Latest preprint reviews

  1. The Par complex regulates apical-basal cell polarity through modulation of FAK signaling homeostasis

    This article has 21 authors:
    1. Meiai He
    2. Lining Liang
    3. Yulu Wang
    4. Yongyu Chen
    5. Hao Sun
    6. Lin Guo
    7. Changpeng Li
    8. Jingcai He
    9. Yanhua Wu
    10. Shiyu Chen
    11. Tingting Yang
    12. Fei Meng
    13. Qiwen Ren
    14. Linna Dong
    15. Lin Liu
    16. Qianqian Zou
    17. Tianya Zhang
    18. Xinyue Hou
    19. Qing Guo
    20. Dajing Qin
    21. Hui Zheng
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This study presents a valuable finding that the Par polarity complex, but not Crumbs or Scrib, regulates morphological remodeling during the naive-to-primed transition of pluripotent stem cells, with later effects on differentiation and neural tube organoid lumen formation. The evidence is incomplete, as the developmental significance of the PAR KO phenotype requires clearer framing and deeper characterization, and the proposed signaling pathway is currently presented more strongly than the data support. The work will be of interest to developmental and stem cell biologists studying polarity, pluripotent-state transitions, epithelialization, and lumen formation.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  2. Story about honest mistakes: The cyanobacterium Synechocystis has a promiscuous Entner-Doudoroff (ED) aldolase but no functional ED pathway

    This article has 11 authors:
    1. Ravi Shankar Ojha
    2. Marius Theune
    3. Ruben Fritsche
    4. Alexander Makowka
    5. Marko Boehm
    6. Carmen Peraglie
    7. Christopher Bräsen
    8. Jacky L. Snoep
    9. Martin Hagemann
    10. Bettina Siebers
    11. Kirstin Gutekunst
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This study presents fundamental results on the presence of the Entner-Doudoroff pathway in cyanobacteria. In contrast to an earlier study, compelling evidence is given that Synechocystis PCC 6803 lacks both an Entner-Doudoroff pathway and a related bypass but contains a promiscuous aldolase. This study successfully reconciles data from different studies and lessons learned from a previous misconception.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  3. SqueakPose Studio: An end-to-end platform for pose estimation and real-time edge-AI deployment

    This article has 3 authors:
    1. David L Haggerty
    2. Caleb B Darden
    3. David M Lovinger
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This important work introduces an integrated open-source platform for behavioral acquisition and pose estimation that substantially improves the accessibility and speed of real-time animal tracking workflows. The evidence supporting the utility and usability of SqueakPose Studio is compelling, particularly the substantial inference speed gains, intuitive graphical interface, flexible pose configuration, and successful testing on independent datasets, although the evidence supporting broader benchmarking claims and the hardware ecosystem surrounding MouseHouse and SqueakView remains somewhat incomplete. The study will be of broad interest to neuroscientists and behavioural researchers seeking scalable and user-friendly approaches for real-time behavioral analysis, and the work would be further strengthened by more rigorous benchmarking, expanded installation and hardware documentation, formal software release practices, and clearer delineation between demonstrated capabilities and future applications.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  4. Dendritic delay lines shape the computation of sound location in neurons of the gerbil medial superior olive

    This article has 5 authors:
    1. Jared Casarez
    2. Rebecca I Voglewede
    3. Bradley D Winters
    4. Ken Ledford
    5. Nace L Golding
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This is a fundamental study that clarifies the cellular mechanism of sound localization in the horizontal plane. The analysis of medial superior olivary neurons provides experimental and computational evidence for a new mechanism in which a range of asymmetric dendritic delays permits individual MSO neurons to represent the full range of biologically relevant ITDs. Using elegant 2-photon guided simultaneous recordings from distal dendrites and soma, along with compartmental modeling on anatomically reconstructed neurons, the authors provide compelling evidence that this mechanism contributes to microsecond-level tuning.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 5 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  5. Benefit Transfer Loops Turn Cheating into a Scaffold for Microbial Diversity

    This article has 7 authors:
    1. Jiqi Shao
    2. Yinxiang Li
    3. Shaohua Gu
    4. Xiaoyi Zhang
    5. Shaopeng Wang
    6. Xueming Liu
    7. Zhiyuan Li
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This manuscript provides a valuable perspective on microbial community diversity and how this is shaped by the presence of cheaters. The evidence provided is solid, and the methods used to assess the research question are convincing. However, a major weakness is the general framing (or lack of embedding in recent literature), reducing the usefulness of the paper for a broad audience.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  6. Development of a genetically encoded fluorescent indicator for facilitating deorphanization of GPR52

    This article has 9 authors:
    1. Guangyi Lan
    2. Huan Wang
    3. Tongrui Qian
    4. Shu Xie
    5. Cheng Qian
    6. Daniel Ursu
    7. Klaus D Bornemann
    8. Bastian Hengerer
    9. Yulong Li
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      GPR52 is an orphan receptor implicated in neuropsychiatric disorders, and this study addresses the lack of real-time monitoring tools by developing GPR52-1.0, a genetically encoded fluorescent sensor built on the GRAB platform. The design of the sensor is elegant and the validation is thorough. The authors also utilized the sensor to discover that striatal neuron excitation may activate the sensor, providing exciting new biological insights into GPR52 functional mechanisms. The work could be useful to the field if presented in the correct context, but as it stands, the work remains incomplete as it overlooks GPR52's well-documented high constitutive activity (PMID: 32076264, PMID: 26384023), which raises major questions about the sensor's physiological relevance.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 3 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  7. Myristoylation licenses disordered viral VP4 protein to anchor to and perforate the membrane through phase separation

    This article has 12 authors:
    1. Sichao Huang
    2. Fengzhen Deng
    3. Te Liu
    4. Wenjian Li
    5. Peiying Wang
    6. Jiahuan Song
    7. Jingjing Huang
    8. Shiyu Zhang
    9. Jiaxin Liu
    10. Yan Wang
    11. Manjie Zhang
    12. Bin Sun
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This valuable study combines multiscale molecular simulations with supporting biophysical experiments to investigate how the myristoylated VP4 peptide of non-enveloped viruses interacts with host membranes during viral entry. The authors show that myristoylation facilitates VP4 membrane anchoring, condensate formation, and membrane remodeling events linked to early stages of membrane breaching. The work provides a convincing biophysical framework for understanding myristoylation-dependence in membrane-penetrating proteins.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 3 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  8. More than just a passive brick in the wall: the nucleosome facilitates DNA polymerase β activity in linker DNA and its PARP-dependent regulation in the BER pathway choice

    This article has 7 authors:
    1. Danil M Shtanov
    2. Tatyana A Kurgina
    3. Mikhail M Kutuzov
    4. Konstantin N Naumenko
    5. Alexander A Ukraintsev
    6. Nina A Moor
    7. Olga I Lavrik
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This valuable study presents evidence that DNA Polymerase β strand displacement synthesis within linker DNA is stimulated by the presence of an adjacent nucleosome core particle. The biochemical analyses of the strand displacement synthesis by the DNA polymerase on a reconstituted nucleosome substrate with a linker DNA provided incomplete evidence to support the authors' conclusion. The results in the paper are of interest to researchers in DNA repair and nucleosome biology.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  9. Optimising the tilt-increment for in situ cryo-electron tomography

    This article has 4 authors:
    1. Maarten W Tuijtel
    2. Tomáš Majtner
    3. Beata Turoňová
    4. Martin Beck
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This convincing contribution addresses a question of practical importance: when collecting tilt-series data, what is the optimal angular step size between successive tilt images? The work provides valuable practical insights into cryo-ET data acquisition by demonstrating that balancing two competing demands - sufficient dose per individual tilt image and fine angular sampling - is essential to achieve high-quality tomographic reconstructions. They demonstrate that tilt-series acquired with finer increments (1-3 degrees) yield superior alignment accuracy and improved template-matching performance,

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 3 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
  10. Hippocampal representations differentiate reactive and anticipatory responses during foraging under threat

    This article has 3 authors:
    1. Chelsey C Damphousse
    2. Olivia L Calvin
    3. A David Redish
    This article has been curated by 1 group:
    • Curated by eLife

      eLife Assessment

      This important study investigates how the hippocampus distinguishes between reactive escape and anticipatory withdrawal during approach-avoidance conflict in rats performing a naturalistic decision-making task. Solid evidence supports the main finding that hippocampal neuronal representations differ during different types of defensive behaviors, although the evidence for some of the claims in the paper could be strengthened. The study will be of interest to researchers studying memory, navigation, and decision-making in the presence of competing rewards and threats.

    Reviewed by eLife

    This article has 4 evaluationsAppears in 1 listLatest version Latest activity
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