Stark, Alexander Brennecke, Julius Russell, Robert B Cohen, Stephen M
Published in
PLoS biology
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short RNA molecules that regulate gene expression by binding to target messenger RNAs and by controlling protein production or causing RNA cleavage. To date, functions have been assigned to only a few of the hundreds of identified miRNAs, in part because of the difficulty in identifying their targets. The short length of miRN...
Carmena, Jose M Lebedev, Mikhail A Crist, Roy E O'Doherty, Joseph E Santucci, David M Dimitrov, Dragan F Patil, Parag G Henriquez, Craig S Nicolelis, Miguel A L
Published in
PLoS biology
Reaching and grasping in primates depend on the coordination of neural activity in large frontoparietal ensembles. Here we demonstrate that primates can learn to reach and grasp virtual objects by controlling a robot arm through a closed-loop brain-machine interface (BMIc) that uses multiple mathematical models to extract several motor parameters (...
Trotman, Lloyd C Niki, Masaru Dotan, Zohar A Koutcher, Jason A Di Cristofano, Antonio Xiao, Andrew Khoo, Alan S Roy-Burman, Pradip Greenberg, Norman M Van Dyke, Terry
...
Published in
PLoS biology
Complete inactivation of the PTEN tumor suppressor gene is extremely common in advanced cancer, including prostate cancer (CaP). However, one PTEN allele is already lost in the vast majority of CaPs at presentation. To determine the consequence of PTEN dose variations on cancer progression, we have generated by homologous recombination a hypomorphi...
Landgraf, Matthias Jeffrey, Victoria Fujioka, Miki Jaynes, James B Bate, Michael
Published in
PLoS biology
The organisational principles of locomotor networks are less well understood than those of many sensory systems, where in-growing axon terminals form a central map of peripheral characteristics. Using the neuromuscular system of the Drosophila embryo as a model and retrograde tracing and genetic methods, we have uncovered principles underlying the ...
Hipfner, David R Cohen, Stephen M
Published in
PLoS biology
Cell proliferation and programmed cell death are closely controlled during animal development. Proliferative stimuli generally also induce apoptosis, and anti-apoptotic factors are required to allow net cell proliferation. Genetic studies in Drosophila have led to identification of a number of genes that control both processes, providing new insigh...
Roose, Jeroen P Diehn, Maximilian Tomlinson, Michael G Lin, Joseph Alizadeh, Ash A Botstein, David Brown, Patrick O Weiss, Arthur
Published in
PLoS biology
Signal transduction pathways guided by cellular receptors commonly exhibit low-level constitutive signaling in a continuous, ligand-independent manner. The dynamic equilibrium of positive and negative regulators establishes such a tonic signal. Ligand-independent signaling by the precursors of mature antigen receptors regulates development of B and...
Delsuc, Frédéric
Published in
PLoS Biology
A phylogenetic study of army ants has completely changed our view of their evolutionary history, including the origin of the curious and fatal phenomenon known as circular mill formation
Hwang, Eun Jung Donchin, Opher Smith, Maurice A Shadmehr, Reza
Published in
PLoS biology
Adaptability of reaching movements depends on a computation in the brain that transforms sensory cues, such as those that indicate the position and velocity of the arm, into motor commands. Theoretical consideration shows that the encoding properties of neural elements implementing this transformation dictate how errors should generalize from one l...
Springer, Michael Wykoff, Dennis D Miller, Nicole O'Shea, Erin K
Published in
PLoS biology
A cell's ability to generate different responses to different levels of stimulus is an important component of an adaptive environmental response. Transcriptional responses are frequently controlled by transcription factors regulated by phosphorylation. We demonstrate that differential phosphorylation of the budding yeast transcription factor Pho4 c...
Katsnelson, Alla
Published in
PLoS biology