Check out our Insight on the beautiful work by Clark et al. 🌱
How can stochastic giant-cell fate lead to non-random epidermal patterns? Cell fate, endoreduplication, and growth all matter.
cup.org/3QYjVm0
@roederlab.bsky.social
@pauformosa.bsky.social
@matmajda.bsky.social
How stochastic cell fate and endoreduplication yield non-random epidermal patterns - Volume 7
Who would have thought, five years ago when I first looked at P-bodies under the microscope, that this journey would lead here. 🔬
Very happy to see this work finally out in #ScienceAdvances. Proud of this collaborative effort and grateful to everyone involved. 👏🏻🎉
Nicola Trozzi
Happy to see this out! Big congratulations to @nicolatrozzi.bsky.social and all involved! doi.org/10.1038/s443...
Here’s the press release by @ruhr-uni-bochum.de for our newest publication 🧬✨
“Bacteria use P-body condensates to attenuate host translation during infection”
How pathogens rewire host translation via condensates 🔄🌱
#plantscience #proteostasis
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
We got a cover!!! Beautiful artwork by
@nicolatrozzi.bsky.social
🎨🌺🍀 @mechanobiologylab.bsky.social
@fbm-unil.bsky.social @unil.bsky.social
Camelot: affordable precision tool for plant biomechanics👨🔧🗜️
doi.org/10.1186/s129...
@nicolatrozzi.bsky.social @richardsmithlab.bsky.social
Manuel González Fuente
Bacteria deactivate the protein synthesis of host cells to hamper immune reactions. This insight could aid in the development of more resistant plants.
🚨 Paper out now in #ScienceAdvances @science.org 🌱🦠
Pathogens don’t just target protein degradation—they also hijack host translation.
"Bacteria use P-body condensates to attenuate host translation during infection" ⚖️♻️
led by @manuelgonzalezfuen.bsky.social
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Second May issue is live!
link.springer.com/journal/4431...
The cover features work by Mateusz Majda @matmajda.bsky.social and Richard S Smith @johninnescentre.bsky.social showing that puzzle cells transform cell geometry into a living record of how leaves grow.
link.springer.com/article/10.1...