Body size in Drosophila larvae, like in other animals, is controlled by nutrition. Nutrient restriction leads to catabolic responses in the majority of tissues, but the Drosophila mitotic imaginal discs continue growing. The nature of these differential control mechanisms that spare distinct tissues from starvation are poorly understood. Here, we reveal that the Ret-like receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK), Stitcher (Stit), is required for cell growth and proliferation through the PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway in the Drosophila wing disc. Both Stit and insulin receptor (InR) signaling activate PI3K-I and drive cellular proliferation and tissue growth. However, whereas optimal growth requires signaling from both InR and Stit, catabolic changes manifested by autophagy only occur when both signaling pathways are compromised. The combined activities of Stit and InR in ectodermal epithelial tissues provide an RTK-mediated, two-tiered reaction threshold to varying nutritional conditions that promote epithelial organ growth even at low levels of InR signaling.
Body size in Drosophila larvae, like in other animals, is controlled by nutrition. Nutrient restriction leads to catabolic responses in the majority of tissues, but the Drosophila mitotic imaginal discs continue growing. The nature of these differential control mechanisms that spare distinct tissues from starvation are poorly understood. Here, we reveal that the Ret-like receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK), Stitcher (Stit), is required for cell growth and proliferation through the PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway in the Drosophila wing disc. Both Stit and insulin receptor (InR) signaling activate PI3K-I and drive cellular proliferation and tissue growth. However, whereas optimal growth requires signaling from both InR and Stit, catabolic changes manifested by autophagy only occur when both signaling pathways are compromised. The combined activities of Stit and InR in ectodermal epithelial tissues provide an RTK-mediated, two-tiered reaction threshold to varying nutritional conditions that promote epithelial organ growth even at low levels of InR signaling.
Cellular and organ growth (anabolism) in animals is regulated by complex interactions of nutritional and hormonal cues. As accumulation of cell mass usually precedes cell division, cellular growth is intimately coupled to proliferation and net organ growth. In all eukaryotes studied, the evolutionarily conserved protein complex TORC1 (target of rapamycin complex 1) integrates nutritional and hormonal cues and translates this information into cellular growth and proliferation. When sufficient ATP and amino acids are present, TOR kinase directly phosphorylates S6K and 4E-BP and stabilizes Myc to promote the activity of the protein translation machinery, thereby permitting protein production and cell growth [1],[2]. The amino-acid-sensing machinery is located on a late endosomal compartment, where a small GTPase heterodimer consisting of RagA/B/GTR1 and RagC/D/GTR2, together with Rheb, is required to stimulate TORC1 activity upon amino acid stimulation [3]–[5].In animals, complex hormonal regulation is layered upon the permissive cellular nutrient sensing to ensure coordinated tissue growth. Results from genetically tractable models revealed that the Insulin/Insulin Growth Factor (IGF) ligands and receptors are the principal organ growth regulators coupled to nutrition [1],[6],[7]. DrosophilaInsulin-like peptides (dILPs) signal through an evolutionarily conserved growth promoting pathway initiated by binding of the adaptor proteins, Chico and Lnk, to the intracellular domain of the InR [8],[9]. Subsequent recruitment of the Phosphatidylinositol-kinase class I (PI3K-I) leads to recruitment of Akt and PDK1 kinases to the plasma membrane through their respective phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5 trisphosphate (PIP3)-lipid binding pleckstrin homology (PH) domains. PDK1 phosphorylates and activates Akt [10]–[12], which in turn activates TORC1 by inhibiting its negative regulators PRAS40 and TSC1/TSC2 [13]–[16].Suboptimal nutrient conditions during both animal development and homeostasis can be compensated for by the differential control of growth and catabolism in different organs. The molecular mechanisms underlying these tissue-specific responses in vivo are only beginning to be elucidated. Shortage of amino acids is sensed by the larval fat body resulting in the activation of autophagy and of an unknown relay signal reducing systemic dILP levels and growth [1],[17]–[20].Prolonged starvation halts the growth of most polyploid larval tissues including the gut, fat body, and epidermis [21]. Strikingly, the imaginal tissues that will make up the adult fly during metamorphosis continue to grow even when amino acid levels in the hemolymph drop [21],[22]. A recent elegant study revealed that the continued cycling of neuroblasts in the Drosophila brain, when insulin signaling is low, is supported by growth signaling from the RTK, ALK (Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase). ALK bypasses the TORC1 requirements for growth but still acts through the direct TORC1 targets, 4E-BP and S6K [22],[23].Stitcher (Stit) is a Ret-like, receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) activated upon epidermal wounding in Drosophila embryos. Stit signaling induces the transcriptional activation of genes involved in barrier repair and the coordinated cytoskeletal rearrangements leading to epidermal wound closure [24]. Here, we report that Stit also promotes growth in the Drosophila epithelial imaginal wing discs. We show that in these organs, Stit induces growth in parallel to InR, but also suppresses autophagy upon low InR signaling through the canonical PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway. Thus, the Stit and InR RTKs ensure a two-threshold response to TORC1 activity in proliferating epithelial tissues, increasing their repertoire of reactions to nutrient stress.
Results
Stit Is Required for Wing Growth
stit mutants die as pupae with melanized abdomens, and Stit protein was detected in several developing imaginal epithelial tissues (the wing, thorax, leg discs, and abdominal histoblasts), but was absent in eye-antennal disc (Figure S1A,B and unpublished data) [24]. To uncover a potential Stit function in epithelial tissue development, we focused on the wing imaginal discs. The larval wing discs generate a dorsal and a ventral epithelial cell layer, which appose each other during pupation to form the adult wing blade. We first made FRT stit and stit mutant clones in the future dorsal surface of the wing using apterous (ap)-GAL4 to drive UAS-FLPase. This resulted in strong upwardly bent wings with no apparent defects in vein patterning or hair orientation. This phenotype suggested that Stit controls the balanced growth of the dorsal and ventral wing compartments (Figure 1A). As stit mutant cells showed residual immunoreactivity during larval stages (Figure S1A), we additionally used a transgene encoding a kinase defective variant of Stit (Stit) to acutely disrupt endogenous Stit as well as stit RNAi-expressing trangenes (stit-IR). Broadly expressed Stit by daughterless (da)-GAL4 caused pupal lethality resembling the stit mutant phenotype. Expression of Stit or stit-IR in the dorsal portion of the wing using either ap-GAL4 or MS1096-GAL4 reproducibly caused upwardly bent wings, but the bending was more severe than that caused by the mutant clones (Figures 1A and 2A). Similarly, expression of Stit and stit-IR using engrailed (en)-GAL4 resulted in bending of the posterior wing part, suggesting that Stit coordinates shape and growth in the entire tissue (Figure 1D and not shown). Overexpression of wild-type stit (ap>stit) could rescue the wing phenotypes caused by either Stit or stit-IR (unpublished data), suggesting that both Stit and stit-IR can act as potent and specific inhibitors of Stit function. In conclusion, clones of stit cells and compartmentalized stit inactivation in the wing resulted in growth defects leading to tissue shape alterations.
Figure 1
Stit is required for optimal growth of the wing epithelium.
(A) Stit inactivation in the dorsal wing compartment using ap-GAL4-induced FRT stit mutant clones or expression of either Stit or stit-IR caused an upwardly bent adult wing. (B) Wing cell area decreased in stit mutant clones compared to wild-type clones. (C) The expression of Stit in the dorsal wing compartment led to a 33% reduction of the dorsal/ventral (D/V) cell number ratio (>15,000 cells from 10 Stit pupal wings counted) relative to GFP expressing controls (8 animals, >15,000 cells counted). Student's t test, p<0.005. (D) Expression of stit-IR in the posterior compartment (en-GAL4) caused a backwardly bent wing. (E) The posterior compartment of en>stit-IR wings was reduced in size due to a reduction in both the total cell number and wing cell area relative to GFP-expressing control wings. (F) hs-flp;actin>CD2,stop>GAL4 (AFG4)-generated clones revealed a general reduction of proliferation and an increase in cell doubling time (CDT) when insulin (InR) or amino acid signaling (RagA) was reduced relative to clones expressing GFP alone (48 h after heatshock). A similar effect was observed in Stit-expressing clones, whereas simultaneous reduction of Stit and InR signaling led to a further reduction in proliferation. The number of clones examined (n) for each genotype is indicated. (G) Analysis of Phospho-histone 3 (PH3)-positive mitotic profiles in third instar larval wing discs revealed a general (dorsal, D, and ventral, V, in graph) reduction in the number of mitotically active cells within ap>Stit wing discs compared to control, Student's t test, p<0.005 when comparing either control compartment with either Stit compartment. The number of discs examined (n) is indicated. Scale bar, 50 µm. (H) 10 min of EdU incorporation did not show a compartment-specific change in cells entering into S-phase in ap>Stit discs versus ap>GFP control discs. However, the overall (both dorsal and ventral) labeling was more sparse in Stit wings, although the D/V ratio was close to 1. The number of wing/discs examined (n) is indicated. All error bars indicate standard deviation. The nonautonomous compensatory growth effect is explored further in Figure S1.
