TY - JOUR A1 - Khider, D. A1 - Emile-Geay, J. A1 - McKay, N. P. A1 - Gil, Y. A1 - Garijo, D. A1 - Ratnakar, V A1 - Alonso-Garcia, M. A1 - Bertrand, S. A1 - Bothe, O. A1 - Brewer, P. A1 - Bunn, A. A1 - Chevalier, M. A1 - Comas-Bru, L. A1 - Csank, A. A1 - Dassie, E. A1 - DeLong, K. A1 - Felis, T. A1 - Francus, P. A1 - Frappier, A. A1 - Gray, W. A1 - Goring, S. A1 - Jonkers, L. A1 - Kahle, M. A1 - Kaufman, D. A1 - Kehrwald, N. M. A1 - Martrat, B. A1 - McGregor, H. A1 - Richey, J. A1 - Schmittner, A. A1 - Scroxton, N. A1 - Sutherland, E. A1 - Thirumalai, Kaustubh A1 - Allen, K. A1 - Arnaud, F. A1 - Axford, Y. A1 - Barrows, T. A1 - Bazin, L. A1 - Birch, S. E. Pilaar A1 - Bradley, E. A1 - Bregy, J. A1 - Capron, E. A1 - Cartapanis, O. A1 - Chiang, H-W A1 - Cobb, K. M. A1 - Debret, M. A1 - Dommain, RĂ©ne A1 - Du, J. A1 - Dyez, K. A1 - Emerick, S. A1 - Erb, M. P. A1 - Falster, G. A1 - Finsinger, W. A1 - Fortier, D. A1 - Gauthier, Nicolas A1 - George, S. A1 - Grimm, E. A1 - Hertzberg, J. A1 - Hibbert, F. A1 - Hillman, A. A1 - Hobbs, W. A1 - Huber, M. A1 - Hughes, A. L. C. A1 - Jaccard, S. A1 - Ruan, J. A1 - Kienast, M. A1 - Konecky, B. A1 - Le Roux, G. A1 - Lyubchich, V A1 - Novello, V. F. A1 - Olaka, L. A1 - Partin, J. W. A1 - Pearce, C. A1 - Phipps, S. J. A1 - Pignol, C. A1 - Piotrowska, N. A1 - Poli, M-S A1 - Prokopenko, A. A1 - Schwanck, F. A1 - Stepanek, C. A1 - Swann, G. E. A. A1 - Telford, R. A1 - Thomas, E. A1 - Thomas, Z. A1 - Truebe, S. A1 - von Gunten, L. A1 - Waite, A. A1 - Weitzel, N. A1 - Wilhelm, B. A1 - Williams, J. A1 - Winstrup, M. A1 - Zhao, N. A1 - Zhou, Y. T1 - PaCTS 1.0: A Crowdsourced Reporting Standard for Paleoclimate Data JF - Paleoceanography and paleoclimatology N2 - The progress of science is tied to the standardization of measurements, instruments, and data. This is especially true in the Big Data age, where analyzing large data volumes critically hinges on the data being standardized. Accordingly, the lack of community-sanctioned data standards in paleoclimatology has largely precluded the benefits of Big Data advances in the field. Building upon recent efforts to standardize the format and terminology of paleoclimate data, this article describes the Paleoclimate Community reporTing Standard (PaCTS), a crowdsourced reporting standard for such data. PaCTS captures which information should be included when reporting paleoclimate data, with the goal of maximizing the reuse value of paleoclimate data sets, particularly for synthesis work and comparison to climate model simulations. Initiated by the LinkedEarth project, the process to elicit a reporting standard involved an international workshop in 2016, various forms of digital community engagement over the next few years, and grassroots working groups. Participants in this process identified important properties across paleoclimate archives, in addition to the reporting of uncertainties and chronologies; they also identified archive-specific properties and distinguished reporting standards for new versus legacy data sets. This work shows that at least 135 respondents overwhelmingly support a drastic increase in the amount of metadata accompanying paleoclimate data sets. Since such goals are at odds with present practices, we discuss a transparent path toward implementing or revising these recommendations in the near future, using both bottom-up and top-down approaches. KW - standards KW - FAIR KW - paleoclimate KW - paleoceanography KW - data KW - best practices Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1029/2019PA003632 SN - 2572-4517 SN - 2572-4525 VL - 34 IS - 10 SP - 1570 EP - 1596 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Librado, Pablo A1 - Gamba, Cristina A1 - Gaunitz, Charleen A1 - Sarkissian, Clio Der A1 - Pruvost, Melanie A1 - Albrechtsen, Anders A1 - Fages, Antoine A1 - Khan, Naveed A1 - Schubert, Mikkel A1 - Jagannathan, Vidhya A1 - Serres-Armero, Aitor A1 - Kuderna, Lukas F. K. A1 - Povolotskaya, Inna S. A1 - Seguin-Orlando, Andaine A1 - Lepetz, Sebastien A1 - Neuditschko, Markus A1 - Theves, Catherine A1 - Alquraishi, Saleh A. A1 - Alfarhan, Ahmed H. A1 - Al-Rasheid, Khaled A. S. A1 - Rieder, Stefan A1 - Samashev, Zainolla A1 - Francfort, Henri-Paul A1 - Benecke, Norbert A1 - Hofreiter, Michael A1 - Ludwig, Arne A1 - Keyser, Christine A1 - Marques-Bonet, Tomas A1 - Ludes, Bertrand A1 - Crubezy, Eric A1 - Leeb, Tosso A1 - Willerslev, Eske A1 - Orlando, Ludovic T1 - Ancient genomic changes associated with domestication of the horse JF - Science N2 - The genomic changes underlying both early and late stages of horse domestication remain largely unknown. We examined the genomes of 14 early domestic horses from the Bronze and Iron Ages, dating to between similar to 4.1 and 2.3 thousand years before present. We find early domestication selection patterns supporting the neural crest hypothesis, which provides a unified developmental origin for common domestic traits. Within the past 2.3 thousand years, horses lost genetic diversity and archaic DNA tracts introgressed from a now-extinct lineage. They accumulated deleterious mutations later than expected under the cost-of-domestication hypothesis, probably because of breeding from limited numbers of stallions. We also reveal that Iron Age Scythian steppe nomads implemented breeding strategies involving no detectable inbreeding and selection for coat-color variation and robust forelimbs. Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aam5298 SN - 0036-8075 SN - 1095-9203 VL - 356 SP - 442 EP - 445 PB - American Assoc. for the Advancement of Science CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kirchner, Sebastian A1 - Cai, Zhiwei A1 - Rauscher, Robert A1 - Kastelic, Nicolai A1 - Anding, Melanie A1 - Czech, Andreas A1 - Kleizen, Bertrand A1 - Ostedgaard, Lynda S. A1 - Braakman, Ineke A1 - Sheppard, David N. A1 - Ignatova, Zoya T1 - Alteration of protein function by a silent polymorphism linked to tRNA abundance JF - PLoS biology N2 - Synonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (sSNPs) are considered neutral for protein function, as by definition they exchange only codons, not amino acids. We identified an sSNP that modifies the local translation speed of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), leading to detrimental changes to protein stability and function. This sSNP introduces a codon pairing to a low-abundance tRNA that is particularly rare in human bronchial epithelia, but not in other human tissues, suggesting tissue-specific effects of this sSNP. Up-regulation of the tRNA cognate to the mutated codon counteracts the effects of the sSNP and rescues protein conformation and function. Our results highlight the wide-ranging impact of sSNPs, which invert the programmed local speed of mRNA translation and provide direct evidence for the central role of cellular tRNA levels in mediating the actions of sSNPs in a tissue-specific manner. Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2000779 SN - 1545-7885 VL - 15 PB - PLoS CY - San Fransisco ER -