TY - THES A1 - Moreno Curtidor, Catalina T1 - Elucidating the molecular basis of enhanced growth in the Arabidopsis thaliana accession Bur-0 N2 - The life cycle of flowering plants is a dynamic process that involves successful passing through several developmental phases and tremendous progress has been made to reveal cellular and molecular regulatory mechanisms underlying these phases, morphogenesis, and growth. Although several key regulators of plant growth or developmental phase transitions have been identified in Arabidopsis, little is known about factors that become active during embryogenesis, seed development and also during further postembryonic growth. Much less is known about accession-specific factors that determine plant architecture and organ size. Bur-0 has been reported as a natural Arabidopsis thaliana accession with exceptionally big seeds and a large rosette; its phenotype makes it an interesting candidate to study growth and developmental aspects in plants, however, the molecular basis underlying this big phenotype remains to be elucidated. Thus, the general aim of this PhD project was to investigate and unravel the molecular mechanisms underlying the big phenotype in Bur-0. Several natural Arabidopsis accessions and late flowering mutant lines were analysed in this study, including Bur-0. Phenotypes were characterized by determining rosette size, seed size, flowering time, SAM size and growth in different photoperiods, during embryonic and postembryonic development. Our results demonstrate that Bur-0 stands out as an interesting accession with simultaneously larger rosettes, larger SAM, later flowering phenotype and larger seeds, but also larger embryos. Interestingly, inter-accession crosses (F1) resulted in bigger seeds than the parental self-crossed accessions, particularly when Bur-0 was used as the female parental genotype, suggesting parental effects on seed size that might be maternally controlled. Furthermore, developmental stage-based comparisons revealed that the large embryo size of Bur-0 is achieved during late embryogenesis and the large rosette size is achieved during late postembryonic growth. Interestingly, developmental phase progression analyses revealed that from germination onwards, the length of developmental phases during postembryonic growth is delayed in Bur-0, suggesting that in general, the mechanisms that regulate developmental phase progression are shared across developmental phases. On the other hand, a detailed physiological characterization in different tissues at different developmental stages revealed accession-specific physiological and metabolic traits that underlie accession-specific phenotypes and in particular, more carbon resources during embryonic and postembryonic development were found in Bur-0, suggesting an important role of carbohydrates in determination of the bigger Bur-0 phenotype. Additionally, differences in the cellular organization, nuclei DNA content, as well as ploidy level were analyzed in different tissues/cell types and we found that the large organ size in Bur-0 can be mainly attributed to its larger cells and also to higher cell proliferation in the SAM, but not to a different ploidy level. Furthermore, RNA-seq analysis of embryos at torpedo and mature stage, as well as SAMs at vegetative and floral transition stage from Bur-0 and Col-0 was conducted to identify accession-specific genetic determinants of plant phenotypes, shared across tissues and developmental stages during embryonic and postembryonic growth. Potential candidate genes were identified and further validation of transcriptome data by expression analyses of candidate genes as well as known key regulators of organ size and growth during embryonic and postembryonic development confirmed that the high confidence transcriptome datasets generated in this study are reliable for elucidation of molecular mechanisms regulating plant growth and accession-specific phenotypes in Arabidopsis. Taken together, this PhD project contributes to the plant development research field providing a detailed analysis of mechanisms underlying plant growth and development at different levels of biological organization, focusing on Arabidopsis accessions with remarkable phenotypical differences. For this, the natural accession Bur-0 was an ideal outlier candidate and different mechanisms at organ and tissue level, cell level, metabolism, transcript and gene expression level were identified, providing a better understanding of different factors involved in plant growth regulation and mechanisms underlying different growth patterns in