Figure 2
Genetic interactions of stit with mutations affecting the PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway.
(A) InR receptor inactivation in the dorsal compartment (ap>InR) reduced total wing size and caused a minor wing bending primarily around the margin. Co-reduction of Stit activity (by Stit) further reduced wing size and gave an upwardly bent wing in addition to the bending at the margin. The stit-IR wing bending phenotypes could be suppressed by co-expression of a constitutively active form of the InR (InR), Rheb, Akt, and constitutively active dS6K (dS6K), indicating that stit acts via or in parallel to the PI3K-I/TORC1 cassette. Dorsal expression of Rheb led to a downwardly bent wing, indicative of overgrowth. This phenotype was also observed upon mild expression of wild-type stit (see Figure S2). (B) Overexpression of stit by MS1096-GAL4 led to a severe crumpled wing phenotype. This could be further enhanced by co-expression of PI3K-I or suppressed by co-expression of PTEN. See also Table S1.
Stit is required for optimal growth of the wing epithelium.
(A) Stit inactivation in the dorsal wing compartment using ap-GAL4-induced FRT stit mutant clones or expression of either Stit or stit-IR caused an upwardly bent adult wing. (B) Wing cell area decreased in stit mutant clones compared to wild-type clones. (C) The expression of Stit in the dorsal wing compartment led to a 33% reduction of the dorsal/ventral (D/V) cell number ratio (>15,000 cells from 10 Stit pupal wings counted) relative to GFP expressing controls (8 animals, >15,000 cells counted). Student's t test, p<0.005. (D) Expression of stit-IR in the posterior compartment (en-GAL4) caused a backwardly bent wing. (E) The posterior compartment of en>stit-IR wings was reduced in size due to a reduction in both the total cell number and wing cell area relative to GFP-expressing control wings. (F) hs-flp;actin>CD2,stop>GAL4 (AFG4)-generated clones revealed a general reduction of proliferation and an increase in cell doubling time (CDT) when insulin (InR) or amino acid signaling (RagA) was reduced relative to clones expressing GFP alone (48 h after heatshock). A similar effect was observed in Stit-expressing clones, whereas simultaneous reduction of Stit and InR signaling led to a further reduction in proliferation. The number of clones examined (n) for each genotype is indicated. (G) Analysis of Phospho-histone 3 (PH3)-positive mitotic profiles in third instar larval wing discs revealed a general (dorsal, D, and ventral, V, in graph) reduction in the number of mitotically active cells within ap>Stit wing discs compared to control, Student's t test, p<0.005 when comparing either control compartment with either Stit compartment. The number of discs examined (n) is indicated. Scale bar, 50 µm. (H) 10 min of EdU incorporation did not show a compartment-specific change in cells entering into S-phase in ap>Stit discs versus ap>GFP control discs. However, the overall (both dorsal and ventral) labeling was more sparse in Stit wings, although the D/V ratio was close to 1. The number of wing/discs examined (n) is indicated. All error bars indicate standard deviation. The nonautonomous compensatory growth effect is explored further in Figure S1.
Genetic interactions of stit with mutations affecting the PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway.
(A) InR receptor inactivation in the dorsal compartment (ap>InR) reduced total wing size and caused a minor wing bending primarily around the margin. Co-reduction of Stit activity (by Stit) further reduced wing size and gave an upwardly bent wing in addition to the bending at the margin. The stit-IR wing bending phenotypes could be suppressed by co-expression of a constitutively active form of the InR (InR), Rheb, Akt, and constitutively active dS6K (dS6K), indicating that stit acts via or in parallel to the PI3K-I/TORC1 cassette. Dorsal expression of Rheb led to a downwardly bent wing, indicative of overgrowth. This phenotype was also observed upon mild expression of wild-type stit (see Figure S2). (B) Overexpression of stit by MS1096-GAL4 led to a severe crumpled wing phenotype. This could be further enhanced by co-expression of PI3K-I or suppressed by co-expression of PTEN. See also Table S1.
