTO’10] who show that if a adaptive queries are allowed, a superlogarithmic number of rounds is necessary.) We also show that a minor variation of the classical GGM construction gives a leakage resilient PRF if both, the leakage-function and the inputs, are chosen non-adaptively.}, author = {Faust, Sebastian and Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z and Schipper, Joachim}, booktitle = { Conference proceedings CHES 2012}, location = {Leuven, Belgium}, pages = {213 -- 232}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Practical leakage-resilient symmetric cryptography}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-33027-8_13}, volume = {7428}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2049, abstract = {We propose a new authentication protocol that is provably secure based on a ring variant of the learning parity with noise (LPN) problem. The protocol follows the design principle of the LPN-based protocol from Eurocrypt’11 (Kiltz et al.), and like it, is a two round protocol secure against active attacks. Moreover, our protocol has small communication complexity and a very small footprint which makes it applicable in scenarios that involve low-cost, resource-constrained devices. Performance-wise, our protocol is more efficient than previous LPN-based schemes, such as the many variants of the Hopper-Blum (HB) protocol and the aforementioned protocol from Eurocrypt’11. Our implementation results show that it is even comparable to the standard challenge-and-response protocols based on the AES block-cipher. Our basic protocol is roughly 20 times slower than AES, but with the advantage of having 10 times smaller code size. Furthermore, if a few hundred bytes of non-volatile memory are available to allow the storage of some off-line pre-computations, then the online phase of our protocols is only twice as slow as AES. }, author = {Heyse, Stefan and Kiltz, Eike and Lyubashevsky, Vadim and Paar, Christof and Pietrzak, Krzysztof Z}, booktitle = { Conference proceedings FSE 2012}, location = {Washington, DC, USA}, pages = {346 -- 365}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Lapin: An efficient authentication protocol based on ring-LPN}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-34047-5_20}, volume = {7549}, year = {2012}, } @article{2073, abstract = {Background: Drosophila albomicans is a unique model organism for studying both sex chromosome and B chromosome evolution. A pair of its autosomes comprising roughly 40% of the whole genome has fused to the ancient X and Y chromosomes only about 0.12 million years ago, thereby creating the youngest and most gene-rich neo-sex system reported to date. This species also possesses recently derived B chromosomes that show non-Mendelian inheritance and significantly influence fertility.Methods: We sequenced male flies with B chromosomes at 124.5-fold genome coverage using next-generation sequencing. To characterize neo-Y specific changes and B chromosome sequences, we also sequenced inbred female flies derived from the same strain but without B's at 28.5-fold.Results: We assembled a female genome and placed 53% of the sequence and 85% of the annotated proteins into specific chromosomes, by comparison with the 12 Drosophila genomes. Despite its very recent origin, the non-recombining neo-Y chromosome shows various signs of degeneration, including a significant enrichment of non-functional genes compared to the neo-X, and an excess of tandem duplications relative to other chromosomes. We also characterized a B-chromosome linked scaffold that contains an actively transcribed unit and shows sequence similarity to the subcentromeric regions of both the ancient X and the neo-X chromosome.Conclusions: Our results provide novel insights into the very early stages of sex chromosome evolution and B chromosome origination, and suggest an unprecedented connection between the births of these two systems in D. albomicans.}, author = {Zhou, Qi and Zhu, Hongmei and Huang, Quanfei and Zhao, Li and Zhang, Guo J and Roy, Scott W and Beatriz Vicoso and Xuan, Zhaolin and Ruan, Jue and Zhang, Yue and Zhao, Ruoping and Ye, Chen and Zhang, Xiuqing and Wang, Jùn and Wang, Wen and Bachtrog, Doris}, journal = {BMC Genomics}, number = {1}, publisher = {BioMed Central}, title = {{Deciphering neo-sex and B chromosome evolution by the draft genome of Drosophila albomicans}}, doi = {10.1186/1471-2164-13-109}, volume = {13}, year = {2012}, } @article{2079, abstract = {We introduce an algorithm and representation for fabricating 3D shape abstractions using mutually intersecting planar cut-outs. The planes have prefabricated slits at their intersections and are assembled by sliding them together. Often such abstractions are used as a sculptural art form or in architecture and are colloquially called ‘cardboard sculptures’. Based on an analysis of construction rules, we propose an extended binary space partitioning tree as an efficient representation of such cardboard models which allows us to quickly evaluate the feasibility of newly added planar elements. The complexity of insertion order quickly increases with the number of planar elements and manual analysis becomes intractable. We provide tools for generating cardboard sculptures with guaranteed constructibility. In combination with a simple optimization and sampling strategy for new elements, planar shape abstraction models can be designed by iteratively adding elements. As an output, we obtain a fabrication plan that can be printed or sent to a laser cutter. We demonstrate the complete process by designing and fabricating cardboard models of various well-known 3D shapes.}, author = {Hildebrand, Kristian and Bernd Bickel and Alexa, Marc}, journal = {Computer Graphics Forum}, number = {2pt3}, pages = {583 -- 592}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{crdbrd: Shape fabrication by sliding planar slices}}, doi = {10.1111/j.1467-8659.2012.03037.x}, volume = {31}, year = {2012}, } @article{2103, abstract = {Although facial hair plays an important role in individual expression, facial-hair reconstruction is not addressed by current facecapture systems. Our research addresses this limitation with an algorithm that treats hair and skin surface capture together in a coupled fashion so that a high-quality representation of hair fibers as well as the underlying skin surface can be reconstructed. We propose a passive, camera-based system that is robust against arbitrary motion since all data is acquired within the time period of a single exposure. Our reconstruction algorithm detects and traces hairs in the captured images and reconstructs them in 3D using a multiview stereo approach. Our coupled skin-reconstruction algorithm uses information about the detected hairs to deliver a skin surface that lies underneath all hairs irrespective of occlusions. In dense regions like eyebrows, we employ a hair-synthesis method to create hair fibers that plausibly match the image data. We demonstrate our scanning system on a number of individuals and show that it can successfully reconstruct a variety of facial-hair styles together with the underlying skin surface.}, author = {Beeler, Thabo and Bernd Bickel and Noris, Gioacchino and Beardsley, Paul A and Marschner, Steve and Sumner, Robert W and Groß, Markus S}, journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics}, number = {4}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Coupled 3D reconstruction of sparse facial hair and skin}}, doi = {10.1145/2185520.2185613}, volume = {31}, year = {2012}, } @article{2101, abstract = {Articulated deformable characters are widespread in computer animation. Unfortunately, we lack methods for their automatic fabrication using modern additive manufacturing (AM) technologies. We propose a method that takes a skinned mesh as input, then estimates a fabricatable single-material model that approximates the 3D kinematics of the corresponding virtual articulated character in a piecewise linear manner. We first extract a set of potential joint locations. From this set, together with optional, user-specified range constraints, we then estimate mechanical friction joints that satisfy inter-joint non-penetration and other fabrication constraints. To avoid brittle joint designs, we place joint centers on an approximate medial axis representation of the input geometry, and maximize each joint's minimal cross-sectional area. We provide several demonstrations, manufactured as single, assembled pieces using 3D printers. }, author = {Bac̈her, Moritz and Bernd Bickel and James, Doug L and Pfister, Hanspeter}, journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics}, number = {4}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Fabricating articulated characters from skinned meshes}}, doi = {10.1145/2185520.2185543}, volume = {31}, year = {2012}, } @article{2102, abstract = {We propose a complete process for designing, simulating, and fabricating synthetic skin for an animatronics character that mimics the face of a given subject and its expressions. The process starts with measuring the elastic properties of a material used to manufacture synthetic soft tissue. Given these measurements we use physicsbased simulation to predict the behavior of a face when it is driven by the underlying robotic actuation. Next, we capture 