nature. N2 - Der Lebenszyklus blühender Pflanzen ist ein dynamischer Prozess, der das erfolgreiche Durchlaufen mehrerer Entwicklungsphasen impliziert. Es wurden enorme Fortschritte gemacht, um zelluläre und molekulare Regulationsmechanismen zu entschlüsseln, die diesen Phasen, der Morphogenese und dem Wachstum zu Grunde liegen. Obwohl mehrere Schlüsselregulatoren des Pflanzenwachstums oder der Entwicklungsphasenübergänge in Arabidopsis identifiziert wurden, ist nur wenig über Faktoren bekannt, die sowohl während der Embryogenese als auch während der Samenentwicklung und dem weiteren Wachstum aktiv werden. Noch viel weniger ist über akzessionspezifische Faktoren bekannt, die die Pflanzenarchitektur und Organgröße bestimmen. Bur-0 wurde als eine natürliche Arabidopsis-Akzession mit außergewöhnlich großen Samen und großer Blattrosette beschrieben. Ihr Phänotyp macht sie zu einem interessanten Kandidaten für die Untersuchung von Wachstums- und Entwicklungsaspekten in Pflanzen, jedoch muss die molekulare Basis, die diesem großen Phänotyp unterliegt, noch entschlüsselt werden. Daher war das allgemeine Ziel dieser Doktorarbeit, die molekularen Mechanismen, die dem großen Phänotyp in Bur-0 zu Grunde liegen, zu entschlüsseln und zu verstehen. Mehrere natürliche Arabidopsis-Akzessionen und spät blühende Mutantenlinien wurden in dieser Studie analysiert, so auch Bur-0. Die Phänotypen wurden durch eine detaillierte Analyse der Rosettengröße, der Samengröße, der Blütezeit, der Sprossapikalmeristemgröße und des Wachstums in verschiedenen Photoperioden, während der embryonalen und postembryonalen Entwicklung charakterisiert. Unsere Ergebnisse zeigen, dass Bur-0 als interessanter Akzession mit gleichzeitig größeren Blattrosetten, größerem Sprossapikalmeristem (SAM), späterem Blühphänotyp und größeren Samen, aber auch größeren Embryonen auffällt. Interessanterweise führten Kreuzungen zwischen den Akzessionen (F1) zu größeren Samen als die elterlichen selbstgekreuzten Akzessionen, insbesondere wenn Bur-0 als weiblicher elterlicher Genotyp verwendet wurde, was auf elterliche Effekte auf die Samengröße hindeutet, die möglicherweise mütterlicherseits kontrolliert werden. Darüber hinaus ergaben Vergleiche auf Basis von Entwicklungsstadien, dass die große Embryogröße von Bur-0 während der späten Embryogenese erreicht wird und die große Blattrosette während des späten postembryonalen Wachstums. Interessanterweise ergaben Analysen der Entwicklungsphasenprogression, dass ab der Keimung die Länge der Entwicklungsphasen während des postembryonalen Wachstums bei Bur-0 verzögert ist, was darauf hindeutet, dass im Allgemeinen die Mechanismen, die die Entwicklungsphasenprogression regulieren, über die Entwicklungsphasen hinweg geteilt werden. Andererseits ergab eine detaillierte physiologische Charakterisierung in verschiedenen Geweben in unterschiedlichen Entwicklungsstadien akzession-spezifische physiologische und metabolische Merkmale, die den akzession-spezifischen Phänotypen zu Grunde liegen. Insbesondere wurden mehr Kohlenstoff-Ressourcen, während der embryonalen und postembryonalen Entwicklung in Bur-0 gefunden, was auf eine wichtige Rolle von Kohlenhydraten bei der Bestimmung des größeren Bur-0-Phänotyps hindeutet. Zusätzlich wurden Unterschiede in der zellulären Organisation, dem DNA-Gehalt der Nuklei sowie dem Ploidiegrad in verschiedenen Geweben/Zelltypen analysiert und wir fanden heraus, dass die größere Organgröße in Bur-0 hauptsächlich auf die größeren Zellen und auch auf eine höhere Zellproliferation im SAM zurückzuführen ist, aber nicht auf einen anderen Ploidiegrad. Darüber hinaus wurden RNA-seq-Analysen von Embryonen im Torpedo- und Reifestadium sowie SAMs im vegetativen und Florenübergangsstadium von Bur-0 und Col-0 durchgeführt, um akzession-spezifische genetische Faktoren für Pflanzenphänotypen zu identifizieren, die in allen Geweben und Entwicklungsstadien während des embryonalen und postembryonalen Wachstums auftreten. Potenzielle Kandidatengene wurden identifiziert und eine weitere Validierung der Transkriptomdaten durch Expressionsanalysen neuartiger Kandidatengene sowie bekannter Schlüsselregulatoren für Organgröße und -wachstum während der embryonalen und postembryonalen Entwicklung bestätigte, dass die in dieser Studie generierten Transkriptomdatensätze mit hoher Zuverlässigkeit für die Aufklärung molekularer Mechanismen zur Regulierung des Pflanzenwachstums und akzessionspezifischer Phänotypen in Arabidopsis geeignet sind. Insgesamt trägt diese Doktorarbeit zur Forschung im Bereich der Pflanzenentwicklung bei, indem sie eine detaillierte Analyse der Mechanismen