Stit Is Required for Cellular Proliferation During Tissue Growth
To determine the cellular defects leading to wing shape changes upon Stit disruption, we first analyzed stit mutant clones in adult wings. We generated wings composed of forked (f)-marked wild-type cells or f-marked stit mutant cells opposing unmarked minute cells to assess the growth and competitiveness of stit mutant cells. In this setting, wild type almost completely outgrew the minute clones. We found a small, but significant reduction in both the size (wing cell area) and total number of cells in stit clones compared to wild-type clones (Figures 1B and S1C). The overall size of wings containing stit mutant clones was also slightly reduced compared to wings composed of f-marked wild type cells. Similarly, stit inactivation by expression of stit-IR or stit-IR in the posterior compartment by en-GAL4 resulted in a 20%–30% reduction in cell numbers, a significant cell size reduction and an overall size reduction of the posterior wing compartment (Figure 1D,E). This indicated that Stit controls cell growth and/or proliferation in the wing imaginal discs. To directly assess imaginal epithelial growth, we co-expressed GFP with Stit or stit-IR in the dorsal compartment using ap-GAL4. We labeled discs with anti-DE-Cadherin and determined cell numbers and their ratios in the juxtaposed dorsal and ventral epithelial layers at 20–40 h after pupal formation (APF) (Figures 1C and S1D). Wing discs from ap>GFP control pupae had a D/V cell ratio close to the expected value 1. ap>Stit, however, showed a D/V cell ratio of 0.67, indicating a 33% reduction of cells within the dorsal compartment compared to the ventral or compared to the wild-type control ratio. The shape of pupal wing cells expressing Stit was different than control wing cells. They were shorter than their ventral counterparts, or conversely their ventral counterparts appeared taller (Figure S1D, X–Z section). This D/V cell shape difference was not observed in the control and suggests a compensatory mechanism, where either the dorsal cells stretch to cover the larger ventral area or conversely the ventral cells compact to accommodate a reduced dorsal surface. Thus, stit mutant clones or localized expression of Stit and stit-IR caused a decrease in cell numbers at pupal stages and a reduction in both cell size and number in the adult wing. We graded the impact of the genetic manipulations to cell numbers in the order: Stit>stit-IR>stit null mutant. This suggested a prominent Stit protein perdurance in the null mutant clones in the wing and prompted us to focus our analysis on the phenotypes generated by the stit RNAi and the dominant negative transgenes.We first assessed whether the reduction in cell numbers was due to an increase in cell death or a decrease in cell proliferation. Expression of stit-IR and Stit in the dorsal compartment of wing discs did not lead to increase in cell death as assessed by TUNEL labeling or Caspase 3 staining (Figure S1G). Moreover, concurrent expression of p35, a baculoviral caspase inhibitor, together with stit-IR or Stit did not ameliorate the wing bending caused by stit inactivation (unpublished data), suggesting that Stit does not influence apoptosis. To examine its role in cell proliferation, we inactivated stit in clones using hs-flp;Act>CD2>GAL4 (AFG4) to drive Stit and GFP expression. In parallel, we used the same approach to express InR or RagA as positive controls. We determined the number of GFP positive cells in individual clones 48 h after clone induction. We plotted the percentage of clones within defined size intervals and calculated the mean cell doubling time (CDT) for each genotype. The cell numbers in GFP expressing control clones produced a bell-shaped distribution, where the majority (40%) of clones were comprised of 11–15 cells. This resulted in a CDT of 12.9 h (Figure 1F), in close agreement with previous findings [25]. The expression of InR or RagA shifted this bell-shaped curve to the left, indicating an increase in the frequency of clones comprised of fewer cells and a corresponding increase in mean CDT to 14.2 and 17.3 h, respectively. Similarly, Stit expression reduced the number of cells per clone, resulting in a mean CDT of 14.9 h, suggesting that Stit is required for epithelial cell proliferation.To pinpoint a potential function of Stit in cell proliferation, we labeled ap>Stit or ap>stit-IR discs with anti-phosphohistone H3 (PH3), EdU (a BrdU analog), and anti-dGeminin. We observed a strong reduction in the labeling of all three markers in ap>Stit or ap>stit-IR discs compared to the control discs (Figures 1G, 1H, S1E and unpublished data). Surprisingly, the 3-fold decrease of anti-PH3 positive cells was not confined in the dorsal compartment but was evident in the entire wing pouch of ap>Stit. The EdU and Geminin stainings also showed a general reduction in labeling cells upon stit inactivation compared to control discs (Figure S1E). This generalized decrease of proliferative markers in the wing discs in response to localized Stit inactivation is in congruence with a nonautonomous mechanism that coordinates wing growth in response to local perturbations [26]. We labeled discs with the G2/M phase marker Cyclin B. Cyclin B expression is dynamic during the cell cycle, accumulating from the end of S-phase, through G2, abating during mitosis. ap>Stit expressing wing discs showed increased Cyclin B levels in the ventral compartment, suggesting a compensatory prolongation or an arrest in G2 therein (Figure S1F). Thus, apart from the global reduction of mitotic markers and the reduction of the wing size upon Stit inactivation, we did not detect any selective block in the cell cycle. Presumably, the decrease in dorsal proliferation occurs early and continuously during development, while the ventral compensation follows in response. We conclude that stit is required for normal levels of cell proliferation during wing development. Rather than playing a direct role controlling the cell cycle, Stit is more likely required for cellular growth.
