Publications by authors named "Silies M"

Article Synopsis
  • Natural scenes present challenges due to their dynamic nature, making reliable visual processing difficult for computer vision but not for animals like Drosophila.
  • The study identifies specific neurons responsible for rapid luminance gain control, allowing for stable visual processing in changing light conditions.
  • The mechanism involves divisive normalization through spatial pooling and shunting inhibition, suggesting that flies have evolved efficient ways to handle varying luminosity in their environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Transition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs) are quantum confined systems with interesting optoelectronic properties, governed by Coulomb interactions in the monolayer (1L) limit, where strongly bound excitons provide a sensitive probe for many-body interactions. Here, we use two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy (2DES) to investigate many-body interactions and their dynamics in 1L-WS at room temperature and with sub-10 fs time resolution. Our data reveal coherent interactions between the strongly detuned A and B exciton states in 1L-WS.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Visual systems are homogeneous structures, where repeating columnar units retinotopically cover the visual field. Each of these columns contain many of the same neuron types that are distinguished by anatomic, genetic and - generally - by functional properties. However, there are exceptions to this rule.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The strong coherent coupling of quantum emitters to vacuum fluctuations of the light field offers opportunities for manipulating the optical and transport properties of nanomaterials, with potential applications ranging from ultrasensitive all-optical switching to creating polariton condensates. Often, ubiquitous decoherence processes at ambient conditions limit these couplings to such short time scales that the quantum dynamics of the interacting system remains elusive. Prominent examples are strongly coupled exciton-plasmon systems, which, so far, have mostly been investigated by linear optical spectroscopy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Synaptic signaling depends on ATP generated by mitochondria. Dysfunctional mitochondria shift the redox balance towards a more oxidative environment. Due to extensive connectivity, the striatum is especially vulnerable to mitochondrial dysfunction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Solid-state single-photon sources are central building blocks in quantum information processing. Atomically thin crystals have emerged as sources of nonclassical light; however, they perform below the state-of-the-art devices based on volume crystals. Here, we implement a bright single-photon source based on an atomically thin sheet of WSe coupled to a tunable optical cavity in a liquid-helium-free cryostat without the further need for active stabilization.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Animals navigating in natural environments must handle vast changes in their sensory input. Visual systems, for example, handle changes in luminance at many timescales, from slow changes across the day to rapid changes during active behavior. To maintain luminance-invariant perception, visual systems must adapt their sensitivity to changing luminance at different timescales.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report the first observation of the coupling of strong optical near fields to wavepackets of free, 100 eV electrons with <50 fs temporal resolution in an ultrafast point-projection microscope. Optical near fields are created by excitation of a thin, nanometer-sized Yagi-Uda antenna, with 20 fs near-infrared laser pulses. Phase matching between electrons and near fields is achieved due to strong spatial confinement of the antenna near field.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease 4A is an autosomal-recessive polyneuropathy caused by mutations of ganglioside-induced differentiation-associated protein 1 (GDAP1), a putative glutathione transferase, which affects mitochondrial shape and alters cellular Ca homeostasis. Here, we identify the underlying mechanism. We found that patient-derived motoneurons and GDAP1 knockdown SH-SY5Y cells display two phenotypes: more tubular mitochondria and a metabolism characterized by glutamine dependence and fewer cytosolic lipid droplets.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The accurate processing of contrast is the basis for all visually guided behaviors. Visual scenes with rapidly changing illumination challenge contrast computation because photoreceptor adaptation is not fast enough to compensate for such changes. Yet, human perception of contrast is stable even when the visual environment is quickly changing, suggesting rapid post receptor luminance gain control.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Enlarging exciton coherence lengths in molecular aggregates is critical for enhancing the collective optical and transport properties of molecular thin film nanostructures or devices. We demonstrate that the exciton coherence length of squaraine aggregates can be increased from 10 to 24 molecular units at room temperature when preparing the aggregated thin film on a metallic rather than a dielectric substrate. Two-dimensional electronic spectroscopy measurements reveal a much lower degree of inhomogeneous line broadening for aggregates on a gold film, pointing to a reduced disorder.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Self-motion generates visual patterns on the eye that are important for navigation. These optic flow patterns are encoded by the population of local direction–selective cells in the mouse retina, whereas in flies, local direction–selective T4/T5 cells are thought to be uniformly tuned. How complex global motion patterns can be computed downstream is unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In Drosophila, direction-selective neurons implement a mechanism of motion computation similar to cortical neurons, using contrast-opponent receptive fields with ON and OFF subfields. It is not clear how the presynaptic circuitry of direction-selective neurons in the OFF pathway supports this computation if all major inputs are OFF-rectified neurons. Here, we reveal the biological substrate for motion computation in the OFF pathway.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