liefert, die dem Wachstum und der Entwicklung auf verschiedenen Ebenen der biologischen Organisation zu Grunde liegen, wobei der Schwerpunkt auf Arabidopsis-Akzessionen mit bemerkenswerten phänotypischen Unterschieden liegt. Dafür war die natürliche Akzession Bur-0 ein idealer Ausreißerkandidat und es wurden verschiedene Mechanismen auf Organ- und Gewebeebene, Zellebene, Stoffwechsel, Transkript- und Genexpressionsniveau identifiziert, was ein besseres Verständnis der verschiedenen Faktoren, die an der Regulierung des Pflanzenwachstums beteiligt sind, und der Mechanismen, die den verschiedenen Wachstumsmustern in der Natur zu Grunde liegen, ermöglicht. KW - Plant development KW - Plant growth KW - Arabidopsis thaliana KW - Phenotype KW - Transcriptome KW - Pflanzenentwicklung KW - Pflanzenwachstum KW - Arabidopsis thaliana KW - Phänotyp KW - Transkriptom Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-526814 ER - TY - THES A1 - Kaptur, Joanna Alexandra T1 - The LEUNIG regulatory complex BT - how does it control shoot apical meristem formation and its postembryonic activity? N2 - Patterning along the apical-basal (A-B) axis is a crucial step during the early stages of plant embryogenesis and leads to the establishment of two poles of which each will develop their own stem cell niches. The activity of these meristems is responsible for post-embryonic growth, with the shoot apical meristem (SAM) generating the above-ground organs and the root apical meristem (RAM) producing the subterranean structures of the plant. While several transcriptional regulators governing A-B patterning have been identified, precisely how their regulatory function is orchestrated remains elusive. This study focuses on transcriptional co-regulators LEUNIG (LUG) and closely related LEUNIG_HOMOLOG (LUH) and their role in the formation of A-B patterning during embryogenesis as well as their post-embryonic maintenance. A link between the LUG regulatory complex and SAM formation and maintenance comes from the observation that lug mutants heterozygous for the luh allele (lug luh+/-) often have enlarged SAMs resulting from misregulated cell divisions. A more severe phenotype is observed in lug luh double mutants which are embryonically lethal. In this study, a detailed characterisation of lug luh embryo phenotype reveals that these mutants display aberrant cell divisions along the A-B axis, which correlates with defects in auxin distribution, complete loss of apical identity, and altered expression of transcription factors determining basal fate. Like other co-regulators, LUG and LUH lack intrinsic DNA-binding domains and instead must interact with DNA-binding cofactors to ensure recruitment to regulatory elements of target genes. This either involves direct contact between the co-regulators and transcription factors (TFs) or the formation of higher-order complexes with adaptor proteins such as SEUSS (SEU) or related SEUSS-LIKEs (SLKs), which facilitate binding to specific TFs. Results presented in this study provide insight into the molecular framework for the LUG regulatory complex activity during embryogenesis. Both yeast and in planta assays showed that LUG/LUH and SEU/SLKs physically associate with a variety of WUSCHEL-RELATED HOMEOBOX (WOX) TFs including members of the WOX2-module. Furthermore, genetic interactions between members of the WOX2-module and the LUG regulatory complex, support their mutual action during embryogenesis. Based on the reduced activity of HOMEODOMAIN LEUCINE-ZIPPER CLASS III (HD-ZIPIII) promoters in lug luh embryos, a model is proposed in which the LUG regulatory complex functions together with WOX2-module to promote apical identity and subsequent SAM initiation through regulation of the HD-ZIPIIIs. The activity of the LUG complex in promoting basal embryo identity through positive regulation of microRNA165/166 suggests that this complex also has functions that are independent of the WOX2-module. Preliminary work reported in this study further uncovered the role of the LUG regulatory complex in post-embryonic development. While the fasciated inflorescence meristems of lug luh+/- plants displayed defects in auxin transport and altered activity of stem cell markers, embryonically rescued lug luh mutants formed flat and differentiated SAMs. In addition, rescued lug luh mutants exhibited severely disorganised RAM and defects in quiescent center (QC) specification, supporting the involvement of the LUG complex in post-embryonic RAM maintenance. KW - LEUNIG LEUNIG_HOMOLOG SEUSS SEUSS-LIKEs Arabidopsis embryogenesis WOX2-module HD-ZIPIII Y1 - 2021 