Stit and InR Function in Parallel to Promote Growth through TORC1
Inactivation of stit in the dorsal compartment either by MS1096>stit-IR or by ap>Stit generated strong upwardly bent wings resembling the defects caused by the disruption of the InR and other growth regulators (Figures 1A, 2A and Table S1) [27],[28]. ap-GAL4-driven InR caused a strong reduction in wing size and bending primarily around the margin (Figure 2A). This contrasted the bending of the entire wing blade generated by ap>Stit expression (Figure 1A). The difference in wing bending at the margin caused by InR versus the bending of the entire wing blade caused by Stit suggests a spatial control of Stit and InR activation in the discs. Co-expression of Stit and InR in the dorsal compartment further reduced wing size and increased the bending compared to the defects caused by InR alone (Figure 2A). These results suggest that Stit and InR function in parallel to control wing growth. To further examine the effect of inactivating both receptors on wing cell proliferation, we generated hs-flp;Act>CD2>GAL4 clones expressing both Stit and InR and determined the number of cells per clone. The fraction of clones composed of fewer cells increased, leading to a marked increase in CDT (17.5 h) compared to the effect caused by inactivation of either receptor alone. This suggests that both Stit and InR are required for optimal tissue growth (Figure 1F). We therefore examined potential genetic interactions of stit with mutations affecting the PI3K-I/TORC1 signaling cassette. Overexpression of Stit by MS1096>stit causes severe crumpling of the whole blade (Figure 2B). Milder overexpression in the dorsal surface by ap>stit at 18°C caused a gentle bend of the wing downwards, indicative of an overgrowth of the dorsal surface (Figure S2A). A similar downward bending was generated by overexpression of the growth activator Rheb in the dorsal compartment using MS1096>Rheb (Figure 2A). The wing overgrowth phenotypes caused by the overexpression of Stit in the dorsal compartment were accompanied by an increase of BrdU and anti-PH3 in the dorsal compartment (Figure S2B). Thus, the changes in wing shape provide a sensitive assay for Stit function in tissue growth. We tested whether the defects caused by stit inactivation or overexpression can be modified by an array of loss-of-function alleles and overexpression constructs of genes regulating cell death, cell cycle control, and growth (Table S1). We did not detect any interactions with mutations affecting cell cycle progression. However, MS1096-GAL4-driven co-expression of stit-IR together with activating components of the PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway—PI3K-I, Akt, and Rheb—suppressed the stit bent wing phenotype (Figure 2A). Similarly, simultaneous inactivation of stit and PTEN (PTEN-IR) gave a flatter wing, suppressing the effect of stit knock down (Table S1). Furthermore, expression of an activated form of dS6K kinase (the Drosophila ortholog of p70 S6K, a direct TORC1 target) was sufficient to suppress the stit inactivation wing-bending phenotype, indicating that increased TORC1 signaling at any level of the intracellular pathway is sufficient to compensate for a lack of stit. Conversely, the wing phenotype resulting from stit overexpression was suppressed by expression of PTEN, a negative regulator of the pathway and could be enhanced by increasing levels of positive regulators or effectors of the TORC1 pathway, PI3K-I, Akt, Rheb, and dS6K (Figure 2B, Table S1). This implied that Stit activates either the PI3K-I pathway or a novel TORC1 regulatory pathway.
Stit Drives the PI3K-I/TORC1 Pathway to Support Growth and Suppress Autophagy
To investigate the postulated role of Stit in cellular growth, we turned to the larval fat body, which is composed of endoreplicating cells growing without cellular division and thereby facilitates the analysis of cellular growth. Stit is not expressed in the fat body and its inactivation by Stit expression in this tissue did not lead to any discernible cell growth phenotype (Figure S3B,C). To investigate if Stit can induce PI3K-I activation and cellular growth, we overexpressed stit and UAS-RFP in clones in larvae expressing the GFP-PH (tGPH) reporter, which is recruited by PIP3 at the plasma membrane, thus reflecting PI3K-I activity. In parallel, we generated clones overexpressing a membrane targeted PI3K-I (PI3K-CaaX) and Stit as positive and negative controls (Figures 3 and S3). As expected, clonal overexpression of PI3K-CaaX caused a pronounced cell overgrowth and induced membrane accumulation of GFP, while Stit had no effects (Figures 3A and S3B,C). stit overexpressing cells showed an accumulation of the GFP-PH signal but not significant overgrowth compared to their wild-type neighbors (Figure 3B). Upon 24 h starvation, however, PI3K-CaaX- or stit-expressing cells were clearly larger and maintained a strong cortical GFP-PH signal compared to their neighbors (Figure 3A,B). This analysis suggests that Stit, like InR signaling, can activate PI3K-I and spare fat body cells from starvation-induced size reduction [19],[20]. To investigate the potential regulatory role of Stit in starvation-induced autophagy, a TORC1-regulated process, we assessed the accumulation of a Cherry-tagged Atg8a autophagy reporter in clones overexpressing Stit. A starvation period of 5 h induced a punctate Ch::Atg8a accumulation in wild-type cells. This increase in Ch::Atg8a was not evident in cells overexpressing either stit or PI3K-I (Figure 3C, 3D, and 3G). Similarly, the developmental wave of programmed autophagy (P.A.) observed in fed larvae just before pupation was blocked as efficiently by Stit as by PI3K-I (Figure 3E, 3F, and 3G) [20]. Thus, Stit overexpression can spare fat body cells from starvation-induced cell size reduction and autophagy. These observations implicate TORC1 as a downstream effector of Stit. To test this hypothesis we reared larvae overexpressing stit or PI3K-CaaX with 50 µM rapamycin (a potent inhibitor of TORC1 activity) and investigated their ability to block Ch::Atg8a accumulation. Rapamycin treatment for 24 h abolished the inhibitory effect of stit or PI3K-I on Ch::Atg8a accumulation upon starvation (Figure 3E, 3F, and 3G), thus indicating that Stit-mediated suppression of autophagy requires TORC1 activation.
Figure 3
Stit activates PI3K-I to support growth and suppress starvation-induced autophagy.
(A) Clonal overexpression in the fat body (marked by RFP, asterisk) of PI3K-CaaX led to increased recruitment of GFP-tagged PH probe (tGPH) to the fat body cell plasma membrane and cell enlargement. This was more evident under starvation conditions, where membrane-bound levels of GFP-PH declined in neighboring cells. (B) Clones expressing stit were slightly enlarged, more rounded, and had higher membrane-bound GFP-PH levels than neighbor cells. This persisted upon starvation. (C) Clonal overexpression of PI3K-CaaX or (D) stit (marked by GFP, asterisk) in the fat body of larvae expressing a Cherry-tagged Atg8a reporter expressed under the control of a fat body promoter showed that both PI3K-CaaX and Stit can block the starvation-induced punctate accumulation of Ch::Atg8a. Quantified in (G). (E) Clonal overexpression of either PI3K-CaaX (E) or stit (F) in larvae during programmed autophagy (P.A.) demonstrated that both can block Ch::Atg8a accumulation in the expressing cells. Quantified in (G). Feeding the TORC1 inhibitor rapamycin to larvae expressing PI3K-CaaX (E) or stit (F) in clones reverted the Stit-mediated block of Ch::Atg8a puncta accumulation. Quantified in (G). (G) The intensity of Ch::Atg8a in AFG4-positive cells was measured and compared to the nearest neighbor cells to calculate fold changes where a value of 1 (red hatched line) indicates no difference to the normal autophagy response to each condition (starved, fed, P.A./developmental, or rapamycin induced) observed in wild-type neighbor cells. Stit and PI3K-I could both suppress programmed and starvation-induced Ch::Atg8a accumulation/intensity increase. * indicates Student's t test scores of significance (p<0.005) between overexpressing cells and wild-type neighbor cells, while inset Student's t test scores indicate p values of the difference in response of stit-expressing cells/wild-type neighbor cells between conditions—that is, starved and fed. The number of transgene-expressing cells/wild-type neighbor cells where Ch::Atg8a intensity was measured (n) is indicated. Error bars indicate standard deviation. Scale bar, 50 µm. See also Figure S3.
Stit activates PI3K-I to support growth and suppress starvation-induced autophagy.
(A) Clonal overexpression in the fat body (marked by RFP, asterisk) of PI3K-CaaX led to increased recruitment of GFP-tagged PH probe (tGPH) to the fat body cell plasma membrane and cell enlargement. This was more evident under starvation conditions, where membrane-bound levels of GFP-PH declined in neighboring cells. (B) Clones expressing stit were slightly enlarged, more rounded, and had higher membrane-bound GFP-PH levels than neighbor cells. This persisted upon starvation. (C) Clonal overexpression of PI3K-CaaX or (D) stit (marked by GFP, asterisk) in the fat body of larvae expressing a Cherry-tagged Atg8a reporter expressed under the control of a fat body promoter showed that both PI3K-CaaX and Stit can block the starvation-induced punctate accumulation of Ch::Atg8a. Quantified in (G). (E) Clonal overexpression of either PI3K-CaaX (E) or stit (F) in larvae during programmed autophagy (P.A.) demonstrated that both can block Ch::Atg8a accumulation in the expressing cells. Quantified in (G). Feeding the TORC1 inhibitor rapamycin to larvae expressing PI3K-CaaX (E) or stit (F) in clones reverted the Stit-mediated block of Ch::Atg8a puncta accumulation. Quantified in (G). (G) The intensity of Ch::Atg8a in AFG4-positive cells was measured and compared to the nearest neighbor cells to calculate fold changes where a value of 1 (red hatched line) indicates no difference to the normal autophagy response to each condition (starved, fed, P.A./developmental, or rapamycin induced) observed in wild-type neighbor cells. Stit and PI3K-I could both suppress programmed and starvation-induced Ch::Atg8a accumulation/intensity increase. * indicates Student's t test scores of significance (p<0.005) between overexpressing cells and wild-type neighbor cells, while inset Student's t test scores indicate p values of the difference in response of stit-expressing cells/wild-type neighbor cells between conditions—that is, starved and fed. The number of transgene-expressing cells/wild-type neighbor cells where Ch::Atg8a intensity was measured (n) is indicated. Error bars indicate standard deviation. Scale bar, 50 µm. See also Figure S3.To assay TORC1 activity, we examined the phosphorylation of the translational repressor 4E-BP by TORC1, upon stit overexpression. We generated clones of cells in the fat body of fed and starved larvae overexpressing stit, RagA, or PI3K-CaaX together with GFP and labeled the tissues with an antibody against p-4E-BP (Figures 4 and S4A) [22]. RagA expression, known to lower TORC1 activity, caused a reduction in p-4E-BP labeling in clones of fed larvae compared to neighboring cells (Figures 4K and S4A) [3]. Conversely, cells expressing PI3K-CaaX showed a stronger p-4E-BP signal than surrounding cells upon starvation (Figure 4A,K). As such, anti-p-4E-BP reflects the nutritional status and TORC1 activity levels of the cell.
Figure 4
The PI3K-I/TORC1signalling cassette is required for Stit-dependent protection against starvation.
Clonal expression (cells marked by GFP/hatched line) of stit and/or transgenes interfering with TORC1 signaling components in the fat body of starved (5 h) larvae expressing Ch::Atg8a under the control of a fat body promoter (A) PI3K-I-expressing cells have larger nuclei, are protected from starvation-induced Ch::Atg8a puncta formation, and maintain high p-4E-BP levels compared to wild-type neighbors. (B) stit-expressing cells behave like PI3K-I-expressing cells in (A). (C) PI3K-I-expressing cells are smaller and show Ch::Atg8a autophagic puncta and low levels of p-4E-BP (indistinguishable from neighbor cells). (D) stit and PI3K-I co-expression resulted in smaller cells with autophagic puncta and low levels of p-4E-BP following starvation, indicating PI3K-I signaling lies downstream of Stit. (E) Akt-IR, (G) RagA, and (I) TOR-expressing cells are smaller, readily form autophagic puncta, and had lower or similar p-4E-BP levels to neighbor cells. (F) Akt-IR, (H) RagA, or (J) TOR co-expression in cells expressing stit inhibited the increase in cell size, resistance to starvation-induced autophagy (Ch::Atg8a puncta), or maintenance of p-4E-BP levels, indicating that these members of the PI3K-I/TORC1 signaling cassette are required for Stit-dependent starvation resistance. Scale bars, 25 µm. (K) Plot of the ratios of p-4E-BP labeling intensities in cells expressing the transgene to wild-type neighbor cells. The number of overexpressing cells/wild-type nearest neighbor cells counted (n) is given. * indicates Student's t test p values <0.005 between transgene-expressing and wild-type neighbor cells. Co-expression of RagA together with stit blocked stit-supported growth under starvation. This effect was so strong on p-4E-BP levels that it reduced levels far beyond the starved wild-type cell levels, giving significant differences. Inset p values compare differences in preservation of p-4E-BP signal between stit-expressing cells/wild-type neighbor cells and stit and transgene co-expressing cells/wild-type cells. Error bars indicate standard deviation.