3D facial expressions for a given target subject. As the key component of our process, we present a novel optimization scheme that determines the shape of the synthetic skin as well as the actuation parameters that provide the best match to the target expressions. We demonstrate this computational skin design by physically cloning a real human face onto an animatronics figure. }, author = {Bernd Bickel and Kaufmann, Peter and Skouras, Mélina and Thomaszewski, Bernhard and Bradley, Derek J and Beeler, Thabo and Jackson, Philip V and Marschner, Steve and Matusik, Wojciech and Groß, Markus S}, journal = {ACM Transactions on Graphics}, number = {4}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Physical face cloning}}, doi = {10.1145/2185520.2185614}, volume = {31}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2106, abstract = {Progress in cloth simulation for computer animation and apparel design has led to a multitude of deformation models, each with its own way of relating geometry, deformation, and forces. As simulators improve, differences between these models become more important, but it is difficult to choose a model and a set of parameters to match a given real material simply by looking at simulation results. This paper provides measurement and fitting methods that allow nonlinear models to be fit to the observed deformation of a particular cloth sample. Unlike standard textile testing, our system measures complex 3D deformations of a sheet of cloth, not just one-dimensional force-displacement curves, so it works under a wider range of deformation conditions. The fitted models are then evaluated by comparison to measured deformations with motions very different from those used for fitting.}, author = {Miguel, Eder and Bradley, Derek J and Thomaszewski, Bernhard and Bernd Bickel and Matusik, Wojciech and Otaduy, Miguel A and Marschner, Steve}, number = {2}, pages = {519 -- 528}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Data-driven estimation of cloth simulation models}}, doi = {10.1111/j.1467-8659.2012.03031.x}, volume = {31}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2104, abstract = {In recent years, various methods have been introduced to exploit pre-recorded data to improve the performance and/or realism of dynamic deformations, but their differences and similarities have not been adequately analyzed or discussed. So far, the proposed methods have been explored mainly in the research context. They have not been adopted by the computer graphics industry. This course bridges the gap between research labs and industry to present a unifying theory and understanding of data-driven methods for dynamic deformations that may inspire development of novel solutions. It focuses on application of data-driven methods to three areas of computer animation: dynamic deformation of faces, soft volumetric tissue, and cloth. And it describes how to approach these challenges in a data-driven manner, classifies the various methods, and demonstrates how data-driven methods can work in other settings. }, author = {Otaduy, Miguel A and Bernd Bickel and Bradley, Derek J and Wang, Huamin}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{Data-driven simulation methods in computer graphics: Cloth, tissue and faces}}, doi = {10.1145/2343483.2343495}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2105, author = {Skouras, Mélina and Thomaszewski, Bernhard and Bernd Bickel and Groß, Markus S}, number = {2}, pages = {835 -- 844}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Computational design of rubber balloons}}, doi = {10.1111/j.1467-8659.2012.03064.x}, volume = {31}, year = {2012}, } @article{2125, abstract = {We consider a class of stochastic PDEs of Burgers type in spatial dimension 1, driven by space–time white noise. Even though it is well known that these equations are well posed, it turns out that if one performs a spatial discretization of the nonlinearity in the “wrong” way, then the sequence of approximate equations does converge to a limit, but this limit exhibits an additional correction term. This correction term is proportional to the local quadratic cross-variation (in space) of the gradient of the conserved quantity with the solution itself. This can be understood as a consequence of the fact that for any fixed time, the law of the solution is locally equivalent to Wiener measure, where space plays the role of time. In this sense, the correction term is similar to the usual Itô–Stratonovich correction term that arises when one considers different temporal discretizations of stochastic ODEs.}, author = {Hairer, Martin M and Jan Maas}, journal = {Annals of Probability}, number = {4}, pages = {1675 -- 1714}, publisher = {Institute of Mathematical Statistics}, title = {{A spatial version of the Itô-Stratonovich correction}}, doi = {10.1214/11-AOP662}, volume = {40}, year = {2012}, } @article{2127, abstract = {We study a new notion of Ricci curvature that applies to Markov chains on discrete spaces. This notion relies on geodesic convexity of the entropy and is analogous to the one introduced by Lott, Sturm, and Villani for geodesic measure spaces. In order to apply to the discrete setting, the role of the Wasserstein metric is taken over by a different metric, having the property that continuous time Markov chains are gradient flows of the entropy. Using this notion of Ricci curvature we prove discrete analogues of fundamental results by Bakry–Émery and Otto–Villani. Further, we show that Ricci curvature bounds are preserved under tensorisation. As a special case we obtain the sharp Ricci curvature lower bound for the discrete hypercube.}, author = {Erbar, Matthias and Jan Maas}, journal = {Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis}, number = {3}, pages = {997 -- 1038}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Ricci curvature of finite Markov chains via convexity of the entropy}}, doi = {10.1007/s00205-012-0554-z}, volume = {206}, year = {2012}, } @article{2128, abstract = {We introduce a technique for handling Whitney decompositions in Gaussian harmonic analysis and apply it to the study of Gaussian analogues of the classical tent spaces T 1,q of Coifman–Meyer–Stein.}, author = {Jan Maas and van Neerven, Jan M and Portal, Pierre}, journal = {Arkiv för Matematik}, number = {2}, pages = {379 -- 395}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Whitney coverings and the tent spaces T 1,q (γ) for the Gaussian measure}}, doi = {10.1007/s11512-010-0143-z}, volume = {50}, year = {2012}, } @article{2203, abstract = {We show that the electric dipole-dipole interaction between a pair of polar molecules undergoes an all-out transformation when superimposed by a far-off-resonant optical field. The combined interaction potential becomes tunable by variation of wavelength, polarisation and intensity of the optical field and its dependence on the intermolecular separation exhibits a crossover from an inverse-power to an oscillating behaviour. The ability thereby offered to control molecular interactions opens up avenues toward the creation and manipulation of novel phases of ultracold polar gases among whose characteristics is a long-range entanglement of the dipoles' mutual orientation. We devised an accurate analytic model of such optical-field-dressed dipole-dipole interaction potentials, which enables a straightforward access to the optical-field parameters required for the design of intermolecular interactions in the laboratory.}, author = {Mikhail Lemeshko and Friedrich, Břetislav}, journal = {Molecular Physics}, number = {15-16}, pages = {1873 -- 1881}, publisher = {Taylor & Francis}, title = {{Interaction between polar molecules subject to a far-off-resonant optical field: Entangled dipoles up- or down-holding each other}}, doi = {10.1080/00268976.2012.689868}, volume = {110}, year = {2012}, } @article{2201, abstract = {We study the growth dynamics of ordered structures of strongly interacting polar molecules in optical lattices. Using a dipole blockade of microwave excitations, we map the system onto an interacting spin-1/2 model possessing ground states with crystalline order, and describe a way to prepare these states by nonadiabatically driving the transitions between molecular rotational levels. The proposed technique bypasses the need to cross a phase transition and allows for the creation of ordered domains of considerably larger size compared to approaches relying on adiabatic preparation.}, author = {Lemeshko, Mikhail and Krems, Roman and Weimer, Hendrik}, journal = {Physical Review Letters}, number = {3}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Nonadiabatic preparation of spin crystals with ultracold polar molecules}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.035301}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{2202, abstract = {We propose a method for sensitive parallel detection of low-frequency electromagnetic fields based on the fine structure interactions in paramagnetic polar molecules. Compared to the recently implemented scheme employing ultracold 87Rb atoms by Böhi, the technique based on molecules offers a 100-fold higher sensitivity, the possibility to measure both the electric and magnetic field components, and a probe of a wide range of frequencies from the dc limit to the THz regime.}, author = {Alyabyshev, Sergey V and Mikhail Lemeshko and Krems, Roman V}, journal = {Physical Review A - Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics}, number = {1}, publisher = {American Physical Society}, title = {{Sensitive imaging of electromagnetic fields with paramagnetic polar molecules}}, doi = {10.1103/PhysRevA.86.013409}, volume = {86}, year = {2012}, } @article{2263, abstract = {Nestin-cre transgenic mice have been widely used to direct recombination to neural stem cells (NSCs) and intermediate neural progenitor cells (NPCs). Here we report that a readily utilized, and the only commercially available, Nestin-cre line is insufficient for directing recombination in early embryonic NSCs and NPCs. Analysis of recombination efficiency in multiple cre-dependent reporters and a genetic mosaic line revealed consistent temporal and spatial patterns of recombination in NSCs and NPCs. For comparison we utilized a knock-in Emx1cre line and found robust recombination in NSCs and NPCs in ventricular and subventricular zones of the cerebral cortices as early as embryonic day 12.5. In addition we found that the rate of Nestin-cre driven recombination only reaches sufficiently high levels in NSCs and NPCs during late embryonic and early postnatal periods. These findings are important when commercially available cre lines are considered for directing recombination to embryonic NSCs and NPCs.}, author = {Liang, Huixuan and Hippenmeyer, Simon and Ghashghaei, H.}, journal = {Biology open}, number = {12}, pages = {1200 -- 1203}, publisher = {The Company of Biologists}, title = {{A Nestin-cre transgenic mouse is insufficient for recombination in early embryonic neural progenitors}}, doi = {10.1242/bio.20122287}, volume = {1}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2267, abstract = {Capturing real-world objects with laser-scanning technology has become an everyday task. Recently, the acquisition of dynamic scenes at interactive frame rates has become feasible. A high-quality visualization of the resulting point cloud stream would require a per-frame reconstruction of object surfaces. Unfortunately, reconstruction computations are still too time-consuming to be applied interactively. In this paper we present a local surface reconstruction and visualization technique that provides interactive feedback for reasonably sized point clouds, while achieving high image quality. Our method is performed entirely on the GPU and in screen pace, exploiting the efficiency of the common rasterization pipeline. The approach is very general, as no assumption is made about point connectivity or sampling density. This naturally allows combining the outputs of multiple scanners in a single visualization, which is useful for many virtual and augmented reality applications. }, author = {Preiner, Reinhold and Jeschke, Stefan and Wimmer, Michael}, location = {Calgari, Italy}, pages = {139 -- 148}, publisher = {Eurographics Association}, title = {{Auto splats: Dynamic point cloud visualization on the GPU}}, doi = {10.2312/EGPGV/EGPGV12/139-148}, year = {2012}, } @article{2262, abstract = {Mosaic Analysis with Double Markers (MADM) is a method for generating genetically mosaic mice, in which sibling mutant and wild-type cells are labeled with different fluorescent markers. It is a powerful tool that enables analysis of gene function at the single cell level in vivo. It requires transgenic cassettes to be located between the centromere and the mutation in the gene of interest on the same chromosome. Here we compare procedures for introduction of MADM cassettes into new loci in the mouse genome, and describe new approaches for expanding the utility of MADM. We show that: 1) Targeted homologous recombination outperforms random transgenesis in generation of reliably expressed MADM cassettes, 2) MADM cassettes in new genomic loci need to be validated for biallelic and ubiquitous expression, 3) Recombination between MADM cassettes on different chromosomes can be used to study reciprocal chromosomal deletions/duplications, and 4) MADM can be modified to permit transgene expression by combining it with a binary expression system. The advances described in this study expand current, and enable new and more versatile applications of MADM.}, author = {Tasic, Bosiljka and Miyamichi, Kazunari and Simon Hippenmeyer and Dani, Vardhan S. and Zeng, H. and Joo, William and Zong, Hui and Chen-Tsai, Yanru and Luo, Liqun}, journal = {PLoS One}, number = {3}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Extensions of MADM (Mosaic Analysis with Double Markers) in Mice }}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0033332}, volume = {7}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2268, abstract = {This paper presents an analytic formulation for anti-aliased sampling of 2D polygons and 3D polyhedra. Our framework allows the exact evaluation of the convolution integral with a linear function defined on the polytopes. The filter is a spherically symmetric polynomial of any order, supporting approximations to refined variants such as the Mitchell-Netravali filter family. This enables high-quality rasterization of triangles and tetrahedra with linearly interpolated vertex values to regular and non-regular grids. A closed form solution of the convolution is presented and an efficient implementation on the GPU using DirectX and CUDA C is described. }, author = {Thomas Auzinger and Guthe, Michael and Stefan Jeschke}, number = {121}, pages = {335 -- 344}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Analytic anti-aliasing of linear functions on polytopes}}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8659.2012.03012.x}, volume = {31}, year = {2012}, } @article{2302, abstract = {We introduce propagation models (PMs), a formalism able to express several kinds of equations that describe the behavior of biochemical reaction networks. Furthermore, we introduce the propagation abstract data type (PADT), which separates concerns regarding different numerical algorithms for the transient analysis of biochemical reaction networks from concerns regarding their implementation, thus allowing for portable and efficient solutions. The state of a propagation abstract data type is given by a vector that assigns mass values to a set of nodes, and its (next) operator propagates mass values through this set of nodes. We propose an approximate implementation of the (next) operator, based on threshold abstraction, which propagates only "significant" mass values and thus achieves a compromise between efficiency and accuracy. Finally, we give three use cases for propagation models: the chemical master equation (CME), the reaction rate equation (RRE), and a hybrid method that combines these two equations. These three applications use propagation models in order to propagate probabilities and/or expected values and variances of the model's variables.}, author = {Henzinger, Thomas A and Mateescu, Maria}, journal = {IEEE ACM Transactions on Computational Biology and Bioinformatics}, number = {2}, pages = {310 -- 322}, publisher = {IEEE}, title = {{The propagation approach for computing biochemical reaction networks}}, doi = {10.1109/TCBB.2012.91}, volume = {10}, year = {2012}, } @article{2313, abstract = {The translation of "next-generation" sequencing directly to the clinic is still being assessed but has the potential for genetic diseases to reduce costs, advance accuracy, and point to unsuspected yet treatable conditions. To study its capability in the clinic, we performed whole-exome sequencing in 118 probands with a diagnosis of a pediatric-onset neurodevelopmental disease in which most known causes had been excluded. Twenty-two genes not previously identified as disease-causing were identified in this study (19% of cohort), further establishing exome sequencing as a useful tool for gene discovery. New genes identified included EXOC8 in Joubert syndrome and GFM2 in a patient with microcephaly, simplified gyral pattern, and insulin-dependent diabetes. Exome sequencing uncovered 10 probands (8% of cohort) with mutations in genes known to cause a disease different from the initial diagnosis. Upon further medical evaluation, these mutations were found to account for each proband's disease, leading to a change in diagnosis, some of which led to changes in patient management. Our data provide proof of principle that genomic strategies are useful in clarifying diagnosis in a proportion of patients with neurodevelopmental disorders.}, author = {Dixon-Salazar, Tracy J and Silhavy, Jennifer L and Udpa, Nitin and Schroth, Jana and Bielas, Stephanie L and Schaffer, Ashleigh E and Olvera, Jesus and Bafna, Vineet K and Zaki, Maha S and Abdel-Salam, Ghada M and Mansour, Lobna A and Selim, Laila A and Abdel-Hadi, Sawsan S and Marzouki, Naima and Ben-Omran, Tawfeg I and Al-Saana, Nouriya A and Sönmez, Fatma M and Celep, Figen and Azam, Matloob and Hill, Kiley J and Collazo, Adrienne and Fenstermaker, Ali G and Gaia Novarino and Akizu, Naiara and Garimella, Kiran V and Sougnez, Carrie L and Russ, Carsten and Gabriel, Stacey B and Gleeson, Joseph G}, journal = {Science Translational Medicine}, number = {138}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Exome sequencing can improve diagnosis and alter patient management}}, doi = {10.1126/scitranslmed.3003544}, volume = {4}, year = {2012}, } @article{2314, abstract = {Autism spectrum disorders are a genetically heterogeneous constellation of syndromes characterized by impairments in reciprocal social interaction. Available somatic treatments have limited efficacy. We have identified inactivating mutations in the gene BCKDK (Branched Chain Ketoacid Dehydrogenase Kinase) in consanguineous families with autism, epilepsy, and intellectual disability. The encoded protein is responsible for phosphorylation-mediated inactivation of the E1α subunit of branched-chain ketoacid dehydrogenase (BCKDH). Patients with homozygous BCKDK mutations display reductions in BCKDK messenger RNA and protein, E1α phosphorylation, and plasma branched-chain amino acids. Bckdk knockout mice show abnormal brain amino acid profiles and neurobehavioral deficits that respond to dietary supplementation. Thus, autism presenting with intellectual disability and epilepsy caused by BCKDK mutations represents a potentially treatable syndrome.}, author = {Gaia Novarino and El-Fishawy, Paul and Kayserili, Hülya and Meguid, Nagwa A and Scott, Eric M and Schroth, Jana and Silhavy, Jennifer L and Kara, Majdi and Khalil, Rehab O and Ben-Omran, Tawfeg I and Ercan-Sencicek, Adife G and Hashish, Adel F and Sanders, Stephan J and Gupta, Abha R and Hashem, Hebatalla S and Matern, Dietrich and Gabriel, Stacey B and Sweetman, Lawrence and Rahimi, Yasmeen and Harris, Robert A and State, Matthew W and Gleeson, Joseph G}, journal = {Science}, number = {6105}, pages = {394 -- 397}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Mutations in BCKD-kinase lead to a potentially treatable form of autism with epilepsy}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1224631}, volume = {338}, year = {2012}, } @article{2318, abstract = {We show that bosons interacting via pair potentials with negative scattering length form bound states for a suitable number of particles. In other words, the absence of many-particle bound states of any kind implies the non-negativity of the scattering length of the interaction potential. }, author = {Seiringer, Robert}, journal = {Journal of Spectral Theory}, number = {3}, pages = {321--328}, publisher = {European Mathematical Society}, title = {{Absence of bound states implies non-negativity of the scattering length}}, doi = {10.4171/JST/31}, volume = {2}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2317, abstract = {We present a summary of our recent rigorous derivation of the celebrated Ginzburg-Landau (GL) theory, starting from the microscopic Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) model. Close to the critical temperature, GL arises as an effective theory on the macroscopic scale. The relevant scaling limit is semiclassical in nature, and semiclassical analysis, with minimal regularity assumptions, plays an important part in our proof. }, author = {Frank, Rupert L and Hainzl, Christian and Robert Seiringer and Solovej, Jan P}, pages = {575 -- 583}, publisher = {World Scientific Publishing}, title = {{Microscopic derivation of the Ginzburg-Landau model}}, doi = {10.1142/9789814449243_0060}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2316, abstract = {We summarize our recent results on the ground state energy of multi-polaron systems. In particular, we discuss stability and existence of the thermodynamic limit, and we discuss the absence of binding in the case of large Coulomb repulsion and the corresponding binding-unbinding transition. We also consider the Pekar-Tomasevich approximation to the ground state energy and we study radial symmetry of the ground state density. }, author = {Frank, Rupert L and Lieb, Élliott H and Robert Seiringer and Thomas, Lawrence E}, pages = {477 -- 485}, publisher = {World Scientific Publishing}, title = {{Ground state properties of multi-polaron systems}}, doi = {10.1142/9789814449243_0045}, year = {2012}, } @article{237, abstract = {The Manin conjecture is established for Châtelet surfaces over Q aris-ing as minimal proper smooth models of the surface Y 2 + Z 2 = f(X) in A 3 Q, where f ∈ Z[X] is a totally reducible polynomial of degree 3 without repeated roots. These surfaces do not satisfy weak approximation.}, author = {de la Bretèche, Régis and Timothy Browning and Peyre, Emmanuel}, journal = {Annals of Mathematics}, number = {1}, pages = {297 -- 343}, publisher = {Princeton University Press}, title = {{On Manin's conjecture for a family of Châtelet surfaces}}, doi = {10.4007/annals.2012.175.1.8}, volume = {175}, year = {2012}, } @article{238, abstract = {For given positive integers a, b, q we investigate the density of solutions (x, y) ∈ Z2 to congruences ax + by2 ≡ 0 mod q.}, author = {Baier, Stephan and Timothy Browning}, journal = {Functiones et Approximatio, Commentarii Mathematici}, number = {2}, pages = {267 -- 286}, publisher = {Adam Mickiewicz University Press}, title = {{Inhomogeneous quadratic congruences}}, doi = {10.7169/facm/2012.47.2.9}, volume = {47}, year = {2012}, } @inbook{2399, abstract = {Bose–Einstein condensation (BEC) in cold atomic gases was first achieved experimentally in 1995 [1, 6]. After initial failed attempts with spin-polarized atomic hydrogen, the first successful demonstrations of this phenomenon used gases of rubidium and sodium atoms, respectively. Since then there has been a surge of activity in this field, with ingenious experiments putting forth more and more astonishing results about the behavior of matter at very cold temperatures. }, author = {Robert Seiringer}, booktitle = {Quantum Many Body Systems}, editor = {Rivasseau, Vincent and Robert Seiringer and Solovej, Jan P and Spencer, Thomas}, pages = {55 -- 92}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Cold quantum gases and bose einstein condensation}}, doi = {10.1007/978-3-642-29511-9_2}, volume = {2051}, year = {2012}, } @article{2394, abstract = {We study the BCS gap equation for a Fermi gas with unequal population of spin-up and spin-down states. For cosh (δ μ/T) ≤ 2, with T the temperature and δμ the chemical potential difference, the question of existence of non-trivial solutions can be reduced to spectral properties of a linear operator, similar to the unpolarized case studied previously in [Frank, R. L., Hainzl, C., Naboko, S., and Seiringer, R., J., Geom. Anal.17, 559-567 (2007)10.1007/BF02937429; Hainzl, C., Hamza, E., Seiringer, R., and Solovej, J. P., Commun., Math. Phys.281, 349-367 (2008)10.1007/s00220-008-0489-2; and Hainzl, C. and Seiringer, R., Phys. Rev. B77, 184517-110 435 (2008)]10.1103/PhysRevB.77.184517. For cosh (δ μ/T) > 2 the phase diagram is more complicated, however. We derive upper and lower bounds for the critical temperature, and study their behavior in the small coupling limit.}, author = {Freiji, Abraham and Hainzl, Christian and Robert Seiringer}, journal = {Journal of Mathematical Physics}, number = {1}, publisher = {American Institute of Physics}, title = {{The gap equation for spin-polarized fermions}}, doi = {10.1063/1.3670747}, volume = {53}, year = {2012}, } @article{2395, abstract = {We give the first rigorous derivation of the celebrated Ginzburg-Landau (GL) theory, starting from the microscopic Bardeen-Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) model. Close to the critical temperature, GL arises as an effective theory on the macroscopic scale. The relevant scaling limit is semiclassical in nature, and semiclassical analysis, with minimal regularity assumptions, plays an important part in our proof. }, author = {Frank, Rupert L and Hainzl, Christian and Robert Seiringer and Solovej, Jan P}, journal = {Journal of the American Mathematical Society}, number = {3}, pages = {667 -- 713}, publisher = {American Mathematical Society}, title = {{Microscopic derivation of Ginzburg-Landau theory}}, doi = {10.1090/S0894-0347-2012-00735-8}, volume = {25}, year = {2012}, } @article{2396, abstract = {A positive temperature analogue of the scattering length of a potential V can be defined via integrating the difference of the heat kernels of -Δ and, with Δ the Laplacian. An upper bound on this quantity is a crucial input in the derivation of a bound on the critical temperature of a dilute Bose gas (Seiringer and Ueltschi in Phys Rev B 80:014502, 2009). In (Seiringer and Ueltschi in Phys Rev B 80:014502, 2009), a bound was given in the case of finite range potentials and sufficiently low temperature. In this paper, we improve the bound and extend it to potentials of infinite range.}, author = {Landon, Benjamin and Robert Seiringer}, journal = {Letters in Mathematical Physics}, number = {3}, pages = {237 -- 243}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{The scattering length at positive temperature}}, doi = {10.1007/s11005-012-0566-5}, volume = {100}, year = {2012}, } @misc{2398, abstract = {We extend the mathematical theory of quantum hypothesis testing to the general W*-algebraic setting and explore its relation with recent developments in non-equilibrium quantum statistical mechanics. In particular, we relate the large deviation principle for the full counting statistics of entropy flow to quantum hypothesis testing of the arrow of time.}, author = {Jakšić, Vojkan and Ogata, Yoshiko and Pillet, Claude A and Robert Seiringer}, booktitle = {Reviews in Mathematical Physics}, number = {6}, publisher = {World Scientific Publishing}, title = {{Quantum hypothesis testing and non-equilibrium statistical mechanics}}, doi = {10.1142/S0129055X12300026}, volume = {24}, year = {2012}, } @article{2397, abstract = {We consider the low-density limit of a Fermi gas in the BCS approximation. We show that if the interaction potential allows for a two-particle bound state, the system at zero temperature is well approximated by the Gross-Pitaevskii functional, describing a Bose-Einstein condensate of fermion pairs.}, author = {Hainzl, Christian and Robert Seiringer}, journal = {Letters in Mathematical Physics}, number = {2}, pages = {119 -- 138}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Low density limit of BCS theory and Bose-Einstein condensation of Fermion pairs}}, doi = {10.1007/s11005-011-0535-4}, volume = {100}, year = {2012}, } @article{240, abstract = {We investigate the frequency of positive squareful numbers x, y, z≤B for which x+y=z and present a conjecture concerning its asymptotic behavior.}, author = {Timothy Browning and Valckenborgh, K Van}, journal = {Experimental Mathematics}, number = {2}, pages = {204 -- 211}, publisher = {Taylor & Francis}, title = {{Sums of three squareful numbers}}, doi = {10.1080/10586458.2011.605733}, volume = {21}, year = {2012}, } @article{2400, abstract = {If the polaron coupling constant α is large enough, bipolarons or multi-polarons will form. When passing through the critical α c from above, does the radius of the system simply get arbitrarily large or does it reach a maximum and then explode? We prove that it is always the latter. We also prove the analogous statement for the Pekar-Tomasevich (PT) approximation to the energy, in which case there is a solution to the PT equation at α c. Similarly, we show that the same phenomenon occurs for atoms, e. g., helium, at the critical value of the nuclear charge. Our proofs rely only on energy estimates, not on a detailed analysis of the Schrödinger equation, and are very general. They use the fact that the Coulomb repulsion decays like 1/r, while 'uncertainty principle' localization energies decay more rapidly, as 1/r 2.}, author = {Frank, Rupert L and Lieb, Élliott H and Robert Seiringer}, journal = {Communications in Mathematical Physics}, number = {2}, pages = {405 -- 424}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Binding of polarons and atoms at threshold}}, doi = {10.1007/s00220-012-1436-9}, volume = {313}, year = {2012}, } @article{2403, abstract = {We study the effects of random scatterers on the ground state of the one-dimensional Lieb-Liniger model of interacting bosons on the unit interval in the Gross-Pitaevskii regime. We prove that Bose-Einstein condensation survives even a strong random potential with a high density of scatterers. The character of the wavefunction of the condensate, however, depends in an essential way on the interplay between randomness and the strength of the two-body interaction. For low density of scatterers and strong interactions the wavefunction extends over the whole interval. A high density of scatterers and weak interactions, on the other hand, lead to localization of the wavefunction in a fragmented subset of the interval.}, author = {Robert Seiringer and Yngvason, Jakob and Zagrebnov, Valentin A}, journal = {Journal of Statistical Mechanics Theory and Experiment}, number = {11}, publisher = {IOP Publishing Ltd.}, title = {{Disordered Bose-Einstein condensates with interaction in one dimension}}, doi = {10.1088/1742-5468/2012/11/P11007}, volume = {2012}, year = {2012}, } @article{2402, abstract = {We consider a model of quantum-mechanical particles interacting via point interactions of infinite scattering length. In the case of fermions we prove a Lieb-Thirring inequality for the energy, i.e., we show that the energy is bounded from below by a constant times the integral of the particle density to the power.}, author = {Frank, Rupert L and Robert Seiringer}, journal = {Journal of Mathematical Physics}, number = {9}, publisher = {American Institute of Physics}, title = {{Lieb-Thirring inequality for a model of particles with point interactions}}, doi = {10.1063/1.3697416}, volume = {53}, year = {2012}, } @article{2401, abstract = {We find further implications of the BMV conjecture, which states that for hermitian matrices B≥0 and A, the function λ {mapping} Tr exp(A - λB) is the Laplace transform of a positive measure supported on [0,∞].}, author = {Lieb, Élliott H and Robert Seiringer}, journal = {Journal of Statistical Physics}, number = {1}, pages = {86 -- 91}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Further implications of the Bessis-Moussa-Villani conjecture}}, doi = {10.1007/s10955-012-0585-8}, volume = {149}, year = {2012}, } @article{2411, abstract = {The kingdom of fungi provides model organisms for biotechnology, cell biology, genetics, and life sciences in general. Only when their phylogenetic relationships are stably resolved, can individual results from fungal research be integrated into a holistic picture of biology. However, and despite recent progress, many deep relationships within the fungi remain unclear. Here, we present the first phylogenomic study of an entire eukaryotic kingdom that uses a consistency criterion to strengthen phylogenetic conclusions. We reason that branches (splits) recovered with independent data and different tree reconstruction methods are likely to reflect true evolutionary relationships. Two complementary phylogenomic data sets based on 99 fungal genomes and 109 fungal expressed sequence tag (EST) sets analyzed with four different tree reconstruction methods shed light from different angles on the fungal tree of life. Eleven additional data sets address specifically the phylogenetic position of Blastocladiomycota, Ustilaginomycotina, and Dothideomycetes, respectively. The combined evidence from the resulting trees supports the deep-level stability of the fungal groups toward a comprehensive natural system of the fungi. In addition, our analysis reveals methodologically interesting aspects. Enrichment for EST encoded data-a common practice in phylogenomic analyses-introduces a strong bias toward slowly evolving and functionally correlated genes. Consequently, the generalization of phylogenomic data sets as collections of randomly selected genes cannot be taken for granted. A thorough characterization of the data to assess possible influences on the tree reconstruction should therefore become a standard in phylogenomic analyses.}, author = {Ebersberger, Ingo and De Matos Simoes, Ricardo and Kupczok, Anne and Gube, Matthias and Kothe, Erika and Voigt, Kerstin and Von Haeseler, Arndt}, journal = {Molecular Biology and Evolution}, number = {5}, pages = {1319 -- 1334}, publisher = {Oxford University Press}, title = {{A consistent phylogenetic backbone for the fungi}}, doi = {10.1093/molbev/msr285}, volume = {29}, year = {2012}, } @article{241, abstract = {The representation of integral binary forms as sums of two squares is discussed and applied to establish the Manin conjecture for certain Châtelet surfaces over ℚ.}, author = {de la Bretèche, Régis and Timothy Browning}, journal = {Israel Journal of Mathematics}, number = {2}, pages = {973 -- 1012}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{Binary forms as sums of two squares and Châtelet surfaces}}, doi = {10.1007/s11856-012-0019-y}, volume = {191}, year = {2012}, } @article{242, abstract = {We investigate the first and second moments of shifted convolutions of the generalized divisor function d 3(n).}, author = {Baier, Stephan and Timothy Browning and Marasingha, Gihan and Zhao, Liangyi}, journal = {Proceedings of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society}, number = {3}, pages = {551 -- 576}, publisher = {Cambridge University Press}, title = {{Averages of shifted convolutions of d3 (n)}}, doi = {10.1017/S001309151100037X}, volume = {55}, year = {2012}, } @article{243, abstract = {Let P(t) ∈ ℚ[t] be an irreducible quadratic polynomial and suppose that K is a quartic extension of ℚ containing the roots of P(t). Let N K/ℚ(X) be a full norm form for the extension K/ℚ. We show that the variety P(t) =N K/ℚ(X)≠ 0 satisfies the Hasse principle and weak approximation. The proof uses analytic methods.}, author = {Timothy Browning and Heath-Brown, Roger}, journal = {Geometric and Functional Analysis}, number = {5}, pages = {1124 -- 1190}, publisher = {Springer Basel}, title = {{Quadratic polynomials represented by norm forms}}, doi = {10.1007/s00039-012-0168-5}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2440, abstract = {We present an algorithm for computing [X, Y], i.e., all homotopy classes of continuous maps X → Y, where X, Y are topological spaces given as finite simplicial complexes, Y is (d - 1)-connected for some d ≥ 2 (for example, Y can be the d-dimensional sphere S d), and dim X ≤ 2d - 2. These conditions on X, Y guarantee that [X, Y] has a natural structure of a finitely generated Abelian group, and the algorithm finds generators and relations for it. We combine several tools and ideas from homotopy theory (such as Postnikov systems, simplicial sets, and obstruction theory) with algorithmic tools from effective algebraic topology (objects with effective homology). We hope that a further extension of the methods developed here will yield an algorithm for computing, in some cases of interest, the ℤ 2-index, which is a quantity playing a prominent role in Borsuk-Ulam style applications of topology in combinatorics and geometry, e.g., in topological lower bounds for the chromatic number of a graph. In a certain range of dimensions, deciding the embeddability of a simplicial complex into ℝ d also amounts to a ℤ 2-index computation. This is the main motivation of our work. We believe that investigating the computational complexity of questions in homotopy theory and similar areas presents a fascinating research area, and we hope that our work may help bridge the cultural gap between algebraic topology and theoretical computer science.