@misc{9804,
  abstract     = {Evolutionary studies are often limited by missing data that are critical to understanding the history of selection. Selection experiments, which reproduce rapid evolution under controlled conditions, are excellent tools to study how genomes evolve under selection. Here we present a genomic dissection of the Longshanks selection experiment, in which mice were selectively bred over 20 generations for longer tibiae relative to body mass, resulting in 13% longer tibiae in two replicates. We synthesized evolutionary theory, genome sequences and molecular genetics to understand the selection response and found that it involved both polygenic adaptation and discrete loci of major effect, with the strongest loci tending to be selected in parallel between replicates. We show that selection may favor de-repression of bone growth through inactivating two limb enhancers of an inhibitor, Nkx3-2. Our integrative genomic analyses thus show that it is possible to connect individual base-pair changes to the overall selection response.},
  author       = {Castro, João Pl and Yancoskie, Michelle N. and Marchini, Marta and Belohlavy, Stefanie and Hiramatsu, Layla and Kučka, Marek and Beluch, William H. and Naumann, Ronald and Skuplik, Isabella and Cobb, John and Barton, Nicholas H and Rolian, Campbell and Chan, Yingguang Frank},
  publisher    = {Dryad},
  title        = {{Data from: An integrative genomic analysis of the Longshanks selection experiment for longer limbs in mice}},
  doi          = {10.5061/dryad.0q2h6tk},
  year         = {2019},
}

@misc{9805,
  abstract     = {The spread of adaptive alleles is fundamental to evolution, and in theory, this process is well‐understood. However, only rarely can we follow this process—whether it originates from the spread of a new mutation, or by introgression from another population. In this issue of Molecular Ecology, Hanemaaijer et al. (2018) report on a 25‐year long study of the mosquitoes Anopheles gambiae (Figure 1) and Anopheles coluzzi in Mali, based on genotypes at 15 single‐nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). The species are usually reproductively isolated from each other, but in 2002 and 2006, bursts of hybridization were observed, when F1 hybrids became abundant. Alleles backcrossed from A. gambiae into A. coluzzi, but after the first event, these declined over the following years. In contrast, after 2006, an insecticide resistance allele that had established in A. gambiae spread into A. coluzzi, and rose to high frequency there, over 6 years (~75 generations). Whole genome sequences of 74 individuals showed that A. gambiae SNP from across the genome had become common in the A. coluzzi population, but that most of these were clustered in 34 genes around the resistance locus. A new set of SNP from 25 of these genes were assayed over time; over the 4 years since near‐fixation of the resistance allele; some remained common, whereas others declined. What do these patterns tell us about this introgression event?},
  author       = {Barton, Nicholas H},
  publisher    = {Dryad},
  title        = {{Data from: The consequences of an introgression event}},
  doi          = {10.5061/dryad.2kb6fh4},
  year         = {2019},
}

@misc{9806,
  abstract     = {1. Hosts can alter their strategy towards pathogens during their lifetime, i.e., they can show phenotypic plasticity in immunity or life history. Immune priming is one such example, where a previous encounter with a pathogen confers enhanced protection upon secondary challenge, resulting in reduced pathogen load (i.e. resistance) and improved host survival. However, an initial encounter might also enhance tolerance, particularly to less virulent opportunistic pathogens that establish persistent infections. In this scenario, individuals are better able to reduce the negative fitness consequences that result from a high pathogen load. Finally, previous exposure may also lead to life history adjustments, such as terminal investment into reproduction. 2. Using different Drosophila melanogaster host genotypes and two bacterial pathogens, Lactococcus lactis and Pseudomonas entomophila, we tested if previous exposure results in resistance or tolerance and whether it modifies immune gene expression during an acute-phase infection (one day post-challenge). We then asked if previous pathogen exposure affects chronic-phase pathogen persistence and longer-term survival (28 days post-challenge). 3. We predicted that previous exposure would increase host resistance to an early stage bacterial infection while it might come at a cost to host fecundity tolerance. We reasoned that resistance would be due in part to stronger immune gene expression after challenge. We expected that previous exposure would improve long-term survival, that it would reduce infection persistence, and we expected to find genetic variation in these responses. 4. We found that previous exposure to P. entomophila weakened host resistance to a second infection independent of genotype and had no effect on immune gene expression. Fecundity tolerance showed genotypic variation but was not influenced by previous exposure. However, L. lactis persisted as a chronic infection, whereas survivors cleared the more pathogenic P. entomophila infection. 5. To our knowledge, this is the first study that addresses host tolerance to bacteria in relation to previous exposure, taking a multi-faceted approach to address the topic. Our results suggest that previous exposure comes with transient costs to resistance during the early stage of infection in this host-pathogen system and that infection persistence may be bacterium-specific.},
  author       = {Kutzer, Megan and Kurtz, Joachim and Armitage, Sophie A.O.},
  publisher    = {Dryad},
  title        = {{Data from: A multi-faceted approach testing the effects of previous bacterial exposure on resistance and tolerance}},
  doi          = {10.5061/dryad.9kj41f0},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5,
  abstract     = {In this paper, we introduce a quantum version of the wonderful compactification of a group as a certain noncommutative projective scheme. Our approach stems from the fact that the wonderful compactification encodes the asymptotics of matrix coefficients, and from its realization as a GIT quotient of the Vinberg semigroup. In order to define the wonderful compactification for a quantum group, we adopt a generalized formalism of Proj categories in the spirit of Artin and Zhang. Key to our construction is a quantum version of the Vinberg semigroup, which we define as a q-deformation of a certain Rees algebra, compatible with a standard Poisson structure. Furthermore, we discuss quantum analogues of the stratification of the wonderful compactification by orbits for a certain group action, and provide explicit computations in the case of SL2.},
  author       = {Ganev, Iordan V},
  journal      = {Journal of the London Mathematical Society},
  number       = {3},
  pages        = {778--806},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{The wonderful compactification for quantum groups}},
  doi          = {10.1112/jlms.12193},
  volume       = {99},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5680,
  abstract     = {Pollinators display a remarkable diversity of foraging strategies with flowering plants, from primarily mutualistic interactions to cheating through nectar robbery. Despite numerous studies on the effect of nectar robbing on components of plant fitness, its contribution to reproductive isolation is unclear. We experimentally tested the impact of different pollinator strategies in a natural hybrid zone between two subspecies of Antirrhinum majus with alternate flower colour guides. On either side of a steep cline in flower colour between Antirrhinum majus pseudomajus (magenta) and A. m. striatum (yellow), we quantified the behaviour of all floral visitors at different time points during the flowering season. Using long-run camera surveys, we quantify the impact of nectar robbing on the number of flowers visited per inflorescence and the flower probing time. We further experimentally tested the effect of nectar robbing on female reproductive success by manipulating the intensity of robbing. While robbing increased over time the number of legitimate visitors tended to decrease concomitantly. We found that the number of flowers pollinated on a focal inflorescence decreased with the number of prior robbing events. However, in the manipulative experiment, fruit set and fruit volume did not vary significantly between low robbing and control treatments. Our findings challenge the idea that robbers have a negative impact on plant fitness through female function. This study also adds to our understanding of the components of pollinator-mediated reproductive isolation and the maintenance of Antirrhinum hybrid zones.},
  author       = {Andalo, Christophe and Burrus, Monique and Paute, Sandrine and Lauzeral, Christine and Field, David},
  issn         = {2381-8115},
  journal      = {Botany Letters},
  number       = {1},
  pages        = {80--92},
  publisher    = {Taylor and Francis},
  title        = {{Prevalence of legitimate pollinators and nectar robbers and the consequences for fruit set in an Antirrhinum majus hybrid zone}},
  doi          = {10.1080/23818107.2018.1545142},
  volume       = {166},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5789,
  abstract     = {Tissue morphogenesis is driven by mechanical forces that elicit changes in cell size, shape and motion. The extent by which forces deform tissues critically depends on the rheological properties of the recipient tissue. Yet, whether and how dynamic changes in tissue rheology affect tissue morphogenesis and how they are regulated within the developing organism remain unclear. Here, we show that blastoderm spreading at the onset of zebrafish morphogenesis relies on a rapid, pronounced and spatially patterned tissue fluidization. Blastoderm fluidization is temporally controlled by mitotic cell rounding-dependent cell–cell contact disassembly during the last rounds of cell cleavages. Moreover, fluidization is spatially restricted to the central blastoderm by local activation of non-canonical Wnt signalling within the blastoderm margin, increasing cell cohesion and thereby counteracting the effect of mitotic rounding on contact disassembly. Overall, our results identify a fluidity transition mediated by loss of cell cohesion as a critical regulator of embryo morphogenesis.},
  author       = {Petridou, Nicoletta and Grigolon, Silvia and Salbreux, Guillaume and Hannezo, Edouard B and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J},
  issn         = {1465-7392},
  journal      = {Nature Cell Biology},
  pages        = {169–178},
  publisher    = {Nature Publishing Group},
  title        = {{Fluidization-mediated tissue spreading by mitotic cell rounding and non-canonical Wnt signalling}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41556-018-0247-4},
  volume       = {21},
  year         = {2019},
}

@inbook{5793,
  abstract     = {The transcription coactivator, Yes-associated protein (YAP), which is a nuclear effector of the Hippo signaling pathway, has been shown to be a mechano-transducer. By using mutant fish and human 3D spheroids, we have recently demonstrated that YAP is also a mechano-effector. YAP functions in three-dimensional (3D) morphogenesis of organ and global body shape by controlling actomyosin-mediated tissue tension. In this chapter, we present a platform that links the findings in fish embryos with human cells. The protocols for analyzing tissue tension-mediated global body shape/organ morphogenesis in vivo and ex vivo using medaka fish embryos and in vitro using human cell spheroids represent useful tools for unraveling the molecular mechanisms by which YAP functions in regulating global body/organ morphogenesis.},
  author       = {Asaoka, Yoichi and Morita, Hitoshi and Furumoto, Hiroko and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J and Furutani-Seiki, Makoto},
  booktitle    = {The hippo pathway},
  editor       = {Hergovich, Alexander},
  isbn         = {978-1-4939-8909-6},
  pages        = {167--181},
  publisher    = {Springer},
  title        = {{Studying YAP-mediated 3D morphogenesis using fish embryos and human spheroids}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-1-4939-8910-2_14},
  volume       = {1893},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5817,
  abstract     = {We theoretically study the shapes of lipid vesicles confined to a spherical cavity, elaborating a framework based on the so-called limiting shapes constructed from geometrically simple structural elements such as double-membrane walls and edges. Partly inspired by numerical results, the proposed non-compartmentalized and compartmentalized limiting shapes are arranged in the bilayer-couple phase diagram which is then compared to its free-vesicle counterpart. We also compute the area-difference-elasticity phase diagram of the limiting shapes and we use it to interpret shape transitions experimentally observed in vesicles confined within another vesicle. The limiting-shape framework may be generalized to theoretically investigate the structure of certain cell organelles such as the mitochondrion.},
  author       = {Kavcic, Bor and Sakashita, A. and Noguchi, H. and Ziherl, P.},
  issn         = {1744-6848},
  journal      = {Soft Matter},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {602--614},
  publisher    = {Royal Society of Chemistry},
  title        = {{Limiting shapes of confined lipid vesicles}},
  doi          = {10.1039/c8sm01956h},
  volume       = {15},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5878,
  abstract     = {We consider the motion of a droplet bouncing on a vibrating bath of the same fluid in the presence of a central potential. We formulate a rotation symmetry-reduced description of this system, which allows for the straightforward application of dynamical systems theory tools. As an illustration of the utility of the symmetry reduction, we apply it to a model of the pilot-wave system with a central harmonic force. We begin our analysis by identifying local bifurcations and the onset of chaos. We then describe the emergence of chaotic regions and their merging bifurcations, which lead to the formation of a global attractor. In this final regime, the droplet’s angular momentum spontaneously changes its sign as observed in the experiments of Perrard et al.},
  author       = {Budanur, Nazmi B and Fleury, Marc},
  issn         = {1089-7682},
  journal      = {Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {AIP Publishing},
  title        = {{State space geometry of the chaotic pilot-wave hydrodynamics}},
  doi          = {10.1063/1.5058279},
  volume       = {29},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5906,
  abstract     = {We introduce a simple, exactly solvable strong-randomness renormalization group (RG) model for the many-body localization (MBL) transition in one dimension. Our approach relies on a family of RG flows parametrized by the asymmetry between thermal and localized phases. We identify the physical MBL transition in the limit of maximal asymmetry, reflecting the instability of MBL against rare thermal inclusions. We find a critical point that is localized with power-law distributed thermal inclusions. The typical size of critical inclusions remains finite at the transition, while the average size is logarithmically diverging. We propose a two-parameter scaling theory for the many-body localization transition that falls into the Kosterlitz-Thouless universality class, with the MBL phase corresponding to a stable line of fixed points with multifractal behavior.},
  author       = {Goremykina, Anna and Vasseur, Romain and Serbyn, Maksym},
  issn         = {1079-7114},
  journal      = {Physical Review Letters},
  number       = {4},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Analytically solvable renormalization group for the many-body localization transition}},
  doi          = {10.1103/physrevlett.122.040601},
  volume       = {122},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5907,
  abstract     = {Microalgae of the genus Chlorella vulgaris are candidates for the production of lipids for biofuel production. Besides that, Chlorella vulgaris is marketed as protein and vitamin rich food additive. Its potential as a novel expression system for recombinant proteins inspired us to study its asparagine-linked oligosaccharides (N-glycans) by mass spectrometry, chromatography and gas chromatography. Oligomannosidic N-glycans with up to nine mannoses were the structures found in culture collection strains as well as several commercial products. These glycans co-eluted with plant N-glycans in the highly shape selective porous graphitic carbon chromatography. Thus, Chlorella vulgaris generates oligomannosidic N-glycans of the structural type known from land plants and animals. In fact, Man5 (Man5GlcNAc2) served as substrate for GlcNAc-transferase I and a trace of an endogenous structure with terminal GlcNAc was seen. The unusual more linear Man5 structure recently found on glycoproteins of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii occurred - if at all - in traces only. Notably, a majority of the oligomannosidic glycans was multiply O-methylated with 3-O-methyl and 3,6-di-O-methyl mannoses at the non-reducing termini. This modification has so far been neither found on plant nor vertebrate N-glycans. It’s possible immunogenicity raises concerns as to the use of C. vulgaris for production of pharmaceutical glycoproteins.},
  author       = {Mócsai, Réka and Figl, Rudolf and Troschl, Clemens and Strasser, Richard and Svehla, Elisabeth and Windwarder, Markus and Thader, Andreas and Altmann, Friedrich},
  journal      = {Scientific Reports},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {Nature Publishing Group},
  title        = {{N-glycans of the microalga Chlorella vulgaris are of the oligomannosidic type but highly methylated}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41598-018-36884-1},
  volume       = {9},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5908,
  abstract     = {The interorganelle communication mediated by membrane contact sites (MCSs) is an evolutionary hallmark of eukaryotic cells. MCS connections enable the nonvesicular exchange of information between organelles and allow them to coordinate responses to changing cellular environments. In plants, the importance of MCS components in the responses to environmental stress has been widely established, but the molecular mechanisms regulating interorganelle connectivity during stress still remain opaque. In this report, we use the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana to show that ionic stress increases endoplasmic reticulum (ER)–plasma membrane (PM) connectivity by promoting the cortical expansion of synaptotagmin 1 (SYT1)-enriched ER–PM contact sites (S-EPCSs). We define differential roles for the cortical cytoskeleton in the regulation of S-EPCS dynamics and ER–PM connectivity, and we identify the accumulation of phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate [PI(4,5)P2] at the PM as a molecular signal associated with the ER–PM connectivity changes. Our study highlights the functional conservation of EPCS components and PM phosphoinositides as modulators of ER–PM connectivity in eukaryotes, and uncovers unique aspects of the spatiotemporal regulation of ER–PM connectivity in plants.},
  author       = {Lee, Eunkyoung and Vanneste, Steffen and Pérez-Sancho, Jessica and Benitez-Fuente, Francisco and Strelau, Matthew and Macho, Alberto P. and Botella, Miguel A. and Friml, Jiří and Rosado, Abel},
  journal      = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {1420--1429},
  publisher    = {National Academy of Sciences},
  title        = {{Ionic stress enhances ER–PM connectivity via phosphoinositide-associated SYT1 contact site expansion in Arabidopsis}},
  doi          = {10.1073/pnas.1818099116},
  volume       = {116},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5943,
  abstract     = {The hairpin instability of a jet in a crossflow (JICF) for a low jet-to-crossflow velocity ratio is investigated experimentally for a velocity ratio range of R ∈ (0.14, 0.75) and crossflow Reynolds numbers ReD ∈ (260, 640). From spectral analysis we characterize the Strouhal number and amplitude of the hairpin instability as a function of R and ReD. We demonstrate that the dynamics of the hairpins is well described by the Landau model, and, hence, that the instability occurs through Hopf bifurcation, similarly to other hydrodynamical oscillators such as wake behind different bluff bodies. Using the Landau model, we determine the precise threshold values of hairpin shedding. We also study the spatial dependence of this hydrodynamical instability, which shows a global behaviour.},
  author       = {Klotz, Lukasz and Gumowski, Konrad and Wesfreid, José Eduardo},
  journal      = {Journal of Fluid Mechanics},
  pages        = {386--406},
  publisher    = {Cambridge University Press},
  title        = {{Experiments on a jet in a crossflow in the low-velocity-ratio regime}},
  doi          = {10.1017/jfm.2018.974},
  volume       = {863},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{5945,
  abstract     = {In developing organisms, spatially prescribed cell identities are thought to be determined by the expression levels of multiple genes. Quantitative tests of this idea, however, require a theoretical framework capable of exposing the rules and precision of cell specification over developmental time. We use the gap gene network in the early fly embryo as an example to show how expression levels of the four gap genes can be jointly decoded into an optimal specification of position with 1% accuracy. The decoder correctly predicts, with no free parameters, the dynamics of pair-rule expression patterns at different developmental time points and in various mutant backgrounds. Precise cellular identities are thus available at the earliest stages of development, contrasting the prevailing view of positional information being slowly refined across successive layers of the patterning network. Our results suggest that developmental enhancers closely approximate a mathematically optimal decoding strategy.},
  author       = {Petkova, Mariela D. and Tkacik, Gasper and Bialek, William and Wieschaus, Eric F. and Gregor, Thomas},
  journal      = {Cell},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {844--855.e15},
  publisher    = {Cell Press},
  title        = {{Optimal decoding of cellular identities in a genetic network}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.cell.2019.01.007},
  volume       = {176},
  year         = {2019},
}

@inproceedings{5947,
  abstract     = {Graph algorithms applied in many applications, including social networks, communication networks, VLSI design, graphics, and several others, require dynamic modifications - addition and removal of vertices and/or edges - in the graph. This paper presents a novel concurrent non-blocking algorithm to implement a dynamic unbounded directed graph in a shared-memory machine. The addition and removal operations of vertices and edges are lock-free. For a finite sized graph, the lookup operations are wait-free. Most significant component of the presented algorithm is the reachability query in a concurrent graph. The reachability queries in our algorithm are obstruction-free and thus impose minimal additional synchronization cost over other operations. We prove that each of the data structure operations are linearizable. We extensively evaluate a sample C/C++ implementation of the algorithm through a number of micro-benchmarks. The experimental results show that the proposed algorithm scales well with the number of threads and on an average provides 5 to 7x performance improvement over a concurrent graph implementation using coarse-grained locking.},
  author       = {Chatterjee, Bapi and Peri, Sathya and Sa, Muktikanta and Singhal, Nandini},
  booktitle    = {ACM International Conference Proceeding Series},
  isbn         = {978-1-4503-6094-4 },
  location     = {Bangalore, India},
  pages        = {168--177},
  publisher    = {ACM},
  title        = {{A simple and practical concurrent non-blocking unbounded graph with linearizable reachability queries}},
  doi          = {10.1145/3288599.3288617},
  year         = {2019},
}

@inproceedings{5948,
  abstract     = {We study the termination problem for nondeterministic probabilistic programs. We consider the bounded termination problem that asks whether the supremum of the expected termination time over all schedulers is bounded. First, we show that ranking supermartingales (RSMs) are both sound and complete for proving bounded termination over nondeterministic probabilistic programs. For nondeterministic probabilistic programs a previous result claimed that RSMs are not complete for bounded termination, whereas our result corrects the previous flaw and establishes completeness with a rigorous proof. Second, we present the first sound approach to establish lower bounds on expected termination time through RSMs.},
  author       = {Fu, Hongfei and Chatterjee, Krishnendu},
  booktitle    = {International Conference on Verification, Model Checking, and Abstract Interpretation},
  location     = {Cascais, Portugal},
  pages        = {468--490},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Termination of nondeterministic probabilistic programs}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-030-11245-5_22},
  volume       = {11388},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{6014,
  abstract     = {Speed of sound waves in gases and liquids are governed by the compressibility of the medium. There exists another type of non-dispersive wave where the wave speed depends on stress instead of elasticity of the medium. A well-known example is the Alfven wave, which propagates through plasma permeated by a magnetic field with the speed determined by magnetic tension. An elastic analogue of Alfven waves has been predicted in a flow of dilute polymer solution where the elastic stress of the stretching polymers determines the elastic wave speed. Here we present quantitative evidence of elastic Alfven waves in elastic turbulence of a viscoelastic creeping flow between two obstacles in channel flow. The key finding in the experimental proof is a nonlinear dependence of the elastic wave speed cel on the Weissenberg number Wi, which deviates from predictions based on a model of linear polymer elasticity.},
  author       = {Varshney, Atul and Steinberg, Victor},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Elastic alfven waves in elastic turbulence}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-019-08551-0},
  volume       = {10},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{6022,
  abstract     = {The evolution of new species is made easier when traits under divergent ecological selection are also mating cues. Such ecological mating cues are now considered more common than previously thought, but we still know little about the genetic changes underlying their evolution or more generally about the genetic basis for assortative mating behaviors. Both tight physical linkage and the existence of large-effect preference loci will strengthen genetic associations between behavioral and ecological barriers, promoting the evolution of assortative mating. The warning patterns of Heliconius melpomene and H. cydno are under disruptive selection due to increased predation of nonmimetic hybrids and are used during mate recognition. We carried out a genome-wide quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis of preference behaviors between these species and showed that divergent male preference has a simple genetic basis. We identify three QTLs that together explain a large proportion (approximately 60%) of the difference in preference behavior observed between the parental species. One of these QTLs is just 1.2 (0-4.8) centiMorgans (cM) from the major color pattern gene optix, and, individually, all three have a large effect on the preference phenotype. Genomic divergence between H. cydno and H. melpomene is high but broadly heterogenous, and admixture is reduced at the preference-optix color pattern locus but not the other preference QTLs. The simple genetic architecture we reveal will facilitate the evolution and maintenance of new species despite ongoing gene flow by coupling behavioral and ecological aspects of reproductive isolation.},
  author       = {Merrill, Richard M. and Rastas, Pasi and Martin, Simon H. and Melo Hurtado, Maria C and Barker, Sarah and Davey, John and Mcmillan, W. Owen and Jiggins, Chris D.},
  journal      = {PLoS Biology},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {Public Library of Science},
  title        = {{Genetic dissection of assortative mating behavior}},
  doi          = {10.1371/journal.pbio.2005902},
  volume       = {17},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{6023,
  abstract     = {Multicellular development requires coordinated cell polarization relative to body axes, and translation to oriented cell division 1–3 . In plants, it is unknown how cell polarities are connected to organismal axes and translated to division. Here, we identify Arabidopsis SOSEKI proteins that integrate apical–basal and radial organismal axes to localize to polar cell edges. Localization does not depend on tissue context, requires cell wall integrity and is defined by a transferrable, protein-specific motif. A Domain of Unknown Function in SOSEKI proteins resembles the DIX oligomerization domain in the animal Dishevelled polarity regulator. The DIX-like domain self-interacts and is required for edge localization and for influencing division orientation, together with a second domain that defines the polar membrane domain. Our work shows that SOSEKI proteins locally interpret global polarity cues and can influence cell division orientation. Furthermore, this work reveals that, despite fundamental differences, cell polarity mechanisms in plants and animals converge on a similar protein domain.},
  author       = {Yoshida, Saiko and Van Der Schuren, Alja and Van Dop, Maritza and Van Galen, Luc and Saiga, Shunsuke and Adibi, Milad and Möller, Barbara and Ten Hove, Colette A. and Marhavy, Peter and Smith, Richard and Friml, Jiří and Weijers, Dolf},
  journal      = {Nature Plants},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {160--166},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{A SOSEKI-based coordinate system interprets global polarity cues in arabidopsis}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41477-019-0363-6},
  volume       = {5},
  year         = {2019},
}

@article{6025,
  abstract     = {Non-canonical Wnt signaling plays a central role for coordinated cell polarization and directed migration in metazoan development. While spatiotemporally restricted activation of non-canonical Wnt-signaling drives cell polarization in epithelial tissues, it remains unclear whether such instructive activity is also critical for directed mesenchymal cell migration. Here, we developed a light-activated version of the non-canonical Wnt receptor Frizzled 7 (Fz7) to analyze how restricted activation of non-canonical Wnt signaling affects directed anterior axial mesendoderm (prechordal plate, ppl) cell migration within the zebrafish gastrula. We found that Fz7 signaling is required for ppl cell protrusion formation and migration and that spatiotemporally restricted ectopic activation is capable of redirecting their migration. Finally, we show that uniform activation of Fz7 signaling in ppl cells fully rescues defective directed cell migration in fz7 mutant embryos. Together, our findings reveal that in contrast to the situation in epithelial cells, non-canonical Wnt signaling functions permissively rather than instructively in directed mesenchymal cell migration during gastrulation.},
  author       = {Capek, Daniel and Smutny, Michael and Tichy, Alexandra Madelaine and Morri, Maurizio and Janovjak, Harald L and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J},
  journal      = {eLife},
  publisher    = {eLife Sciences Publications},
  title        = {{Light-activated Frizzled7 reveals a permissive role of non-canonical wnt signaling in mesendoderm cell migration}},
  doi          = {10.7554/eLife.42093},
  volume       = {8},
  year         = {2019},
}

