Destacados

Cada año, un comité de expertos debe acometer una ardua tarea: de entre todas las publicaciones de ICREA, debe escoger unas cuantas que destaquen del resto. Es todo un reto: a veces los debates se acaloran, y siempre son difíciles, pero acaba saliendo una lista con las mejors publicaciones del año. No se concede ningún premio, y el único reconocimiento adicional es el honor de ser resaltado en la web de ICREA. Cada publicación tiene algo especial, ya sea una solución especialmente elegante, un éxito espectacular en los medios de comunicación o la simple fascinación por una idea del todo nueva. Independientemente de la razón, se trata de los mejores de los mejores y, como tales, nos complace compartirlos aquí.

LIST OF SCIENTIFIC HIGHLIGHTS

Format: yyyy
  • DIFFERENT LEVELS OF A PROTEIN REGULATE TISSUE HOMEOSTASIS OR TUMOR INITIATION (2018)

    Postigo, Antonio (FRCB-IDIBAPS)

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    DIFFERENT LEVELS OF A PROTEIN REGULATE TISSUE HOMEOSTASIS OR TUMOR INITIATION

    Stem cells are pluripotent cells that can continuously generate new stem cell and/or cells that differentiate to a particular phenotype. Normal stem cells are required in tissue regeneration while cancer stem cells are critical in tumor initiation.

    The transcription factor ZEB1 promotes the reprogramming of malignant cells toward a stem-like plastic phenotype. Consequently, its expression associates with poorer prognosis in most human cancers. However, the role of ZEB1 beyond cancer remained understudied. We now show that different levels of ZEB1 are required for both tissue homeostasis and cancer progression.

    Thus, we found that ZEB1 protects skeletal muscle from atrophy. Using a Zeb1 deficient mouse, we showed that muscle myofibers require full levels of ZEB1 to maintain their normal size. The downregulation of Zeb1 in myofibers to just half of the normal levels enhanced muscle wasting in response to immobilization through repression of so-called atrogenes (Ninfali et al).

    We previously reported that induction of ZEB1 in epithelial cells by oncogenic signals (e.g., Wnt, KRas) is not sufficient for ZEB1 to promote tumor progression that requires a super-induction of ZEB1 through additional oncogenic mutations (e.g., RB1 plus KRas, Wnt plus KRas). We have now found that adenoma cells within hypoxic niches divide asymmetrically to produce tumor-initiating cells where ZEB1 is upregulated and prompts the differential distribution of other factors to determine the fate of cancer stem cells upon division (Liu et al).

  • Feeding ecology and extinction of elephants in South America (2018)

    Rivals, Florent (IPHES)
    Agustí Ballester, Jordi (IPHES)

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    Feeding ecology and extinction of elephants in South America

    The gomphotheres are a family of extinct elephants related to the mammoths that inhabited Eurasia and the American continent. They reached South America during the Great American Interchange when the Isthmus of Panama connected the two continents. The extinction of gomphotheres in South America is relatively recent and linked to the phenomenon of disappearance of the megafauna during the late Pleistocene, approximately between 12,000 and 10,000 years ago. Their paleontological interest lies in the fact that gomphotheres, as other megafauna, have played an important role as ecosystems engineers in shaping past vegetal landscapes, considering that they became very numerous and with a high demand for biomass. For these reasons, they are considered key actors in the investigation of the extinction of the megafauna.

    The paleodiet of the gomphotheres from Central Chile was studied using a multi-proxy approach, including dental microwear, stable isotopes and the microfossils from the dental calculus preserved in the teeth. Each of these proxies are providing access into different windows in the life history of the gomphotheres. In other words, the diet and the environment could be determined from the first months or years of life until the last days before the animal died.

    The results of this study show that gomphotheres from Central Chile had a diet dominated by the consumption of leaves from trees or bushes, and to a lesser but complementary extent, of herbaceous plants. This multiproxy study widens potential occupied habitats to closed-canopy forests. This habitat variability supports the hypothesis that the diet of gomphotheres appears to be more constrained by resource availability than by the potential dietary range. This availability of resources changed throughout the Pleistocene depending on glacial and interglacial periods.

    The study highlights the importance of Central Chile as one of the most significant areas in South America for the research on large mammalian refuges during glacial periods and for the study of the extinction process of its megafauna during the last Ice Age.

  • Nothing to Come – A Defence of the Growing Block Theory of Time (2018)

    Rosenkranz, Sven (UB)

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    Nothing to Come – A Defence of the Growing Block Theory of Time

    There exists now nothing that is merely future. As time goes by, things come to exist that did not exist before. Once they exist, such things continue to exist forever after, even if they will no longer be present. What exists increases over time, as the boundary of the present pushes into ontologically unchartered territory.

    These are the tenets of the Growing Block Theory, first conceived by C.D. Broad in 1923. Since its inception, the theory has been given short shrift, leaving only two contenders in the field: the view that only present things exist, and the view that what exists does not vary with time.

    Nothing To Come proves that the theory’s dismissal has been premature. It offers, for the first time, a coherent, logically perspicuous and ideologically lean formulation of the theory, and successfully defends it against the most notorious objections. Nothing To Come breaks new ground by showing how the theory and its competitors are derivable from more general theories consistent with relativistic spacetime, on the pre-relativistic assumption of an absolute and total temporal order.

    Against the backdrop of a shared quantified temporal logic, the authors devise axiomatisations of the theory and its rivals, and go on to address and defuse the charges that the theory can only be stabilised using unfamiliar resources, that it invites skepticism about our temporal location, and that it cannot heed the requirement that truths be grounded and so mandates rejection of classical logic.

    The most pressing challenge affecting all traditional theories of time is posed by relativistic physics and its rejection of absolute simultaneity. Nothing To Come meets this challenge head-on, replacing claims about temporal variation by claims about variation across spacetime. To this end, it devises a novel spacetime logic suited for the articulation, and comparative assessment, of relativistic theories of time succeeding their pre-relativistic counterparts.

    The book comes with three technical appendices which include soundness and completeness proofs for the axiomatic systems for the Growing Block Theory and its rivals, in both their pre-relativistic and relativistic forms.

  • How our glucose reservoir forms at atomic scale (2018)

    Rovira Virgili, Carme (UB)

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    How our glucose reservoir forms at atomic scale

    Glycogen is the key energy storage molecule in humans, animals and fungi. It’s where the glucose that fuels us is stored and release from. However, the precise mechanisms by which glycogen is formed at its very start have remained unclear until now. A recent study published in Nature uncovers how the enzyme that initiates glyconeogenesis works at a molecular level. The research was carried out by a team of computational biology from the University of Barcelona (UB), together with research groups of Chemical and Structural Biology of the University of Oxford.

    At the heart of the glycogen particle there is a protein that starts the glycogen formation catalysing its own autoglucosylation, that is, decorating itself with glucose molecules. This ‘self-sweetening’ protein - glycogenin - has been hard to understand since, by definition, as it is decorating itself it is also changing (and so its mechanism is ever-changing too). This seeming conundrum in basic human Biology and health has now been solved by using Chemistry – mediated by the unnatural metal palladium –  to ‘jump start’ or ‘shunt' into these different decorated forms directly.

    The researchers at the University of Oxford could access different states of glycosylation of the glycogenin enzyme through a palladium-mediated enzyme activation ‘shunt’ process using on-protein C–C bond formation. The UB team, using computational techniques, has modelled these states and has deciphered the mechanism of glycosylation (synthesis of glucose-glucose bonds) through methods of quantum mechanics and molecular dynamics.

    Both experiments and calculations reveal a surprisingly tolerant process to glycogen’s creation and growth, which then become very precise as it goes on. This new of way of ‘jumping’ into different states of Biology using Chemistry suggests a new way of understanding and even programming Biology directly.

  • Not only crops will suffer from heat waves but also we will need to manage Nitrogen fertilisation more cautiously (2018)

    Slafer Lago, Gustavo A. (UdL)

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    Not only crops will suffer from heat waves but also we will need to manage Nitrogen fertilisation more cautiously

    To cope with increased food demand, crop yields must increase substantially within the next 2–3 decades. This must be achieved in a context in which crop management should be environmentally more sustainable, and when crops will be more frequently exposed to stressful conditions penalising their yields due to climate change. Deleterious effects of heat on crop yields are well documented and the occurrence of heat stresses will likely be a major constraint to achieving increased yields. Nitrogen (N) fertilization is within the most common management practices used in cereal production, however, there have been limited efforts to elucidate to what degree the level of soil fertility may affect the magnitude of the heat effect on crop yield. The likely interaction may be relevant for designing more appropriate fertilisation strategies. We conducted different studies on maize (2009–2012) and wheat (2012–2013), always under field conditions, to determine whether the availability of N may be responsible for the magnitude of the yield penalty imposed by heat stress. We showed for the first time that sensitivity to heat stress increased with increasing N availability and speculated that moderate N stress might produce in the crop plants a sort of acclimation to reduce sensitivity to other stresses. Fertilisation recommendations in the future may need to balance the yielding benefits of high N availability with the detrimental effect of increasing sensitivity to heat stress.

  • Waste heat recovery with the most abundant element: Silicon (2018)

    Tarancón Rubio, Albert (IREC)
    Cabot, Andreu (IREC)

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    Waste heat recovery with the most abundant element: Silicon

    Large amounts of waste heat generated in our fossil-fuel based economy can be converted into useful electric power by using the so-called thermoelectric generators. These power generators use temperature differences to generate electricity in a very simple and straightforward way. However, the low-efficiency, high-cost and scarcity of conventional thermoelectric materials are hindering a massive deployment of this energy harvesting technology to recover residual heat.

    Nanoengineering has proven to be an excellent approach for enhancing thermoelectric properties of abundant and cheap materials such as Silicon. Nevertheless, the implementation of these nanostructures is still a major challenge especially for covering the large areas required for massive waste heat recovery, for instance, at the industry level. 

    We have been working in developing a novel family of nano-enabled silicon-based materials in the form of large-area paper-like fabrics made of nanotubes. Our recent paper in Nature Communications presents this as a cost-effective and scalable solution for thermoelectric generation opening new markets with a potential for recovery up to 15TW of currently wasted power.