RNA polymerase II (RNAP II) pausing is essential to precisely control gene expression and is critical for development of metazoans. Here, we show that the mA RNA modification regulates promoter-proximal RNAP II pausing in Drosophila cells. The mA methyltransferase complex (MTC) and the nuclear reader Ythdc1 are recruited to gene promoters.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The olfactory system translates chemical signals into neuronal signals that inform behavioral decisions of the animal. Odors are cues for source identity, but if monitored long enough, they can also be used to localize the source. Odor representations should therefore be robust to changing conditions and flexible in order to drive an appropriate behavior.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Visual perception scales with changes in the visual stimulus, or contrast, irrespective of background illumination. However, visual perception is challenged when adaptation is not fast enough to deal with sudden declines in overall illumination, for example, when gaze follows a moving object from bright sunlight into a shaded area. Here, we show that the visual system of the fly employs a solution by propagating a corrective luminance-sensitive signal.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The development of tissues and organs requires close interaction of cells. To achieve this, cells express adhesion proteins such as the neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) or its ortholog Fasciclin 2 (Fas2). Both are members of the Ig-domain superfamily of proteins that mediate homophilic adhesion.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The computational organization of sensory systems depends on the diversification of individual cell types with distinct signal-processing capabilities. The Drosophila visual system, for instance, splits information into channels with different temporal properties directly downstream of photoreceptors in the first-order interneurons of the OFF pathway, L2 and L3. However, the biophysical mechanisms that determine this specialization are largely unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sensory systems sequentially extract increasingly complex features. ON and OFF pathways, for example, encode increases or decreases of a stimulus from a common input. This ON/OFF pathway split is thought to occur at individual synaptic connections through a sign-inverting synapse in one of the pathways.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) followed by next generation sequencing (ChIP-Seq) is a powerful technique to study transcriptional regulation. However, the requirement of millions of cells to generate results with high signal-to-noise ratio precludes it in the study of small cell populations. Here, we present a tagmentation-assisted fragmentation ChIP (TAF-ChIP) and sequencing method to generate high-quality histone profiles from low cell numbers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We propose an approach of steering the second harmonic (SH) emission from a single plasmonic structure, through local excitations of plasmon. The proposed idea is confirmed experimentally, by adjusting the incident beam position at the fundamental frequency, on a single plasmonic antenna. A significant directivity change ( ± 52°) for the SH emission is observed with submicrometer adjustment ( ± 250 nm) of the excitation beam position, over broadband SH frequencies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • The original article had mistakes in Figs. 4 and 6.
  • In Fig. 4, labels were misaligned during typesetting, and in Fig. 6, a number on the heat map scale was incorrectly positioned.
  • These errors have been fixed in both the PDF and HTML versions of the article.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Drosophila olfactory local interneurons (LNs) in the antennal lobe are highly diverse and variable. How and when distinct types of LNs emerge, differentiate, and integrate into the olfactory circuit is unknown. Through systematic developmental analyses, we found that LNs are recruited to the adult olfactory circuit in three groups.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - The text discusses how rapid escape behaviors in response to harmful stimuli are crucial for survival, highlighting a lack of understanding regarding the mechanisms linking stimuli to coordinated responses.
  • - Researchers identified specific interneurons called Down-and-Back (DnB) neurons in larvae that are activated by harmful heat and are critical for effective escape behaviors, such as body bending and rolling.
  • - DnB neurons connect with nociceptive and mechanosensory neurons and interact with pre-motor circuits, coordinating the escape responses by promoting activity in Goro neurons, which are necessary for rolling movements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Laminar arrangement of neural connections is a fundamental feature of neural circuit organization. Identifying mechanisms that coordinate neural connections within correct layers is thus vital for understanding how neural circuits are assembled. In the medulla of the visual system neurons form connections within ten parallel layers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF