@article{10763,
  abstract     = {AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs) mediate rapid signal transmission at excitatory
synapses in the brain. Glutamate binding to the receptor’s ligand-binding domains (LBDs)
leads to ion channel activation and desensitization. Gating kinetics shape synaptic transmission
and are strongly modulated by transmembrane AMPAR regulatory proteins (TARPs)
through currently incompletely resolved mechanisms. Here, electron cryo-microscopy
structures of the GluA1/2 TARP-γ8 complex, in both open and desensitized states
(at 3.5 Å), reveal state-selective engagement of the LBDs by the large TARP-γ8 loop (‘β1’),
elucidating how this TARP stabilizes specific gating states. We further show how TARPs alter
channel rectification, by interacting with the pore helix of the selectivity filter. Lastly, we
reveal that the Q/R-editing site couples the channel constriction at the filter entrance to the
gate, and forms the major cation binding site in the conduction path. Our results provide a
mechanistic framework of how TARPs modulate AMPAR gating and conductance.},
  author       = {Herguedas, Beatriz and Kohegyi, Bianka K. and Dohrke, Jan Niklas and Watson, Jake and Zhang, Danyang and Ho, Hinze and Shaikh, Saher A. and Lape, Remigijus and Krieger, James M. and Greger, Ingo H.},
  issn         = {2041-1723},
  journal      = {Nature Communications},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Mechanisms underlying TARP modulation of the GluA1/2-γ8 AMPA receptor}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41467-022-28404-7},
  volume       = {13},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{10769,
  abstract     = {studiamos aspectos de Teoría Cuántica de Campos a densidad finita usando técnicas y conceptos de información cuántica. Nos enfocamos en fermiones de Dirac masivos con potencial químico en 1+1 dimensiones espacio-temporales. Usando la entropía de entrelazamiento en un intervalo, construimos la función c entrópica que es finita. Esta función c no es monótona, e incorpora el entrelazamiento de largo alcance proveniente de la superficie de Fermi. Motivados por trabajos previos de modelos en la red, calculamos numéricamente las entropías de Renyi y encontramos oscilaciones de Friedel. Seguidamente, analizamos la información mutua como una medida de correlación entre diferentes regiones. Usando una expansión de distancia grande desarrollada por Cardy, argumentamos que la información mutua detecta las correlaciones inducidas por la superficie de Fermi todavía al orden dominante en la expansión. Finalmente, analizamos la entropía relativa y sus generalizaciones de Renyi para distinguir estados con diferente carga. Encontramos que estados en diferentes sectores de superselección dan origen a un comportamiento super-extensivo en la entropía relativa.},
  author       = {Daguerre, L. and Torroba, G. and Medina Ramos, Raimel A and Solís, M.},
  issn         = {1850-1168},
  journal      = {Anales de la Asociacion Fisica Argentina},
  number       = {4},
  pages        = {93--98},
  publisher    = {Asociación Física Argentina},
  title        = {{Non relativistic quantum field theory: Dynamics and irreversibility}},
  doi          = {10.31527/analesafa.2021.32.4.93},
  volume       = {32},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11333,
  abstract     = {Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is the energy source for various biochemical processes and biomolecular motors in living things. Development of ATP antagonists and their stimuli-controlled actions offer a novel approach to regulate biological processes. Herein, we developed azobenzene-based photoswitchable ATP antagonists for controlling the activity of motor proteins; cytoplasmic and axonemal dyneins. The new ATP antagonists showed reversible photoswitching of cytoplasmic dynein activity in an in vitro dynein-microtubule system due to the trans and cis photoisomerization of their azobenzene segment. Importantly, our ATP antagonists reversibly regulated the axonemal dynein motor activity for the force generation in a demembranated model of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. We found that the trans and cis isomers of ATP antagonists significantly differ in their affinity to the ATP binding site.},
  author       = {Thayyil, Sampreeth and Nishigami, Yukinori and Islam, Muhammad J and Hashim, P. K. and Furuta, Ken'Ya and Oiwa, Kazuhiro and Yu, Jian and Yao, Min and Nakagaki, Toshiyuki and Tamaoki, Nobuyuki},
  issn         = {1521-3765},
  journal      = {Chemistry - A European Journal},
  number       = {30},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{Dynamic control of microbial movement by photoswitchable ATP antagonists}},
  doi          = {10.1002/chem.202200807},
  volume       = {28},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{10766,
  abstract     = {Tension of the actomyosin cell cortex plays a key role in determining cell–cell contact growth and size. The level of cortical tension outside of the cell–cell contact, when pulling at the contact edge, scales with the total size to which a cell–cell contact can grow [J.-L. Maître et al., Science 338, 253–256 (2012)]. Here, we show in zebrafish primary germ-layer progenitor cells that this monotonic relationship only applies to a narrow range of cortical tension increase and that above a critical threshold, contact size inversely scales with cortical tension. This switch from cortical tension increasing to decreasing progenitor cell–cell contact size is caused by cortical tension promoting E-cadherin anchoring to the actomyosin cytoskeleton, thereby increasing clustering and stability of E-cadherin at the contact. After tension-mediated E-cadherin stabilization at the contact exceeds a critical threshold level, the rate by which the contact expands in response to pulling forces from the cortex sharply drops, leading to smaller contacts at physiologically relevant timescales of contact formation. Thus, the activity of cortical tension in expanding cell–cell contact size is limited by tension-stabilizing E-cadherin–actin complexes at the contact.},
  author       = {Slovakova, Jana and Sikora, Mateusz K and Arslan, Feyza N and Caballero Mancebo, Silvia and Krens, Gabriel and Kaufmann, Walter and Merrin, Jack and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J},
  issn         = {1091-6490},
  journal      = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
  number       = {8},
  publisher    = {National Academy of Sciences},
  title        = {{Tension-dependent stabilization of E-cadherin limits cell-cell contact expansion in zebrafish germ-layer progenitor cells}},
  doi          = {10.1073/pnas.2122030119},
  volume       = {119},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11353,
  abstract     = {Micro- and nanoscale optical or microwave cavities are used in a wide range of classical applications and quantum science experiments, ranging from precision measurements, laser technologies to quantum control of mechanical motion. The dissipative photon loss via absorption, present to some extent in any optical cavity, is known to introduce thermo-optical effects and thereby impose fundamental limits on precision measurements. Here, we theoretically and experimentally reveal that such dissipative photon absorption can result in quantum feedback via in-loop field detection of the absorbed optical field, leading to the intracavity field fluctuations to be squashed or antisquashed. A closed-loop dissipative quantum feedback to the cavity field arises. Strikingly, this modifies the optical cavity susceptibility in coherent response measurements (capable of both increasing or decreasing the bare cavity linewidth) and causes excess noise and correlations in incoherent interferometric optomechanical measurements using a cavity, that is parametrically coupled to a mechanical oscillator. We experimentally observe such unanticipated dissipative dynamics in optomechanical spectroscopy of sideband-cooled optomechanical crystal cavitiess at both cryogenic temperature (approximately 8 K) and ambient conditions. The dissipative feedback introduces effective modifications to the optical cavity linewidth and the optomechanical scattering rate and gives rise to excess imprecision noise in the interferometric quantum measurement of mechanical motion. Such dissipative feedback differs fundamentally from a quantum nondemolition feedback, e.g., optical Kerr squeezing. The dissipative feedback itself always results in an antisqueezed out-of-loop optical field, while it can enhance the coexisting Kerr squeezing under certain conditions. Our result applies to cavity spectroscopy in both optical and superconducting microwave cavities, and equally applies to any dissipative feedback mechanism of different bandwidth inside the cavity. It has wide-ranging implications for future dissipation engineering, such as dissipation enhanced sideband cooling and Kerr squeezing, quantum frequency conversion, and nonreciprocity in photonic systems.},
  author       = {Qiu, Liu and Huang, Guanhao and Shomroni, Itay and Pan, Jiahe and Seidler, Paul and Kippenberg, Tobias J.},
  issn         = {2691-3399},
  journal      = {PRX Quantum},
  number       = {2},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Dissipative quantum feedback in measurements using a parametrically coupled microcavity}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PRXQuantum.3.020309},
  volume       = {3},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{10826,
  abstract     = {Animals that lose one sensory modality often show augmented responses to other sensory inputs. The mechanisms underpinning this cross-modal plasticity are poorly understood. We probe such mechanisms by performing a forward genetic screen for mutants with enhanced O2 perception in Caenorhabditis elegans. Multiple mutants exhibiting increased O2 responsiveness concomitantly show defects in other sensory responses. One mutant, qui-1, defective in a conserved NACHT/WD40 protein, abolishes pheromone-evoked Ca2+ responses in the ADL pheromone-sensing neurons. At the same time, ADL responsiveness to pre-synaptic input from O2-sensing neurons is heightened in qui-1, and other sensory defective mutants, resulting in enhanced neurosecretion although not increased Ca2+ responses. Expressing qui-1 selectively in ADL rescues both the qui-1 ADL neurosecretory phenotype and enhanced escape from 21% O2. Profiling ADL neurons in qui-1 mutants highlights extensive changes in gene expression, notably of many neuropeptide receptors. We show that elevated ADL expression of the conserved neuropeptide receptor NPR-22 is necessary for enhanced ADL neurosecretion in qui-1 mutants, and is sufficient to confer increased ADL neurosecretion in control animals. Sensory loss can thus confer cross-modal plasticity by changing the peptidergic connectome.},
  author       = {Valperga, Giulio and De Bono, Mario},
  issn         = {2050-084X},
  journal      = {eLife},
  publisher    = {eLife Sciences Publications},
  title        = {{Impairing one sensory modality enhances another by reconfiguring peptidergic signalling in Caenorhabditis elegans}},
  doi          = {10.7554/eLife.68040},
  volume       = {11},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{10829,
  abstract     = {A novel multivariable system, combining a transistor with fiber optic-based surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy with the gate electrode simultaneously acting as the fiber optic sensor surface, is reported. The dual-mode sensor allows for discrimination of mass and charge contributions for binding assays on the same sensor surface. Furthermore, we optimize the sensor geometry by investigating the influence of the fiber area to transistor channel area ratio and distance. We show that larger fiber optic tip diameters are favorable for electronic and optical signals and demonstrate the reversibility of plasmon resonance wavelength shifts after electric field application. As a proof of principle, a layer-by-layer assembly of polyelectrolytes is performed to benchmark the system against multivariable sensing platforms with planar surface plasmon resonance configurations. Furthermore, the biosensing performance is assessed using a thrombin binding assay with surface-immobilized aptamers as receptors, allowing for the detection of medically relevant thrombin concentrations.},
  author       = {Hasler, Roger and Reiner-Rozman, Ciril and Fossati, Stefan and Aspermair, Patrik and Dostalek, Jakub and Lee, Seungho and Ibáñez, Maria and Bintinger, Johannes and Knoll, Wolfgang},
  issn         = {2379-3694},
  journal      = {ACS Sensors},
  number       = {2},
  pages        = {504--512},
  publisher    = {American Chemical Society},
  title        = {{Field-effect transistor with a plasmonic fiber optic gate electrode as a multivariable biosensor device}},
  doi          = {10.1021/acssensors.1c02313},
  volume       = {7},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{10827,
  abstract     = {Titanium dioxide has been extensively studied in the rutile or anatase phase, while its high-pressure phases are less well-understood, despite that many are thought to have interesting optical, mechanical, and electrochemical properties. First-principles methods, such as density functional theory (DFT), are often used to compute the enthalpies of TiO2 phases at 0 K, but they are expensive and, thus, impractical for long time scale and large system-size simulations at finite temperatures. On the other hand, cheap empirical potentials fail to capture the relative stabilities of various polymorphs. To model the thermodynamic behaviors of ambient and high-pressure phases of TiO2, we design an empirical model as a baseline and then train a machine learning potential based on the difference between the DFT data and the empirical model. This so-called Δ-learning potential contains long-range electrostatic interactions and predicts the 0 K enthalpies of stable TiO2 phases that are in good agreement with DFT. We construct a pressure–temperature phase diagram of TiO2 in the range 0 < P < 70 GPa and 100 < T < 1500 K. We then simulate dynamic phase transition processes by compressing anatase at different temperatures. At 300 K, we predominantly observe an anatase-to-baddeleyite transformation at about 20 GPa via a martensitic two-step mechanism with a highly ordered and collective atomic motion. At 2000 K, anatase can transform into cotunnite around 45–55 GPa in a thermally activated and probabilistic manner, accompanied by diffusive movement of oxygen atoms. The pressures computed for these transitions show good agreement with experiments. Our results shed light on how to synthesize and stabilize high-pressure TiO2 phases, and our method is generally applicable to other functional materials with multiple polymorphs.},
  author       = {Lee, Jacob G. and Pickard, Chris J. and Cheng, Bingqing},
  issn         = {1089-7690},
  journal      = {The Journal of chemical physics},
  number       = {7},
  publisher    = {AIP Publishing},
  title        = {{High-pressure phase behaviors of titanium dioxide revealed by a Δ-learning potential}},
  doi          = {10.1063/5.0079844},
  volume       = {156},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{10771,
  abstract     = {A critical overview of the theory of the chirality-induced spin selectivity (CISS) effect, that is, phenomena in which the chirality of molecular species imparts significant spin selectivity to various electron processes, is provided. Based on discussions in a recently held workshop, and further work published since, the status of CISS effects—in electron transmission, electron transport, and chemical reactions—is reviewed. For each, a detailed discussion of the state-of-the-art in theoretical understanding is provided and remaining challenges and research opportunities are identified.},
  author       = {Evers, Ferdinand and Aharony, Amnon and Bar-Gill, Nir and Entin-Wohlman, Ora and Hedegård, Per and Hod, Oded and Jelinek, Pavel and Kamieniarz, Grzegorz and Lemeshko, Mikhail and Michaeli, Karen and Mujica, Vladimiro and Naaman, Ron and Paltiel, Yossi and Refaely-Abramson, Sivan and Tal, Oren and Thijssen, Jos and Thoss, Michael and Van Ruitenbeek, Jan M. and Venkataraman, Latha and Waldeck, David H. and Yan, Binghai and Kronik, Leeor},
  issn         = {1521-4095},
  journal      = {Advanced Materials},
  number       = {13},
  publisher    = {Wiley},
  title        = {{Theory of chirality induced spin selectivity: Progress and challenges}},
  doi          = {10.1002/adma.202106629},
  volume       = {34},
  year         = {2022},
}

@misc{10833,
  abstract     = {Detailed information about the data set see "dataset description.txt" file.},
  author       = {Hasler, Roger and Reiner-Rozman, Ciril and Fossati, Stefan and Aspermair, Patrik and Dostalek, Jakub and Lee, Seungho and Ibáñez, Maria and Bintinger, Johannes and Knoll, Wolfgang},
  publisher    = {Zenodo},
  title        = {{Field-effect transistor with a plasmonic fiber optic gate electrode as a multivariable biosensor device}},
  doi          = {10.5281/ZENODO.5500360},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11551,
  abstract     = {Imbalanced mitochondrial dNTP pools are known players in the pathogenesis of multiple human diseases. Here we show that, even under physiological conditions, dGTP is largely overrepresented among other dNTPs in mitochondria of mouse tissues and human cultured cells. In addition, a vast majority of mitochondrial dGTP is tightly bound to NDUFA10, an accessory subunit of complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. NDUFA10 shares a deoxyribonucleoside kinase (dNK) domain with deoxyribonucleoside kinases in the nucleotide salvage pathway, though no specific function beyond stabilizing the complex I holoenzyme has been described for this subunit. We mutated the dNK domain of NDUFA10 in human HEK-293T cells while preserving complex I assembly and activity. The NDUFA10E160A/R161A shows reduced dGTP binding capacity in vitro and leads to a 50% reduction in mitochondrial dGTP content, proving that most dGTP is directly bound to the dNK domain of NDUFA10. This interaction may represent a hitherto unknown mechanism regulating mitochondrial dNTP availability and linking oxidative metabolism to DNA maintenance.},
  author       = {Molina-Granada, David and González-Vioque, Emiliano and Dibley, Marris G. and Cabrera-Pérez, Raquel and Vallbona-Garcia, Antoni and Torres-Torronteras, Javier and Sazanov, Leonid A and Ryan, Michael T. and Cámara, Yolanda and Martí, Ramon},
  issn         = {2399-3642},
  journal      = {Communications Biology},
  number       = {1},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Most mitochondrial dGTP is tightly bound to respiratory complex I through the NDUFA10 subunit}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s42003-022-03568-6},
  volume       = {5},
  year         = {2022},
}

@inproceedings{12101,
  abstract     = {Spatial games form a widely-studied class of games from biology and physics modeling the evolution of social behavior. Formally, such a game is defined by a square (d by d) payoff matrix M and an undirected graph G. Each vertex of G represents an individual, that initially follows some strategy i ∈ {1,2,…,d}. In each round of the game, every individual plays the matrix game with each of its neighbors: An individual following strategy i meeting a neighbor following strategy j receives a payoff equal to the entry (i,j) of M. Then, each individual updates its strategy to its neighbors' strategy with the highest sum of payoffs, and the next round starts. The basic computational problems consist of reachability between configurations and the average frequency of a strategy. For general spatial games and graphs, these problems are in PSPACE. In this paper, we examine restricted setting: the game is a prisoner’s dilemma; and G is a subgraph of grid. We prove that basic computational problems for spatial games with prisoner’s dilemma on a subgraph of a grid are PSPACE-hard.},
  author       = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Ibsen-Jensen, Rasmus and Jecker, Ismael R and Svoboda, Jakub},
  booktitle    = {42nd IARCS Annual Conference on Foundations of Software Technology and Theoretical Computer Science},
  isbn         = {9783959772617},
  issn         = {1868-8969},
  location     = {Madras, India},
  publisher    = {Schloss Dagstuhl - Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik},
  title        = {{Complexity of spatial games}},
  doi          = {10.4230/LIPIcs.FSTTCS.2022.11},
  volume       = {250},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{12257,
  abstract     = {Structural balance theory is an established framework for studying social relationships of friendship and enmity. These relationships are modeled by a signed network whose energy potential measures the level of imbalance, while stochastic dynamics drives the network toward a state of minimum energy that captures social balance. It is known that this energy landscape has local minima that can trap socially aware dynamics, preventing it from reaching balance. Here we first study the robustness and attractor properties of these local minima. We show that a stochastic process can reach them from an abundance of initial states and that some local minima cannot be escaped by mild perturbations of the network. Motivated by these anomalies, we introduce best-edge dynamics (BED), a new plausible stochastic process. We prove that BED always reaches balance and that it does so fast in various interesting settings.},
  author       = {Chatterjee, Krishnendu and Svoboda, Jakub and Zikelic, Dorde and Pavlogiannis, Andreas and Tkadlec, Josef},
  issn         = {2470-0053},
  journal      = {Physical Review E},
  number       = {3},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Social balance on networks: Local minima and best-edge dynamics}},
  doi          = {10.1103/physreve.106.034321},
  volume       = {106},
  year         = {2022},
}

@inproceedings{11839,
  abstract     = {It is a highly desirable property for deep networks to be robust against
small input changes. One popular way to achieve this property is by designing
networks with a small Lipschitz constant. In this work, we propose a new
technique for constructing such Lipschitz networks that has a number of
desirable properties: it can be applied to any linear network layer
(fully-connected or convolutional), it provides formal guarantees on the
Lipschitz constant, it is easy to implement and efficient to run, and it can be
combined with any training objective and optimization method. In fact, our
technique is the first one in the literature that achieves all of these
properties simultaneously. Our main contribution is a rescaling-based weight
matrix parametrization that guarantees each network layer to have a Lipschitz
constant of at most 1 and results in the learned weight matrices to be close to
orthogonal. Hence we call such layers almost-orthogonal Lipschitz (AOL).
Experiments and ablation studies in the context of image classification with
certified robust accuracy confirm that AOL layers achieve results that are on
par with most existing methods. Yet, they are simpler to implement and more
broadly applicable, because they do not require computationally expensive
matrix orthogonalization or inversion steps as part of the network
architecture. We provide code at https://github.com/berndprach/AOL.},
  author       = {Prach, Bernd and Lampert, Christoph},
  booktitle    = {Computer Vision – ECCV 2022},
  isbn         = {9783031198021},
  location     = {Tel Aviv, Israel},
  pages        = {350--365},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Almost-orthogonal layers for efficient general-purpose Lipschitz networks}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-031-19803-8_21},
  volume       = {13681},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{12109,
  abstract     = {Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM) is a powerful tool for studying contact electrification (CE) at the nanoscale, but converting KPFM voltage maps to charge density maps is nontrivial due to long-range forces and complex system geometry. Here we present a strategy using finite-element method (FEM) simulations to determine the Green's function of the KPFM probe/insulator/ground system, which allows us to quantitatively extract surface charge. Testing our approach with synthetic data, we find that accounting for the atomic force microscope (AFM) tip, cone, and cantilever is necessary to recover a known input and that existing methods lead to gross miscalculation or even the incorrect sign of the underlying charge. Applying it to experimental data, we demonstrate its capacity to extract realistic surface charge densities and fine details from contact-charged surfaces. Our method gives a straightforward recipe to convert qualitative KPFM voltage data into quantitative charge data over a range of experimental conditions, enabling quantitative CE at the nanoscale.},
  author       = {Pertl, Felix and Sobarzo Ponce, Juan Carlos A and Shafeek, Lubuna B and Cramer, Tobias and Waitukaitis, Scott R},
  issn         = {2475-9953},
  journal      = {Physical Review Materials},
  number       = {12},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Quantifying nanoscale charge density features of contact-charged surfaces with an FEM/KPFM-hybrid approach}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.6.125605},
  volume       = {6},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{11478,
  abstract     = {Cerebral organoids differentiated from human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) provide a unique opportunity to investigate brain development. However, organoids usually lack microglia, brain-resident immune cells, which are present in the early embryonic brain and participate in neuronal circuit development. Here, we find IBA1+ microglia-like cells alongside retinal cups between week 3 and 4 in 2.5D culture with an unguided retinal organoid differentiation protocol. Microglia do not infiltrate the neuroectoderm and instead enrich within non-pigmented, 3D-cystic compartments that develop in parallel to the 3D-retinal organoids. When we guide the retinal organoid differentiation with low-dosed BMP4, we prevent cup development and enhance microglia and 3D-cysts formation. Mass spectrometry identifies these 3D-cysts to express mesenchymal and epithelial markers. We confirmed this microglia-preferred environment also within the unguided protocol, providing insight into microglial behavior and migration and offer a model to study how they enter and distribute within the human brain.},
  author       = {Bartalska, Katarina and Hübschmann, Verena and Korkut, Medina and Cubero, Ryan J and Venturino, Alessandro and Rössler, Karl and Czech, Thomas and Siegert, Sandra},
  issn         = {2589-0042},
  journal      = {iScience},
  number       = {7},
  publisher    = {Elsevier},
  title        = {{A systematic characterization of microglia-like cell occurrence during retinal organoid differentiation}},
  doi          = {10.1016/j.isci.2022.104580},
  volume       = {25},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{12291,
  abstract     = {The phytohormone auxin triggers transcriptional reprogramming through a well-characterized perception machinery in the nucleus. By contrast, mechanisms that underlie fast effects of auxin, such as the regulation of ion fluxes, rapid phosphorylation of proteins or auxin feedback on its transport, remain unclear1,2,3. Whether auxin-binding protein 1 (ABP1) is an auxin receptor has been a source of debate for decades1,4. Here we show that a fraction of Arabidopsis thaliana ABP1 is secreted and binds auxin specifically at an acidic pH that is typical of the apoplast. ABP1 and its plasma-membrane-localized partner, transmembrane kinase 1 (TMK1), are required for the auxin-induced ultrafast global phospho-response and for downstream processes that include the activation of H+-ATPase and accelerated cytoplasmic streaming. abp1 and tmk mutants cannot establish auxin-transporting channels and show defective auxin-induced vasculature formation and regeneration. An ABP1(M2X) variant that lacks the capacity to bind auxin is unable to complement these defects in abp1 mutants. These data indicate that ABP1 is the auxin receptor for TMK1-based cell-surface signalling, which mediates the global phospho-response and auxin canalization.},
  author       = {Friml, Jiří and Gallei, Michelle C and Gelová, Zuzana and Johnson, Alexander J and Mazur, Ewa and Monzer, Aline and Rodriguez Solovey, Lesia and Roosjen, Mark and Verstraeten, Inge and Živanović, Branka D. and Zou, Minxia and Fiedler, Lukas and Giannini, Caterina and Grones, Peter and Hrtyan, Mónika and Kaufmann, Walter and Kuhn, Andre and Narasimhan, Madhumitha and Randuch, Marek and Rýdza, Nikola and Takahashi, Koji and Tan, Shutang and Teplova, Anastasiia and Kinoshita, Toshinori and Weijers, Dolf and Rakusová, Hana},
  issn         = {1476-4687},
  journal      = {Nature},
  number       = {7927},
  pages        = {575--581},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{ABP1–TMK auxin perception for global phosphorylation and auxin canalization}},
  doi          = {10.1038/s41586-022-05187-x},
  volume       = {609},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{10845,
  abstract     = {We study an impurity with a resonance level whose position coincides with the Fermi energy of the surrounding Fermi gas. An impurity causes a rapid variation of the scattering phase shift for fermions at the Fermi surface, introducing a new characteristic length scale into the problem. We investigate manifestations of this length scale in the self-energy of the impurity and in the density of the bath. Our calculations reveal a model-independent deformation of the density of the Fermi gas, which is determined by the width of the resonance. To provide a broader picture, we investigate time evolution of the density in quench dynamics, and study the behavior of the system at finite temperatures. Finally, we briefly discuss implications of our findings for the Fermi-polaron problem.},
  author       = {Maslov, Mikhail and Lemeshko, Mikhail and Volosniev, Artem},
  issn         = {2643-1564},
  journal      = {Physical Review Research},
  publisher    = {American Physical Society},
  title        = {{Impurity with a resonance in the vicinity of the Fermi energy}},
  doi          = {10.1103/PhysRevResearch.4.013160},
  volume       = {4},
  year         = {2022},
}

@article{12431,
  abstract     = {This paper presents a new representation of curve dynamics, with applications to vortex filaments in fluid dynamics. Instead of representing these filaments with explicit curve geometry and Lagrangian equations of motion, we represent curves implicitly with a new co-dimensional 2 level set description. Our implicit representation admits several redundant mathematical degrees of freedom in both the configuration and the dynamics of the curves, which can be tailored specifically to improve numerical robustness, in contrast to naive approaches for implicit curve dynamics that suffer from overwhelming numerical stability problems. Furthermore, we note how these hidden degrees of freedom perfectly map to a Clebsch representation in fluid dynamics. Motivated by these observations, we introduce untwisted level set functions and non-swirling dynamics which successfully regularize sources of numerical instability, particularly in the twisting modes around curve filaments. A consequence is a novel simulation method which produces stable dynamics for large numbers of interacting vortex filaments and effortlessly handles topological changes and re-connection events.},
  author       = {Ishida, Sadashige and Wojtan, Christopher J and Chern, Albert},
  issn         = {1557-7368},
  journal      = {ACM Transactions on Graphics},
  number       = {6},
  publisher    = {Association for Computing Machinery},
  title        = {{Hidden degrees of freedom in implicit vortex filaments}},
  doi          = {10.1145/3550454.3555459},
  volume       = {41},
  year         = {2022},
}

@inproceedings{11775,
  abstract     = {Quantitative monitoring can be universal and approximate: For every finite sequence of observations, the specification provides a value and the monitor outputs a best-effort approximation of it. The quality of the approximation may depend on the resources that are available to the monitor. By taking to the limit the sequences of specification values and monitor outputs, we obtain precision-resource trade-offs also for limit monitoring. This paper provides a formal framework for studying such trade-offs using an abstract interpretation for monitors: For each natural number n, the aggregate semantics of a monitor at time n is an equivalence relation over all sequences of at most n observations so that two equivalent sequences are indistinguishable to the monitor and thus mapped to the same output. This abstract interpretation of quantitative monitors allows us to measure the number of equivalence classes (or “resource use”) that is necessary for a certain precision up to a certain time, or at any time. Our framework offers several insights. For example, we identify a family of specifications for which any resource-optimal exact limit monitor is independent of any error permitted over finite traces. Moreover, we present a specification for which any resource-optimal approximate limit monitor does not minimize its resource use at any time. },
  author       = {Henzinger, Thomas A and Mazzocchi, Nicolas Adrien and Sarac, Naci E},
  booktitle    = {22nd International Conference on Runtime Verification},
  issn         = {0302-9743},
  location     = {Tbilisi, Georgia},
  pages        = {200--220},
  publisher    = {Springer Nature},
  title        = {{Abstract monitors for quantitative specifications}},
  doi          = {10.1007/978-3-031-17196-3_11},
  volume       = {13498},
  year         = {2022},
}

