97 research outputs found
Spectral Representation for the Effective Macroscopic Response of a Polycrystal: Application to Third-Order Nonlinear Susceptibility
Erratum:
In our paper, we show that the spectral representation for isotropic
two-component composites also applies to uniaxial polycrystals. We have learned
that this result was, in fact, first conjectured by G.W. Milton. While our
derivation is more detailed, our result for the spectral function is the same
as Milton's. We very much regret not having been aware of this work at the time
of writing our paper.
Original abstract:
We extend the spectral theory used for the calculation of the effective
linear response functions of composites to the case of a polycrystalline
material with uniaxially anisotropic microscopic symmetry. As an application,
we combine these results with a nonlinear decoupling approximation as modified
by Ma et al., to calculate the third-order nonlinear optical susceptibility of
a uniaxial polycrystal, assuming that the effective dielectric function of the
polycrystal can be calculated within the effective-medium approximation.Comment: v2 includes erratum and the original preprin
Functional Identification and Characterization of the Brassica Napus Transcription Factor Gene BnAP2, the Ortholog of Arabidopsis Thaliana APETALA2
BnAP2, an APETALA2 (AP2)-like gene, has been isolated from Brassica napus cultivar Zhongshuang 9. The cDNA of BnAP2, with 1, 299 bp in length, encoded a transcription factor comprising of 432 amino acid residues. Results from complementary experiment indicated that BnAP2 was completely capable of restoring the phenotype of Arabidopsis ap2-11 mutant. Together with the sequence and expression data, the complementation data suggested that BnAP2 encodes the ortholog of AtAP2. To address the transcriptional activation of BnAP2, we performed transactivation assays in yeast. Fusion protein of BnAP2 with GAL4 DNA binding domain strongly activated transcription in yeast, and the transactivating activity of BnAP2 was localized to the N-terminal 100 amino acids. To further study the function of BnAP2 involved in the phenotype of B. napus, we used a transgenic approach that involved targeted RNA interference (RNAi) repression induced by ihp-RNA. Floral various phenotype defectives and reduced female fertility were observed in B. napus BnAP2-RNAi lines. Loss of the function of BnAP2 gene also resulted in delayed sepal abscission and senescence with the ethylene-independent pathway. In the strong BnAP2-RNAi lines, seeds showed defects in shape, structure and development and larger size. Strong BnAP2-RNAi and wild-type seeds initially did not display a significant difference in morphology at 10 DAF, but the development of BnAP2-RNAi seeds was slower than that of wild type at 20 DAF, and further at 30 DAF, wild-type seeds were essentially at their final size, whereas BnAP2-RNAi seeds stopped growing and developing and gradually withered
Analysing the Impact of Regulation on Disruptive Innovations: The Case of Wireless Technology
The paper analyses the role of regulation in the suppression of disruptive innovations and shows that this process might be explained by the dependance on the path of joint evolution of regulation and the mainstream technology. Industrial policy in highly regulated industries such as wireless telecommunications is able to support evolution of established technologies and adjust itself to sustaining innovations, while regulatory disconnection impedes disruptive technologies, and the market plays a quite secondary role in this process. We observe more innovations in those parts of telecommunications where regulator is less active, but the core, the physical layer, of the industry is changing in sustaining way of development of the technology. The paper argues that the problem of impediment to disruptive innovations could be alleviated if the crucial resources of the industry were accessible for a number of potential innovators and newcomers. The openness makes easier the appearance of disruptive technologies, and regulation must facilitate it in order to promote opportunities for creative destruction
Novel Disease Susceptibility Factors for Fungal Necrotrophic Pathogens in Arabidopsis
Host cells use an intricate signaling system to respond to invasions by pathogenic microorganisms.
Although several signaling components of disease resistance against necrotrophic
fungal pathogens have been identified, our understanding for how molecular components
and host processes contribute to plant disease susceptibility is rather sparse. Here, we identified
four transcription factors (TFs) from Arabidopsis that limit pathogen spread. Arabidopsis
mutants defective in any of these TFs displayed increased disease susceptibility to
Botrytis cinerea and Plectosphaerella cucumerina, and a general activation of non-immune
host processes that contribute to plant disease susceptibility. Transcriptome analyses revealed
that the mutants share a common transcriptional signature of 77 up-regulated genes.
We characterized several of the up-regulated genes that encode peptides with a secretion
signal, which we named PROVIR (for provirulence) factors. Forward and reverse genetic
analyses revealed that many of the PROVIRs are important for disease susceptibility of the
host to fungal necrotrophs. The TFs and PROVIRs identified in our work thus represent
novel genetic determinants for plant disease susceptibility to necrotrophic fungal pathogens.Funding: This work was supported by the Spanish MINECO (BFU2012 to PV), and Generalitat Valenciana (Prometeo2014/020 to PV). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Dobón Alonso, A.; Canet Perez, JV.; GarcÃa-Andrade Serrano, J.; Angulo, C.; Neumetzler, L.; Persson, S.; Vera Vera, P. (2015). Novel Disease Susceptibility Factors for Fungal Necrotrophic Pathogens in Arabidopsis. PLoS Pathogens. 11(4):1-30. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004800S13011
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