}, author = {Čadek, Martin and Marek Krcál and Matoušek, Jiří and Sergeraert, Francis and Vokřínek, Lukáš and Uli Wagner}, pages = {1 -- 10}, publisher = {SIAM}, title = {{Computing all maps into a sphere}}, year = {2012}, } @article{2438, abstract = {The colored Tverberg theorem asserts that for eve;ry d and r there exists t=t(d,r) such that for every set C ⊂ ℝ d of cardinality (d + 1)t, partitioned into t-point subsets C 1, C 2,...,C d+1 (which we think of as color classes; e. g., the points of C 1 are red, the points of C 2 blue, etc.), there exist r disjoint sets R 1, R 2,...,R r⊆C that are rainbow, meaning that {pipe}R i∩C j{pipe}≤1 for every i,j, and whose convex hulls all have a common point. All known proofs of this theorem are topological. We present a geometric version of a recent beautiful proof by Blagojević, Matschke, and Ziegler, avoiding a direct use of topological methods. The purpose of this de-topologization is to make the proof more concrete and intuitive, and accessible to a wider audience.}, author = {Matoušek, Jiří and Martin Tancer and Uli Wagner}, journal = {Discrete & Computational Geometry}, number = {2}, pages = {245 -- 265}, publisher = {Springer}, title = {{A geometric proof of the colored Tverberg theorem}}, doi = {10.1007/s00454-011-9368-2}, volume = {47}, year = {2012}, } @article{244, abstract = {We investigate the solubility of the congruence xy ≡ 1 (mod p), where p is a prime and x, y are restricted to lie in suitable short intervals. Our work relies on a mean value theorem for incomplete Kloosterman sums.}, author = {Timothy Browning and Haynes, Alan K}, journal = {International Journal of Number Theory}, number = {2}, pages = {481 -- 486}, publisher = {World Scientific Publishing}, title = {{Incomplete kloosterman sums and multiplicative inverses in short intervals}}, doi = { https://doi.org/10.1142/S1793042112501448}, volume = {9}, year = {2012}, } @article{2439, abstract = {A Monte Carlo approximation algorithm for the Tukey depth problem in high dimensions is introduced. The algorithm is a generalization of an algorithm presented by Rousseeuw and Struyf (1998) . The performance of this algorithm is studied both analytically and experimentally.}, author = {Chen, Dan and Morin, Pat and Uli Wagner}, journal = {Computational Geometry: Theory and Applications}, number = {5}, pages = {566 -- 573}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Absolute approximation of Tukey depth: Theory and experiments}}, doi = {10.1016/j.comgeo.2012.03.001}, volume = {46}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{2441, abstract = {Eigenvalues associated to graphs are a well-studied subject. In particular the spectra of the adjacency matrix and of the Laplacian of random graphs G(n, p) are known quite precisely. We consider generalizations of these matrices to simplicial complexes of higher dimensions and study their eigenvalues for the Linial-Meshulam model X k(n, p) of random k-dimensional simplicial complexes on n vertices. We show that for p = Ω(log n/n), the eigenvalues of both, the higher-dimensional adjacency matrix and the Laplacian, are a.a.s. sharply concentrated around two values. In a second part of the paper, we discuss a possible higherdimensional analogue of the Discrete Cheeger Inequality. This fundamental inequality expresses a close relationship between the eigenvalues of a graph and its combinatorial expansion properties; in particular, spectral expansion (a large eigenvalue gap) implies edge expansion. Recently, a higher-dimensional analogue of edge expansion for simplicial complexes was introduced by Gromov, and independently by Linial, Meshulam and Wallach and by Newman and Rabinovich. It is natural to ask whether there is a higher-dimensional version of Cheeger's inequality. We show that the most straightforward version of a higher-dimensional Cheeger inequality fails: for every k > 1, there is an infinite family of k-dimensional complexes that are spectrally expanding (there is a large eigenvalue gap for the Laplacian) but not combinatorially expanding.}, author = {Gundert, Anna and Uli Wagner}, pages = {151 -- 160}, publisher = {ACM}, title = {{On Laplacians of random complexes}}, doi = {10.1145/2261250.2261272}, year = {2012}, } @article{2453, abstract = {Constitutive endocytic recycling is a crucial mechanism allowing regulation of the activity of proteins at the plasma membrane and for rapid changes in their localization, as demonstrated in plants for PIN-FORMED (PIN) proteins, the auxin transporters. To identify novel molecular components of endocytic recycling, mainly exocytosis, we designed a PIN1-green fluorescent protein fluorescence imaging-based forward genetic screen for Arabidopsis thaliana mutants that showed increased intracellular accumulation of cargos in response to the trafficking inhibitor brefeldin A (BFA). We identified bex5 (for BFA-visualized exocytic trafficking defective), a novel dominant mutant carrying a missense mutation that disrupts a conserved sequence motif of the small GTPase, RAS GENES FROM RAT BRAINA1b. bex5 displays defects such as enhanced protein accumulation in abnormal BFA compartments, aberrant endosomes, and defective exocytosis and transcytosis. BEX5/RabA1b localizes to trans-Golgi network/early endosomes (TGN/EE) and acts on distinct trafficking processes like those regulated by GTP exchange factors on ADP-ribosylation factors GNOM-LIKE1 and HOPM INTERACTOR7/BFA-VISUALIZED ENDOCYTIC TRAFFICKING DEFECTIVE1, which regulate trafficking at the Golgi apparatus and TGN/EE, respectively. All together, this study identifies Arabidopsis BEX5/RabA1b as a novel regulator of protein trafficking from a TGN/EE compartment to the plasma membrane.}, author = {Feraru, Elena and Feraru, Mugurel Ioan and Asaoka, Rin and Paciorek, Tomasz and De Rycke, Riet M and Tanaka, Hirokazu and Nakano, Akihiko and Jirí Friml}, journal = {Plant Cell}, number = {7}, pages = {3074 -- 3086}, publisher = {American Society of Plant Biologists}, title = {{BEX5/RabA1b regulates trans-Golgi network-to-plasma membrane protein trafficking in Arabidopsis}}, doi = {10.1105/tpc.112.098152}, volume = {24}, year = {2012}, } @article{2456, abstract = {The third EMBO Conference on Plant Molecular Biology, which focused on ‘Plant development and environmental interactions’,was held in May 2012 in Matera, Italy. Here, we review some of the topics and themes that emerged from the various contributions; namely, steering technologies, transcriptional networks and hormonal regulation, small RNAs, cell and tissue polarity, environmental control and natural variation. We intend to provide the reader who might have missed this remarkable event with a glimpse of the recent progress made in this blossoming research field.}, author = {Beeckman, Tom and Friml, Jirí}, journal = {Development}, number = {20}, pages = {3677 -- 3682}, publisher = {Company of Biologists}, title = {{Plant developmental biologists meet on stairways in Matera}}, doi = {10.1242/dev.080861}, volume = {139}, year = {2012}, } @article{2459, abstract = {Coordinated, subcellular trafficking of proteins is one of the fundamental properties of the multicellular eukaryotic organisms. Trafficking involves a large diversity of compartments, pathways, cargo molecules, and vesicle-sorting events. It is also crucial in regulating the localization and, thus, the activity of various proteins, but the process is still poorly genetically defined in plants. In the past, forward genetics screens had been used to determine the function of genes by searching for a specific morphological phenotype in the organism population in which mutations had been induced chemically or by irradiation. Unfortunately, these straightforward genetic screens turned out to be limited in identifying new regulators of intracellular protein transport, because mutations affecting essential trafficking pathways often lead to lethality. In addition, the use of these approaches has been restricted by functional redundancy among trafficking regulators. Screens for mutants that rely on the observation of changes in the cellular localization or dynamics of fluorescent subcellular markers enable, at least partially, to circumvent these issues. Hence, such image-based screens provide the possibility to identify either alleles with weak effects or components of the subcellular trafficking machinery that have no strong impact on the plant growth.}, author = {Zwiewka, Marta and Friml, Jirí}, journal = {Frontiers in Plant Science}, number = {May}, publisher = {Frontiers Research Foundation}, title = {{Fluorescence imaging-based forward genetic screens to identify trafficking regulators in plants}}, doi = {10.3389/fpls.2012.00097}, volume = {3}, year = {2012}, } @article{2458, abstract = {Initiation and successive development of organs induce mechanical stresses at the cellular level. Using the tomato shoot apex, a new study now proposes that mechanical strain regulates the plasma membrane abundance of the PIN1 auxin transporter, thereby reinforcing a positive feed-back loop between growth and auxin accumulation.}, author = {Li, Hongjiang and Friml, Jirí and Grunewald, Wim}, journal = {Current Biology}, number = {16}, pages = {R635 -- R637}, publisher = {Cell Press}, title = {{Cell polarity: Stretching prevents developmental cramps}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cub.2012.06.053}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, } @article{2476, abstract = {Recently developed pharmacogenetic and optogenetic approaches, with their own advantages and disadvantages, have become indispensable tools in modern neuroscience. Here, we employed a previously described knock-in mouse line (GABA ARγ2 77Ilox) in which the γ2 subunit of the GABA A receptor (GABA AR) was mutated to become zolpidem insensitive (γ2 77I) and used viral vectors to swap γ2 77I with wild-type, zolpidem-sensitive γ2 subunits (γ2 77F). The verification of unaltered density and subcellular distribution of the virally introduced γ2 subunits requires their selective labelling. For this we generated six N- and six C-terminal-tagged γ2 subunits, with which cortical cultures of GABA ARγ2 -/- mice were transduced using lentiviruses. We found that the N-terminal AU1 tag resulted in excellent immunodetection and unimpaired synaptic localization. Unaltered kinetic properties of the AU1-tagged γ2 ( AU1γ2 77F) channels were demonstrated with whole-cell patch-clamp recordings of spontaneous IPSCs from cultured cells. Next, we carried out stereotaxic injections of lenti- and adeno-associated viruses containing Cre-recombinase and the AU1γ2 77F subunit (Cre-2A- AU1γ2 77F) into the neocortex of GABA ARγ2 77Ilox mice. Light microscopic immunofluorescence and electron microscopic freeze-fracture replica immunogold labelling demonstrated the efficient immunodetection of the AU1 tag and the normal enrichment of the AU1γ2 77F subunits in perisomatic GABAergic synapses. In line with this, miniature and action potential-evoked IPSCs whole-cell recorded from transduced cells had unaltered amplitudes, kinetics and restored zolpidem sensitivity. Our results obtained with a wide range of structural and functional verification methods reveal unaltered subcellular distributions and functional properties of γ2 77I and AU1γ2 77F GABA ARs in cortical pyramidal cells. This transgenic-viral pharmacogenetic approach has the advantage that it does not require any extrinsic protein that might endow some unforeseen alterations of the genetically modified cells. In addition, this virus-based approach opens up the possibility of modifying multiple cell types in distinct brain regions and performing alternative recombination-based intersectional genetic manipulations.}, author = {Sümegi, Máté and Fukazawa, Yugo and Matsui, Ko and Lörincz, Andrea and Eyre, Mark D and Nusser, Zoltán and Ryuichi Shigemoto}, journal = {Journal of Physiology}, number = {7}, pages = {1517 -- 1534}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Virus-mediated swapping of zolpidem-insensitive with zolpidem-sensitive GABA A receptors in cortical pyramidal cells}}, doi = {10.1113/jphysiol.2012.227538}, volume = {590}, year = {2012}, } @article{2475, abstract = {Background: One of the best-characterized causative factors of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the generation of amyloid-β peptide (Aβ). AD subjects are at high risk of epileptic seizures accompanied by aberrant neuronal excitability, which in itself enhances Aβ generation. However, the molecular linkage between epileptic seizures and Aβ generation in AD remains unclear. Results: X11 and X11-like (X11L) gene knockout mice suffered from epileptic seizures, along with a malfunction of hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide gated (HCN) channels. Genetic ablation of HCN1 in mice and HCN1 channel blockage in cultured Neuro2a (N2a) cells enhanced Aβ generation. Interestingly, HCN1 levels dramatically decreased in the temporal lobe of cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) during aging and were significantly diminished in the temporal lobe of sporadic AD patients. Conclusion: Because HCN1 associates with amyloid-β precursor protein (APP) and X11/X11L in the brain, genetic deficiency of X11/X11L may induce aberrant HCN1 distribution along with epilepsy. Moreover, the reduction in HCN1 levels in aged primates may contribute to augmented Aβ generation. Taken together, HCN1 is proposed to play an important role in the molecular linkage between epileptic seizures and Aβ generation, and in the aggravation of sporadic AD.}, author = {Saito, Yuhki and Inoue, Tsuyoshi and Zhu, Gang and Kimura, Naoki and Okada, Motohiro and Nishimura, Masaki and Murayama, Shigeo and Kaneko, Sunao and Ryuichi Shigemoto and Imoto, Keiji and Suzuki, Toshiharu}, journal = {Molecular Neurodegeneration}, number = {1}, publisher = {BioMed Central}, title = {{Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide gated channels: A potential molecular link between epileptic seizures and Aβ generation in Alzheimer's disease}}, doi = {10.1186/1750-1326-7-50}, volume = {7}, year = {2012}, } @article{2477, abstract = {Dynamic activity of glia has repeatedly been demonstrated, but if such activity is independent from neuronal activity, glia would not have any role in the information processing in the brain or in the generation of animal behavior. Evidence for neurons communicating with glia is solid, but the signaling pathway leading back from glial-to-neuronal activity was often difficult to study. Here, we introduced a transgenic mouse line in which channelrhodopsin-2, a light-gated cation channel, was expressed in astrocytes. Selective photostimulation of these astrocytes in vivo triggered neuronal activation. Using slice preparations, we show that glial photostimulation leads to release of glutamate, which was sufficient to activate AMPA receptors on Purkinje cells and to induce long-term depression of parallel fiber-to-Purkinje cell synapses through activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors. In contrast to neuronal synaptic vesicular release, glial activation likely causes preferential activation of extrasynaptic receptors that appose glial membrane. Finally, we show that neuronal activation by glial stimulation can lead to perturbation of cerebellar modulated motor behavior. These findings demonstrate that glia can modulate the tone of neuronal activity and behavior. This animal model is expected to be a potentially powerful approach to study the role of glia in brain function.}, author = {Sasaki, Takuya and Beppu, Kaoru and Tanaka, Kenji F and Fukazawa, Yugo and Ryuichi Shigemoto and Matsui, Ko}, journal = {PNAS}, number = {50}, pages = {20720 -- 20725}, publisher = {National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Application of an optogenetic byway for perturbing neuronal activity via glial photostimulation}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1213458109}, volume = {109}, year = {2012}, } @article{2474, abstract = {Interneurons are critical for neuronal circuit function, but how their dendritic morphologies and membrane properties influence information flow within neuronal circuits is largely unknown. We studied the spatiotemporal profile of synaptic integration and short-term plasticity in dendrites of mature cerebellar stellate cells by combining two-photon guided electrical stimulation, glutamate uncaging, electron microscopy, and modeling. Synaptic activation within thin (0.4 μm) dendrites produced somatic responses that became smaller and slower with increasing distance from the soma, sublinear subthreshold input-output relationships, and a somatodendritic gradient of short-term plasticity. Unlike most studies showing that neurons employ active dendritic mechanisms, we found that passive cable properties of thin dendrites determine the sublinear integration and plasticity gradient, which both result from large dendritic depolarizations that reduce synaptic driving force. These integrative properties allow stellate cells to act as spatiotemporal filters of synaptic input patterns, thereby biasing their output in favor of sparse presynaptic activity. Stellate cells are critical sources of inhibition in the cerebellum, but how their dendrites integrate excitatory synaptic inputs is unknown. Abrahamsson et al. show that thin dendrites and passive membrane properties of SCs promote sublinear synaptic summation and distance-dependent short-term plasticity. }, author = {Abrahamsson, Therese and Cathala, Laurence and Matsui, Ko and Ryuichi Shigemoto and DiGregorio, David A}, journal = {Neuron}, number = {6}, pages = {1159 -- 1172}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Thin dendrites of cerebellar interneurons confer sublinear synaptic integration and a gradient of short-term plasticity}}, doi = {10.1016/j.neuron.2012.01.027}, volume = {73}, year = {2012}, } @article{2515, abstract = {We