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Oberkofler, Vicky A1 - Pratx, Loris A1 - Bäurle, Isabel T1 - Epigenetic regulation of abiotic stress memory BT - maintaining the good things while they last JF - Current opinion in plant biology N2 - As sessile organisms, plants have evolved sophisticated ways to constantly gauge and adapt to changing environmental conditions including extremes that may be harmful to their growth and development and are thus perceived as stress. In nature, stressful events are often chronic or recurring and thus an initial stress may prime a plant to respond more efficiently to a subsequent stress event. An epigenetic basis of such stress memory was long postulated and in recent years it has been shown that this is indeed the case. High temperature stress has proven an excellent system to unpick the molecular basis of somatic stress memory, which includes histone modifications and nucleosome occupancy. This review discusses recent findings and pinpoints open questions in the field. Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pbi.2021.102007 SN - 1369-5266 SN - 1879-0356 VL - 61 PB - Elsevier CY - London ER - TY - GEN A1 - Kahl, Sandra A1 - Kappel, Christian A1 - Joshi, Jasmin Radha A1 - Lenhard, Michael T1 - Phylogeography of a widely distributed plant species reveals cryptic genetic lineages with parallel phenotypic responses to warming and drought conditions T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - To predict how widely distributed species will perform under future climate change, it is crucial to understand and reveal their underlying phylogenetics. However, detailed information about plant adaptation and its genetic basis and history remains scarce and especially widely distributed species receive little attention despite their putatively high adaptability. To examine the adaptation potential of a widely distributed species, we sampled the model plant Silene vulgaris across Europe. In a greenhouse experiment, we exposed the offspring of these populations to a climate change scenario for central Europe and revealed the population structure through whole-genome sequencing. Plants were grown under two temperatures (18°C and 21°C) and three precipitation regimes (65, 75, and 90 mm) to measure their response in biomass and fecundity-related traits. To reveal the population genetic structure, ddRAD sequencing was employed for a whole-genome approach. We found three major genetic clusters in S. vulgaris from Europe: one cluster comprising Southern European populations, one cluster of Western European populations, and another cluster containing central European populations. Population genetic diversity decreased with increasing latitude, and a Mantel test revealed significant correlations between FST and geographic distances as well as between genetic and environmental distances. Our trait analysis showed that the genetic clusters significantly differed in biomass-related traits and in the days to flowering. However, half of the traits showed parallel response patterns to the experimental climate change scenario. Due to the differentiated but parallel response patterns, we assume that phenotypic plasticity plays an important role for the adaptation of the widely distributed species S. vulgaris and its intraspecific genetic lineages. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1218 KW - climate adaptation KW - ddRAD KW - Silene vulgaris Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-530035 SN - 1866-8372 SP - 13986 EP - 14002 ER - TY - THES A1 - Novakovic, Lazar T1 - Investigating DEFECTIVE KERNEL 1 regulation of primary cell wall biosynthesis and mechanical properties during plant growth in Arabidopsis thaliana N2 - Plants possess cell wall, a polysaccharide exoskeleton which encompasses all plant cells. Cell wall gives plant cells mechanical support, defines their shape, enables growth and water transport through a plant. It also has important role in communication with the external environment. Regulation of plant cell wall biosynthesis and cell and organ morphogenesis depends on cell’s ability to detect mechanical signals originating both from the external environment and from internal plant tissues. Thanks to the presence of the cell wall, all living plant cells develop constant internal pressure generated by the active water uptake, known as turgor pressure, which enables them to grow. Thus, actively growing cells in the tissue are exerting mechanical stress to each other. In order to properly coordinate cell growth, tissue morphogenesis and maintain cell-to-cell adhesion, plant cell have to detect these mechanical signals. That is performed by a group of still not well enough characterized plant mechanosensitive proteins. Mechanosensors are proteins capable of detecting changes in mechanical stress patterns and translating them into physiological and developmental outputs. One of plant mechanosensitive proteins, DEFECTIVE KERNEL1 (DEK1) has shown to be a very important in proper plant development. DEK1 bears similarity with animal cysteine proteases of Calpain superfamily. DEK1 is very important for plant development since all null alleles are embryo lethal. During the last 20 years of DEK1 studies, this protein has proven to be a very difficult for different molecular and biochemical manipulations. As a consequence, very little is known about its direct target proteins. Wang and co-workers (2003) and Johnson and co-workers (2008) have given a valuable contribution to biochemical understanding of DEK1 by determining that it functions as Cys-protease in similar way as animal calpains. However, a lot of indirect knowledge was gathered about the effects of disruption and modulation of DEK1 activity. DEK1 is important for proper organ development, epidermal specification, and maintenance. However, some studies have inferred that DEK1 affects expression of different cell wall related genes, and it regulates cell-to-cell adhesion in epidermal cells. This led to two extensive studies (Amanda et al., 2016, 2017) which demonstrated importance of DEK1 in regulation leaf epidermal cell walls in A. thaliana mature leaves and inflorescence stems. These studies demonstrated that DEK1 also influences cell wall thickness and cell-to-cell adhesion and that it could potentially regulate cell growth and expansion. Building up on this research, we decided to try to further characterize molecular and biomechanical aspects of DEK1 mediated cell wall regulation, with special emphasis on regulation of cellulose synthesis. We used two mutant lines, with modulated DEK1 activity, a constitutive overexpressor for DEK1 CALPAIN domain and a point mutant in CALPAIN domain, dek1-4. In Chapter 3 we demonstrated that DEK1 regulates dynamics of Cellulose Synthase Complexes (CSCs). Both lines showed decreased crystalline cellulose contents. This led us to investigate if velocity of CSCs in cotyledons, was affected, since it is known that changes in cellulose contents are often caused by defects in CSC. We found that bothDEK1 modulated lines we used have significantly decreased velocity of CSCs. We have also examined plasma membrane turnover rates of CSCs and found out that after photo-bleaching OE CALPAIN has much faster recovery rates compared to Col-0 wild type, while dek1-4 has lower exocytotic rates of CSCs, and much longer life-time of CSCs inserted into the plasma membrane. These results suggested that DEK1 regulates different aspects of CSC dynamics, possibly through interaction with different regulatory proteins. Decrease in cellulose contents we observed in DEK1 modulated lines, prompted us to investigate how this reflects biomechanics and structural properties of epidermal cotyledon cell walls of DEK1 modulated lines, which is described in Chapter 4. To achieve this, we developed a novel microdissection method for isolation and mechanical and structural characterization of native epidermal cell wall monolayers using atomic force microscopy (AFM). AFM force spectroscopy assays showed that both DEK1 modulated lines had stiffer cell walls compared to Col-0. This was awkward since we initially detected decrease in crystalline cellulose which implied decrease in cell wall stiffness. However, subsequent high-resolution AFM imaging has revealed that DEK1 modulate lines cells walls have their cellulose microfibrils organized in thicker bundles than Col-0. Also, polysaccharide composition analysis has revealed that DEK1 modulated lines have increased abundance of pectins, which could also be responsible for the observed increase in cell wall stiffness. Previous work has shown that different dek1 mutants and modulated lines have defects in cell-to-cell adhesion. This implied that DEK1 may be involved in sensing and/or maintaining cell wall integrity (CWI). We performed several growth assays to determine role of DEK1 in CWI, which is described in Chapter 5. We performed cellulose synthesis perturbation assays with cellulose synthesis inhibitor Isoxaben and obtained very interesting results. While OE CALPAIN plants were hypersensitive to Isoxaben, dek1-4 has shown complete insensitivity. Furthermore, a regular CWI maintenance response, reported in A. thaliana as result of compromised CWI, ectopic lignification in seedlings’ roots was absent in both DEK1 modulated lines we examined. We detected interesting growth response of DEK1 lines to NaCl and mannitol treatments as well. Although these findings are pointing out that DEK1 could be part of CWI signalling pathways, more experiments are necessary to fully elucidate possible role of DEK1 in CWI sensing and/or maintenance pathways, especially to check if DEK1 is interacting with Catharanthus roseus Receptor Like Kinase group of CWI sensors. Studies on 4-month old short day grown DEK1 modulated lines, have shown defects in branching, with development of fasciated stem branches in a DEK1 modulated line overexpressing CALPAIN domain (Amanda et al., 2017). This result pointed out to a possibility that DEK1 may regulate organ morphogenesis and patterning at the level of shoot apical meristem (SAM). Work towards elucidating role of DEK1 in SAM maintenance and organ patterning is detailed in Chapter 6. We determined that OE CALPAIN had significantly larger central zone of SAM as well as larger individual SAM cells in central zone, as well as higher distribution of cell sizes, implying possible cell expansion defects. dek1-4 did not exhibited changes in SAM central zone size or individual stem cell size, but it seemed that it had increased number of stem cells in SAM central zone. Both DEK1 lines had perturbation of phyllotaxis on SAM level, with disturbed divergence angles between floral primordia. Disturbed phyllotaxis was also observed between siliques, in mature plants. In addition to this, OE CALPAIN has exhibited occurrence of multiple (up to four) siliques growing from a single stem node. All this is pointing out that DEK1 might participate in hormone-signalling in the SAM.. DEK1 is a highly intriguing protein. However, since it is a unigene, and in addition to that, a regulatory protease, it probably participates in multiple signalling pathways, which makes understanding its function much more complicated. KW - DEK1 KW - atomic force microscopy KW - cellulose microfibrils KW - shoot apical meristem KW - phyllotaxis KW - biomechanics KW - cellulose synthase complex KW - cell wall Y1 - 2021 ER - TY - CHAP A1 - Inäbnit, Thomas A1 - Dennis, Alice B. T1 - The mitochondrial genome of Melampus bidentatus (Panpulmonata, Ellobioidea) T2 - Integrative and comparative biology / Society of Integrative and Comparative Biology Y1 - 2021 SN - 1540-7063 SN - 1557-7023 VL - 61 IS - Supplement 1 SP - E405 EP - E405 PB - Oxford University Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Omranian, Sara A1 - Angeleska, Angela A1 - Nikoloski, Zoran T1 - PC2P BT - parameter-free network-based prediction of protein complexes JF - Bioinformatics N2 - Motivation: Prediction of protein complexes from protein-protein interaction (PPI) networks is an important problem in systems biology, as they control different cellular functions. The existing solutions employ algorithms for network community detection that identify dense subgraphs in PPI networks. However, gold standards in yeast and human indicate that protein complexes can also induce sparse subgraphs, introducing further challenges in protein complex prediction. Results: To address this issue, we formalize protein complexes as biclique spanned subgraphs, which include both sparse and dense subgraphs. We then cast the problem of protein complex prediction as a network partitioning into biclique spanned subgraphs with removal of minimum number of edges, called coherent partition. Since finding a coherent partition is a computationally intractable problem, we devise a parameter-free greedy approximation algorithm, termed Protein Complexes from Coherent Partition (PC2P), based on key properties of biclique spanned subgraphs. Through comparison with nine contenders, we demonstrate that PC2P: (i) successfully identifies modular structure in networks, as a prerequisite for protein complex prediction, (ii) outperforms the existing solutions with respect to a composite score of five performance measures on 75% and 100% of the analyzed PPI networks and gold standards in yeast and human, respectively, and (iii,iv) does not compromise GO semantic similarity and enrichment score of the predicted protein complexes. Therefore, our study demonstrates that clustering of networks in terms of biclique spanned subgraphs is a promising framework for detection of complexes in PPI networks. Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/bioinformatics/btaa1089 SN - 1367-4811 VL - 37 IS - 1 SP - 73 EP - 81 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER -