@article{11588,
  abstract     = {Visualizing cell behavior and effector function on a single cell level has been crucial for understanding key aspects of mammalian biology. Due to their small size, large number and rapid recruitment into thrombi, there is a lack of data on fate and behavior of individual platelets in thrombosis and hemostasis. Here we report the use of platelet lineage restricted multi-color reporter mouse strains to delineate platelet function on a single cell level. We show that genetic labeling allows for single platelet and megakaryocyte (MK) tracking and morphological analysis in vivo and in vitro, while not affecting lineage functions. Using Cre-driven Confetti expression, we provide insights into temporal gene expression patterns as well as spatial clustering of MK in the bone marrow. In the vasculature, shape analysis of activated platelets recruited to thrombi identifies ubiquitous filopodia formation with no evidence of lamellipodia formation. Single cell tracking in complex thrombi reveals prominent myosin-dependent motility of platelets and highlights thrombus formation as a highly dynamic process amenable to modification and intervention of the acto-myosin cytoskeleton. Platelet function assays combining flow cytrometry, as well as in vivo, ex vivo and in vitro imaging show unaltered platelet functions of multicolor reporter mice compared to wild-type controls. In conclusion, platelet lineage multicolor reporter mice prove useful in furthering our understanding of platelet and MK biology on a single cell level.},
  author       = {Nicolai, Leo and Kaiser, Rainer and Escaig, Raphael and Hoffknecht, Marie Louise and Anjum, Afra and Leunig, Alexander and Pircher, Joachim and Ehrlich, Andreas and Lorenz, Michael and Ishikawa-Ankerhold, Hellen and Aird, William C. and Massberg, Steffen and Gärtner, Florian R},
  issn         = {1592-8721},
  journal      = {Haematologica},
  number       = {7},
  pages        = {1669--1680},
  publisher    = {Ferrata Storti Foundation},
  title        = {{Single platelet and megakaryocyte morpho-dynamics uncovered by multicolor reporter mouse strains in vitro and in vivo}},
  doi          = {10.3324/haematol.2021.278896},
  volume       = {107},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11589,
  abstract     = {Calcium-dependent protein kinases (CPK) are key components of a wide array of signaling pathways, translating stress and nutrient signaling into the modulation of cellular processes such as ion transport and transcription. However, not much is known about CPKs in endomembrane trafficking. Here, we screened for CPKs that impact on root growth and gravitropism, by overexpressing constitutively active forms of CPKs under the control of an inducible promoter in Arabidopsis thaliana. We found that inducible overexpression of an constitutive active CPK30 (CA-CPK30) resulted in a loss of root gravitropism and ectopic auxin accumulation in the root tip. Immunolocalization revealed that CA-CPK30 roots have reduced PIN protein levels, PIN1 polarity defects and impaired Brefeldin A (BFA)-sensitive trafficking. Moreover, FM4-64 uptake was reduced, indicative of a defect in endocytosis. The effects on BFA-sensitive trafficking were not specific to PINs, as BFA could not induce aggregation of ARF1- and CHC-labeled endosomes in CA-CPK30. Interestingly, the interference with BFA-body formation, could be reverted by increasing the extracellular pH, indicating a pH-dependence of this CA-CPK30 effect. Altogether, our data reveal an important role for CPK30 in root growth regulation and endomembrane trafficking in Arabidopsis thaliana.},
  author       = {Wang, Ren and Himschoot, Ellie and Chen, Jian and Boudsocq, Marie and Geelen, Danny and Friml, Jiří and Beeckman, Tom and Vanneste, Steffen},
  issn         = {1664-462X},
  journal      = {Frontiers in Plant Science},
  publisher    = {Frontiers},
  title        = {{Constitutive active CPK30 interferes with root growth and endomembrane trafficking in Arabidopsis thaliana}},
  doi          = {10.3389/fpls.2022.862398},
  volume       = {13},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11590,
  abstract     = {We investigate the ground-state properties of weakly repulsive one-dimensional bosons in the presence of an attractive zero-range impurity potential. First, we derive mean-field solutions to the problem on a finite ring for the two asymptotic cases: (i) all bosons are bound to the impurity and (ii) all bosons are in a scattering state. Moreover, we derive the critical line that separates these regimes in the parameter space. In the thermodynamic limit, this critical line determines the maximum number of bosons that can be bound by the impurity potential, forming an artificial atom. Second, we validate the mean-field results using the flow equation approach and the multi-layer multi-configuration time-dependent Hartree method for atomic mixtures. While beyond-mean-field effects destroy long-range order in the Bose gas, the critical boson number is unaffected. Our findings are important for understanding such artificial atoms in low-density Bose gases with static and mobile impurities.},
  author       = {Brauneis, Fabian and Backert, Timothy G. and Mistakidis, Simeon I. and Lemeshko, Mikhail and Hammer, Hans Werner and Volosniev, Artem},
  issn         = {1367-2630},
  journal      = {New Journal of Physics},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {IOP Publishing},
  title        = {{Artificial atoms from cold bosons in one dimension}},
  doi          = {10.1088/1367-2630/ac78d8},
  volume       = {24},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11591,
  abstract     = {We investigate the deterministic generation and distribution of entanglement in large quantum networks by driving distant qubits with the output fields of a nondegenerate parametric amplifier. In this setting, the amplifier produces a continuous Gaussian two-mode squeezed state, which acts as a quantum-correlated reservoir for the qubits and relaxes them into a highly entangled steady state. Here we are interested in the maximal amount of entanglement and the optimal entanglement generation rates that can be achieved with this scheme under realistic conditions taking, in particular, the finite amplifier bandwidth, waveguide losses, and propagation delays into account. By combining exact numerical simulations of the full network with approximate analytic results, we predict the optimal working point for the amplifier and the corresponding qubit-qubit entanglement under various conditions. Our findings show that this passive conversion of Gaussian into discrete-variable entanglement offers a robust and experimentally very attractive approach for operating large optical, microwave, or hybrid quantum networks, for which efficient parametric amplifiers are currently developed.},
  author       = {Agustí, J. and Minoguchi, Y. and Fink, Johannes M and Rabl, P.},
  issn         = {2469-9934},
  journal      = {Physical Review A},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Long-distance distribution of qubit-qubit entanglement using Gaussian-correlated photonic beams}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevA.105.062454},
  volume       = {105},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11592,
  abstract     = {We compare recent experimental results [Science 375, 528 (2022)] of the superfluid unitary Fermi gas near the critical temperature with a thermodynamic model based on the elementary excitations of the system. We find good agreement between experimental data and our theory for several quantities such as first sound, second sound, and superfluid fraction. We also show that mode mixing between first and second sound occurs. Finally, we characterize the response amplitude to a density perturbation: Close to the critical temperature both first and second sound can be excited through a density perturbation, whereas at lower temperatures only the first sound mode exhibits a significant response.},
  author       = {Bighin, Giacomo and Cappellaro, Alberto and Salasnich, L.},
  issn         = {2469-9934},
  journal      = {Physical Review A},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Unitary Fermi superfluid near the critical temperature: Thermodynamics and sound modes from elementary excitations}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevA.105.063329},
  volume       = {105},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11593,
  abstract     = {A drawing of a graph on a surface is independently even if every pair of nonadjacent edges in the drawing crosses an even number of times. The Z2 -genus of a graph G is the minimum g such that G has an independently even drawing on the orientable surface of genus g. An unpublished result by Robertson and Seymour implies that for every t, every graph of sufficiently large genus contains as a minor a projective t×t grid or one of the following so-called t -Kuratowski graphs: K3,t, or t copies of K5 or K3,3 sharing at most two common vertices. We show that the Z2-genus of graphs in these families is unbounded in t; in fact, equal to their genus. Together, this implies that the genus of a graph is bounded from above by a function of its Z2-genus, solving a problem posed by Schaefer and Štefankovič, and giving an approximate version of the Hanani–Tutte theorem on orientable surfaces. We also obtain an analogous result for Euler genus and Euler Z2-genus of graphs.},
  author       = {Fulek, Radoslav and Kynčl, Jan},
  issn         = {1432-0444},
  journal      = {Discrete and Computational Geometry},
  pages        = {425--447},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{The Z2-Genus of Kuratowski minors}},
  doi          = {10.1007/s00454-022-00412-w},
  volume       = {68},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11636,
  abstract     = {In [3], Poonen and Slavov recently developed a novel approach to Bertini irreducibility theorems over an arbitrary field, based on random hyperplane slicing. In this paper, we extend their work by proving an analogous bound for the dimension of the exceptional locus in the setting of linear subspaces of higher codimensions.},
  author       = {Kmentt, Philip and Shute, Alec L},
  issn         = {1090-2465},
  journal      = {Finite Fields and their Applications},
  number       = {10},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{The Bertini irreducibility theorem for higher codimensional slices}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.ffa.2022.102085},
  volume       = {83},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11637,
  abstract     = {The ability to detect and respond to acute oxygen (O2) shortages is indispensable to aerobic life. The molecular mechanisms and circuits underlying this capacity are poorly understood. Here, we characterize the behavioral responses of feeding Caenorhabditis elegans to approximately 1% O2. Acute hypoxia triggers a bout of turning maneuvers followed by a persistent switch to rapid forward movement as animals seek to avoid and escape hypoxia. While the behavioral responses to 1% O2 closely resemble those evoked by 21% O2, they have distinct molecular and circuit underpinnings. Disrupting phosphodiesterases (PDEs), specific G proteins, or BBSome function inhibits escape from 1% O2 due to increased cGMP signaling. A primary source of cGMP is GCY-28, the ortholog of the atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) receptor. cGMP activates the protein kinase G EGL-4 and enhances neuroendocrine secretion to inhibit acute responses to 1% O2. Triggering a rise in cGMP optogenetically in multiple neurons, including AIA interneurons, rapidly and reversibly inhibits escape from 1% O2. Ca2+ imaging reveals that a 7% to 1% O2 stimulus evokes a Ca2+ decrease in several neurons. Defects in mitochondrial complex I (MCI) and mitochondrial complex I (MCIII), which lead to persistently high reactive oxygen species (ROS), abrogate acute hypoxia responses. In particular, repressing the expression of isp-1, which encodes the iron sulfur protein of MCIII, inhibits escape from 1% O2 without affecting responses to 21% O2. Both genetic and pharmacological up-regulation of mitochondrial ROS increase cGMP levels, which contribute to the reduced hypoxia responses. Our results implicate ROS and precise regulation of intracellular cGMP in the modulation of acute responses to hypoxia by C. elegans.},
  author       = {Zhao, Lina and Fenk, Lorenz A. and Nilsson, Lars and Amin-Wetzel, Niko Paresh and Ramirez, Nelson and De Bono, Mario and Chen, Changchun},
  issn         = {1545-7885},
  journal      = {PLoS Biology},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {Public Library of Science},
  title        = {{ROS and cGMP signaling modulate persistent escape from hypoxia in Caenorhabditis elegans}},
  doi          = {10.1371/journal.pbio.3001684},
  volume       = {20},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11638,
  abstract     = {Statistical inference is central to many scientific endeavors, yet how it works remains unresolved. Answering this requires a quantitative understanding of the intrinsic interplay between statistical models, inference methods, and the structure in the data. To this end, we characterize the efficacy of direct coupling analysis (DCA)—a highly successful method for analyzing amino acid sequence data—in inferring pairwise interactions from samples of ferromagnetic Ising models on random graphs. Our approach allows for physically motivated exploration of qualitatively distinct data regimes separated by phase transitions. We show that inference quality depends strongly on the nature of data-generating distributions: optimal accuracy occurs at an intermediate temperature where the detrimental effects from macroscopic order and thermal noise are minimal. Importantly our results indicate that DCA does not always outperform its local-statistics-based predecessors; while DCA excels at low temperatures, it becomes inferior to simple correlation thresholding at virtually all temperatures when data are limited. Our findings offer insights into the regime in which DCA operates so successfully, and more broadly, how inference interacts with the structure in the data.},
  author       = {Ngampruetikorn, Vudtiwat and Sachdeva, Vedant and Torrence, Johanna and Humplik, Jan and Schwab, David J. and Palmer, Stephanie E.},
  issn         = {2643-1564},
  journal      = {Physical Review Research},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Inferring couplings in networks across order-disorder phase transitions}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevResearch.4.023240},
  volume       = {4},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11639,
  abstract     = {We study the list decodability of different ensembles of codes over the real alphabet under the assumption of an omniscient adversary. It is a well-known result that when the source and the adversary have power constraints P and N respectively, the list decoding capacity is equal to 1/2logP/N. Random spherical codes achieve constant list sizes, and the goal of the present paper is to obtain a better understanding of the smallest achievable list size as a function of the gap to capacity. We show a reduction from arbitrary codes to spherical codes, and derive a lower bound on the list size of typical random spherical codes. We also give an upper bound on the list size achievable using nested Construction-A lattices and infinite Construction-A lattices. We then define and study a class of infinite constellations that generalize Construction-A lattices and prove upper and lower bounds for the same. Other goodness properties such as packing goodness and AWGN goodness of infinite constellations are proved along the way. Finally, we consider random lattices sampled from the Haar distribution and show that if a certain conjecture that originates in analytic number theory is true, then the list size grows as a polynomial function of the gap-to-capacity.},
  author       = {Zhang, Yihan and Vatedka, Shashank},
  issn         = {1557-9654},
  journal      = {IEEE Transactions on Information Theory},
  number       = {12},
  pages        = {7753--7786},
  publisher    = {IEEE},
  title        = {{List decoding random Euclidean codes and Infinite constellations}},
  doi          = {10.1109/TIT.2022.3189542},
  volume       = {68},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11640,
  abstract     = {Spatially explicit population genetic models have long been developed, yet have rarely been used to test hypotheses about the spatial distribution of genetic diversity or the genetic divergence between populations. Here, we use spatially explicit coalescence simulations to explore the properties of the island and the two-dimensional stepping stone models under a wide range of scenarios with spatio-temporal variation in deme size. We avoid the simulation of genetic data, using the fact that under the studied models, summary statistics of genetic diversity and divergence can be approximated from coalescence times. We perform the simulations using gridCoal, a flexible spatial wrapper for the software msprime (Kelleher et al., 2016, Theoretical Population Biology, 95, 13) developed herein. In gridCoal, deme sizes can change arbitrarily across space and time, as well as migration rates between individual demes. We identify different factors that can cause a deviation from theoretical expectations, such as the simulation time in comparison to the effective deme size and the spatio-temporal autocorrelation across the grid. Our results highlight that FST, a measure of the strength of population structure, principally depends on recent demography, which makes it robust to temporal variation in deme size. In contrast, the amount of genetic diversity is dependent on the distant past when Ne is large, therefore longer run times are needed to estimate Ne than FST. Finally, we illustrate the use of gridCoal on a real-world example, the range expansion of silver fir (Abies alba Mill.) since the last glacial maximum, using different degrees of spatio-temporal variation in deme size.},
  author       = {Szep, Eniko and Trubenova, Barbora and Csilléry, Katalin},
  issn         = {1755-0998},
  journal      = {Molecular Ecology Resources},
  number       = {8},
  pages        = {2941--2955},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{Using gridCoal to assess whether standard population genetic theory holds in the presence of spatio-temporal heterogeneity in population size}},
  doi          = {10.1111/1755-0998.13676},
  volume       = {22},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11648,
  abstract     = {Progress in structural membrane biology has been significantly accelerated by the ongoing 'Resolution Revolution' in cryo electron microscopy (cryo-EM). In particular, structure determination by single particle analysis has evolved into the most powerful method for atomic model building of multisubunit membrane protein complexes. This has created an ever increasing demand in cryo-EM machine time, which to satisfy is in need of new and affordable cryo electron microscopes. Here, we review our experience in using the JEOL CRYO ARM 200 prototype for the structure determination by single particle analysis of three different multisubunit membrane complexes: the Thermus thermophilus V-type ATPase VO complex, the Thermosynechococcus elongatus photosystem I monomer and the flagellar motor LP-ring from Salmonella enterica.},
  author       = {Gerle, Christoph and Kishikawa, Jun-ichi and Yamaguchi, Tomoko and Nakanishi, Atsuko and Çoruh, Mehmet Orkun and Makino, Fumiaki and Miyata, Tomoko and Kawamoto, Akihiro and Yokoyama, Ken and Namba, Keiichi and Kurisu, Genji and Kato, Takayuki},
  issn         = {2050-5701},
  journal      = {Microscopy},
  keywords     = {Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging, Instrumentation, Structural Biology},
  number       = {5},
  pages        = {249--261},
  publisher    = {Oxford University Press},
  title        = {{Structures of multisubunit membrane complexes with the CRYO ARM 200}},
  doi          = {10.1093/jmicro/dfac037},
  volume       = {71},
  year         = {2022},
}

@misc{11686,
  abstract     = {Maternally inherited Wolbachia transinfections are being introduced into natural mosquito populations to reduce the transmission of dengue, Zika and other arboviruses. Wolbachia-induced cytoplasmic incompatibility provides a frequency-dependent reproductive advantage to infected females that can spread transinfections within and among populations. However, because transinfections generally reduce host fitness, they tend to spread within populations only after their frequency exceeds a critical threshold. This produces bistability with stable equilibrium frequencies at both 0 and 1, analogous to the bistability produced by underdominance between alleles or karyotypes and by population dynamics under Allee effects. Here, we analyze how stochastic frequency variation produced by finite population size can facilitate the local spread of variants with bistable dynamics into areas where invasion is unexpected from deterministic models. Our exemplar is the establishment of wMel Wolbachia in the Aedes aegypti population of Pyramid Estates (PE), a small community in far north Queensland, Australia. In 2011, wMel was stably introduced into Gordonvale, separated from PE by barriers to Ae. aegypti dispersal. After nearly six years during which wMel was observed only at low frequencies in PE, corresponding to an apparent equilibrium between immigration and selection, wMel rose to fixation by 2018. Using analytic approximations and statistical analyses, we demonstrate that the observed fixation of wMel at PE is consistent with both stochastic transition past an unstable threshold frequency and deterministic transformation produced by steady immigration at a rate just above the threshold required for deterministic invasion. The indeterminacy results from a delicate balance of parameters needed to produce the delayed transition observed. Our analyses suggest that once Wolbachia transinfections are established locally through systematic introductions, stochastic “threshold crossing” is likely to only minimally enhance spatial spread, providing a local ratchet that slightly – but systematically – aids area-wide transformation of disease-vector populations in heterogeneous landscapes.},
  author       = {Turelli, Michael and Barton, Nicholas H},
  keywords     = {Biological sciences},
  publisher    = {Dryad},
  title        = {{Wolbachia frequency data from: Why did the Wolbachia transinfection cross the road? Drift, deterministic dynamics and disease control}},
  doi          = {10.25338/B81931},
  year         = {2022},
}

@misc{11695,
  abstract     = {Data underlying the figures in the publication "The chemistry of Cu3N and Cu3PdN nanocrystals" },
  author       = {Parvizian, Mahsa and Duran Balsa, Alejandra and Pokratath, Rohan and Kalha, Curran and Lee, Seungho and Van den Eynden, Dietger and Ibáñez, Maria and Regoutz, Anna and De Roo, Jonathan},
  publisher    = {Zenodo},
  title        = {{Data for "The chemistry of Cu3N and Cu3PdN nanocrystals"}},
  doi          = {10.5281/ZENODO.6542908},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11700,
  abstract     = {This paper contains two contributions in the study of optimal transport on metric graphs. Firstly, we prove a Benamou–Brenier formula for the Wasserstein distance, which establishes the equivalence of static and dynamical optimal transport. Secondly, in the spirit of Jordan–Kinderlehrer–Otto, we show that McKean–Vlasov equations can be formulated as gradient flow of the free energy in the Wasserstein space of probability measures. The proofs of these results are based on careful regularisation arguments to circumvent some of the difficulties arising in metric graphs, namely, branching of geodesics and the failure of semi-convexity of entropy functionals in the Wasserstein space.},
  author       = {Erbar, Matthias and Forkert, Dominik L and Maas, Jan and Mugnolo, Delio},
  issn         = {1556-181X},
  journal      = {Networks and Heterogeneous Media},
  number       = {5},
  pages        = {687--717},
  publisher    = {American Institute of Mathematical Sciences},
  title        = {{Gradient flow formulation of diffusion equations in the Wasserstein space over a metric graph}},
  doi          = {10.3934/nhm.2022023},
  volume       = {17},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11701,
  abstract     = {In this paper we develop a new approach to nonlinear stochastic partial differential equations with Gaussian noise. Our aim is to provide an abstract framework which is applicable to a large class of SPDEs and includes many important cases of nonlinear parabolic problems which are of quasi- or semilinear type. This first part is on local existence and well-posedness. A second part in preparation is on blow-up criteria and regularization. Our theory is formulated in an Lp-setting, and because of this we can deal with nonlinearities in a very efficient way. Applications to several concrete problems and their quasilinear variants are given. This includes Burgers' equation, the Allen–Cahn equation, the Cahn–Hilliard equation, reaction–diffusion equations, and the porous media equation. The interplay of the nonlinearities and the critical spaces of initial data leads to new results and insights for these SPDEs. The proofs are based on recent developments in maximal regularity theory for the linearized problem for deterministic and stochastic evolution equations. In particular, our theory can be seen as a stochastic version of the theory of critical spaces due to Prüss–Simonett–Wilke (2018). Sharp weighted time-regularity allow us to deal with rough initial values and obtain instantaneous regularization results. The abstract well-posedness results are obtained by a combination of several sophisticated splitting and truncation arguments.},
  author       = {Agresti, Antonio and Veraar, Mark},
  issn         = {1361-6544},
  journal      = {Nonlinearity},
  number       = {8},
  pages        = {4100--4210},
  publisher    = {IOP Publishing},
  title        = {{Nonlinear parabolic stochastic evolution equations in critical spaces Part I. Stochastic maximal regularity and local existence}},
  doi          = {10.1088/1361-6544/abd613},
  volume       = {35},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11702,
  abstract     = {When Mendel’s work was rediscovered in 1900, and extended to establish classical genetics, it was initially seen in opposition to Darwin’s theory of evolution by natural selection on continuous variation, as represented by the biometric research program that was the foundation of quantitative genetics. As Fisher, Haldane, and Wright established a century ago, Mendelian inheritance is exactly what is needed for natural selection to work efficiently. Yet, the synthesis remains unfinished. We do not understand why sexual reproduction and a fair meiosis predominate in eukaryotes, or how far these are responsible for their diversity and complexity. Moreover, although quantitative geneticists have long known that adaptive variation is highly polygenic, and that this is essential for efficient selection, this is only now becoming appreciated by molecular biologists—and we still do not have a good framework for understanding polygenic variation or diffuse function.},
  author       = {Barton, Nicholas H},
  issn         = {1091-6490},
  journal      = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
  number       = {30},
  publisher    = {National Academy of Sciences},
  title        = {{The "New Synthesis"}},
  doi          = {10.1073/pnas.2122147119},
  volume       = {119},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11703,
  abstract     = {Polyploidization may precipitate dramatic changes to the genome, including chromosome rearrangements, gene loss, and changes in gene expression. In dioecious plants, the sex-determining mechanism may also be disrupted by polyploidization, with the potential evolution of hermaphroditism. However, while dioecy appears to have persisted through a ploidy transition in some species, it is unknown whether the newly formed polyploid maintained its sex-determining system uninterrupted, or whether dioecy re-evolved after a period of hermaphroditism. Here, we develop a bioinformatic pipeline using RNA-sequencing data from natural populations to demonstrate that the allopolyploid plant Mercurialis canariensis directly inherited its sex-determining region from one of its diploid progenitor species, M. annua, and likely remained dioecious through the transition. The sex-determining region of M. canariensis is smaller than that of its diploid progenitor, suggesting that the non-recombining region of M. annua expanded subsequent to the polyploid origin of M. canariensis. Homeologous pairs show partial sexual subfunctionalization. We discuss the possibility that gene duplicates created by polyploidization might contribute to resolving sexual antagonism.},
  author       = {Toups, Melissa A and Vicoso, Beatriz and Pannell, John R.},
  issn         = {1553-7404},
  journal      = {PLoS Genetics},
  number       = {7},
  publisher    = {Public Library of Science},
  title        = {{Dioecy and chromosomal sex determination are maintained through allopolyploid speciation in the plant genus Mercurialis}},
  doi          = {10.1371/journal.pgen.1010226},
  volume       = {18},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11704,
  abstract     = {In Fall 2020, several European countries reported rapid increases in COVID-19 cases along with growing estimates of the effective reproduction rates. Such an acceleration in epidemic spread is usually attributed to time-dependent effects, e.g. human travel, seasonal behavioral changes, mutations of the pathogen etc. In this case however the acceleration occurred when counter measures such as testing and contact tracing exceeded their capacity limit. Considering Austria as an example, here we show that this dynamics can be captured by a time-independent, i.e. autonomous, compartmental model that incorporates these capacity limits. In this model, the epidemic acceleration coincides with the exhaustion of mitigation efforts, resulting in an increasing fraction of undetected cases that drive the effective reproduction rate progressively higher. We demonstrate that standard models which does not include this effect necessarily result in a systematic underestimation of the effective reproduction rate.},
  author       = {Budanur, Nazmi B and Hof, Björn},
  issn         = {1932-6203},
  journal      = {PLoS ONE},
  number       = {7},
  publisher    = {Public Library of Science},
  title        = {{An autonomous compartmental model for accelerating epidemics}},
  doi          = {10.1371/journal.pone.0269975},
  volume       = {17},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11705,
  abstract     = {The broad implementation of thermoelectricity requires high-performance and low-cost materials. One possibility is employing surfactant-free solution synthesis to produce nanopowders. We propose the strategy of functionalizing “naked” particles’ surface by inorganic molecules to control the nanostructure and, consequently, thermoelectric performance. In particular, we use bismuth thiolates to functionalize surfactant-free SnTe particles’ surfaces. Upon thermal processing, bismuth thiolates decomposition renders SnTe-Bi2S3 nanocomposites with synergistic functions: 1) carrier concentration optimization by Bi doping; 2) Seebeck coefficient enhancement and bipolar effect suppression by energy filtering; and 3) lattice thermal conductivity reduction by small grain domains, grain boundaries and nanostructuration. Overall, the SnTe-Bi2S3 nanocomposites exhibit peak z T up to 1.3 at 873 K and an average z T of ≈0.6 at 300–873 K, which is among the highest reported for solution-processed SnTe.},
  author       = {Chang, Cheng and Liu, Yu and Lee, Seungho and Spadaro, Maria and Koskela, Kristopher M. and Kleinhanns, Tobias and Costanzo, Tommaso and Arbiol, Jordi and Brutchey, Richard L. and Ibáñez, Maria},
  issn         = {1521-3773},
  journal      = {Angewandte Chemie - International Edition},
  number       = {35},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{Surface functionalization of surfactant-free particles: A strategy to tailor the properties of nanocomposites for enhanced thermoelectric performance}},
  doi          = {10.1002/anie.202207002},
  volume       = {61},
  year         = {2022},
}