investigated the temporal and spatial expression of SK2 in the developing mouse hippocampus using molecular and biochemical techniques, quantitative immunogold electron microscopy, and electrophysiology. The mRNA encoding SK2 was expressed in the developing and adult hippocampus. Western blotting and immunohistochemistry showed that SK2 protein increased with age. This was accompanied by a shift in subcellular localization. Early in development (P5), SK2 was predominantly localized to the endoplasmic reticulum in the pyramidal cell layer. But by P30 SK2 was almost exclusively expressed in the dendrites and spines. The level of SK2 at the postsynaptic density (PSD) also increased during development. In the adult, SK2 expression on the spine plasma membrane showed a proximal-to-distal gradient. Consistent with this redistribution and gradient of SK2, the selective SK channel blocker apamin increased evoked excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) only in CA1 pyramidal neurons from mice older than P15. However, the effect of apamin on EPSPs was not different between synapses in proximal or distal stratum radiatum or stratum lacunosum-moleculare in adult. These results show a developmental increase and gradient in SK2-containing channel surface expression that underlie their influence on neurotransmission, and that may contribute to increased memory acquisition during early development.}, author = {Ballesteros-Merino, Carmen and Lin, Michael and Wu, Wendy W and Ferrándiz-Huertas, Clotilde and Cabañero, María José and Watanabe, Masahiko and Fukazawa, Yugo and Ryuichi Shigemoto and Maylie, James G and Adelman, John P and Luján, Rafael}, journal = {Hippocampus}, number = {6}, pages = {1467 -- 1480}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{ Developmental profile of SK2 channel expression and function in CA1 neurons}}, doi = {10.1002/hipo.20986}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, } @article{2514, abstract = {Visual information must be relayed through the lateral geniculate nucleus before it reaches the visual cortex. However, not all spikes created in the retina lead to postsynaptic spikes and properties of the retinogeniculate synapse contribute to this filtering. To understand the mechanisms underlying this filtering process, we conducted electrophysiology to assess the properties of signal transmission in the Long-Evans rat. We also performed SDS-digested freeze-fracture replica labeling to quantify the receptor and transporter distribution, as well as EM reconstruction to describe the 3D structure. To analyze the impact of transmitter diffusion on the activity of the receptors, simulations were integrated. We identified that a large contributor to the filtering is the marked paired-pulse depression at this synapse, which was intensified by the morphological characteristics of the contacts. The broad presynaptic and postsynaptic contact area restricts transmitter diffusion two dimensionally. Additionally, the presence of multiple closely arranged release sites invites intersynaptic spillover, which causes desensitization of AMPA receptors. The presence of AMPA receptors that slowly recover from desensitization along with the high presynaptic release probability and multivesicular release at each synapse also contribute to the depression. These features contrast with many other synapses where spatiotemporal spread of transmitter is limited by rapid transmitter clearance allowing synapses to operate more independently. We propose that the micrometer-order structure can ultimately affect the visual information processing.}, author = {Budisantoso, Timotheus and Matsui, Ko and Kamasawa, Naomi and Fukazawa, Yugo and Ryuichi Shigemoto}, journal = {Journal of Neuroscience}, number = {7}, pages = {2357 -- 2376}, publisher = {Society for Neuroscience}, title = {{Mechanisms underlying signal filtering at a multisynapse contact}}, doi = {10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5243-11.2012}, volume = {32}, year = {2012}, } @article{2689, abstract = {R-type calcium channels (RTCCs) are well known for their role in synaptic plasticity, but little is known about their subcellular distribution across various neuronal compartments. Using subtype-specific antibodies, we characterized the regional and subcellular localization of Ca v2.3 in mice and rats at both light and electron microscopic levels. Ca v2.3 immunogold particles were found to be predominantly presynaptic in the interpeduncular nucleus, but postsynaptic in other brain regions. Serial section analysis of electron microscopic images from the hippocampal CA1 revealed a higher density of immunogold particles in the dendritic shaft plasma membrane compared with the pyramidal cell somata. However, the labeling densities were not significantly different among the apical, oblique, or basal dendrites. Immunogold particles were also observed over the plasma membrane of dendritic spines, including both synaptic and extrasynaptic sites. Individual spine heads contained <20 immunogold particles, with an average density of ~260 immunoparticles per μm 3 spine head volume, in accordance with the density of RTCCs estimated using calcium imaging (Sabatini and Svoboda, 2000). The Ca v2.3 density was variable among similar-sized spine heads and did not correlate with the density in the parent dendrite, implying that spines are individual calcium compartments operating autonomously from their parent dendrites.}, author = {Parajuli, Laxmi K and Nakajima, Chikako and Kulik, Ákos and Matsui, Ko and Schneider, Toni and Ryuichi Shigemoto and Fukazawa, Yugo}, journal = {Journal of Neuroscience}, number = {39}, pages = {13555 -- 13567}, publisher = {Society for Neuroscience}, title = {{Quantitative regional and ultra structural localization of the Ca v2 3 subunit of R type calcium channel in mouse brain}}, doi = {10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1142-12.2012}, volume = {32}, year = {2012}, } @article{2687, abstract = {Left-right asymmetry of human brain function has been known for a century, although much of molecular and cellular basis of brain laterality remains to be elusive. Recent studies suggest that hippocampal CA3-CA1 excitatory synapses are asymmetrically arranged, however, the functional implication of the asymmetrical circuitry has not been studied at the behavioral level. In order to address the left-right asymmetry of hippocampal function in behaving mice, we analyzed the performance of "split-brain" mice in the Barnes maze. The "split-brain" mice received ventral hippocampal commissure and corpus callosum transection in addition to deprivation of visual input from one eye. In such mice, the hippocampus in the side of visual deprivation receives sensory-driven input. Better spatial task performance was achieved by the mice which were forced to use the right hippocampus than those which were forced to use the left hippocampus. In two-choice spatial maze, forced usage of left hippocampus resulted in a comparable performance to the right counterpart, suggesting that both hippocampal hemispheres are capable of conducting spatial learning. Therefore, the results obtained from the Barnes maze suggest that the usage of the right hippocampus improves the accuracy of spatial memory. Performance of non-spatial yet hippocampus-dependent tasks (e.g. fear conditioning) was not influenced by the laterality of the hippocampus.}, author = {Shinohara, Yoshiaki and Hosoya, Aki and Yamasaki, Nobuyuki and Ahmed, Hassan and Hattori, Satoko and Eguchi, Megumi and Yamaguchi, Shun and Miyakawa, Tsuyoshi and Hirase, Hajime and Ryuichi Shigemoto}, journal = {Hippocampus}, number = {2}, pages = {117 -- 121}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Right-hemispheric dominance of spatial memory in split-brain mice}}, doi = {10.1002/hipo.20886}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, } @article{2688, abstract = {To gain insights into structure-function relationship of excitatory synapses, we revisit our quantitative analysis of synaptic AMPAR by highly sensitive freeze-fracture replica labeling in eight different connections. All of these connections showed linear correlation between synapse size and AMPAR number indicating a common intra-synapse-type relationship in CNS synapses. On the contrary, inter-synapse-type relationship is unexpected indicating no correlation between averages of synapse size and AMPAR number. Interestingly, connections with large average synapse size and low AMPAR density showed high variability of AMPAR number and mosaic distribution within the postsynaptic membrane. We propose an idea that these connections may quickly exhibit synaptic plasticity by modifying AMPAR density/number whereas those with high AMPAR density change their efficacy by modifying synapse size.}, author = {Fukazawa, Yugo and Ryuichi Shigemoto}, journal = {Current Opinion in Neurobiology}, number = {3}, pages = {446 -- 452}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Intra-synapse-type and inter-synapse-type relationships between synaptic size and AMPAR expression}}, doi = {10.1016/j.conb.2012.01.006}, volume = {22}, year = {2012}, } @unpublished{2696, author = {László Erdös}, booktitle = {ArXiv}, publisher = {ArXiv}, title = {{Universality for random matrices and log-gases}}, year = {2012}, }