The PI3K-I/TORC1signalling cassette is required for Stit-dependent protection against starvation.
Clonal expression (cells marked by GFP/hatched line) of stit and/or transgenes interfering with TORC1 signaling components in the fat body of starved (5 h) larvae expressing Ch::Atg8a under the control of a fat body promoter (A) PI3K-I-expressing cells have larger nuclei, are protected from starvation-induced Ch::Atg8a puncta formation, and maintain high p-4E-BP levels compared to wild-type neighbors. (B) stit-expressing cells behave like PI3K-I-expressing cells in (A). (C) PI3K-I-expressing cells are smaller and show Ch::Atg8a autophagic puncta and low levels of p-4E-BP (indistinguishable from neighbor cells). (D) stit and PI3K-I co-expression resulted in smaller cells with autophagic puncta and low levels of p-4E-BP following starvation, indicating PI3K-I signaling lies downstream of Stit. (E) Akt-IR, (G) RagA, and (I) TOR-expressing cells are smaller, readily form autophagic puncta, and had lower or similar p-4E-BP levels to neighbor cells. (F) Akt-IR, (H) RagA, or (J) TOR co-expression in cells expressing stit inhibited the increase in cell size, resistance to starvation-induced autophagy (Ch::Atg8a puncta), or maintenance of p-4E-BP levels, indicating that these members of the PI3K-I/TORC1 signaling cassette are required for Stit-dependent starvation resistance. Scale bars, 25 µm. (K) Plot of the ratios of p-4E-BP labeling intensities in cells expressing the transgene to wild-type neighbor cells. The number of overexpressing cells/wild-type nearest neighbor cells counted (n) is given. * indicates Student's t test p values <0.005 between transgene-expressing and wild-type neighbor cells. Co-expression of RagA together with stit blocked stit-supported growth under starvation. This effect was so strong on p-4E-BP levels that it reduced levels far beyond the starved wild-type cell levels, giving significant differences. Inset p values compare differences in preservation of p-4E-BP signal between stit-expressing cells/wild-type neighbor cells and stit and transgene co-expressing cells/wild-type cells. Error bars indicate standard deviation.Clonal Stit overexpression in fed larvae did not greatly affect p-4E-BP signal intensity (Figure 4K) but, like PI3K-CaaX, caused a robust increase of the signal in stit-expressing cells compared to wild-type neighbors following starvation (Figure 4A, B, and K). This indicates that stit, like InR, activation is sufficient to activate TORC1-mediated p-4E-BP phosphorylation and to protect cells against the starvation-induced drop in TORC1 activity. Next, we investigated whether dS6K, another well-characterized TORC1 effector, can be phosphorylated by Stit overexpression upon starvation. We analyzed fat body cell clones overexpressing RagA or stit with a p-dS6K antibody. RagA expression strongly reduced the cytoplasmic punctate p-dS6K staining observed in neighboring cells lacking RagA expression (Figure S4B and G). To assess the specificity of the cytoplasmic p-dS6K labeling, we overexpressed dS6K in fat body cell clones and subjected the larvae to a 5-h starvation period. We found that the p-dS6K signal was selectively enhanced in cells overexpressing dS6K compared to surrounding cells with endogenous dS6K levels (Figure S4C and G). This indicated that the p-dS6K antibody can faithfully recognize the cytoplasmic punctate accumulations of p-dS6K. To investigate the nature of these puncta, we labeled larvae expressing the late endosomal/lysosomal marker, GFP-Lamp1, with anti-p-dS6K. During the P.A. wave that clears the larval tissues at pupation GFP-Lamp1 puncta become enlarged and decorated by p-dS6K. This p-dS6K localization supports the observation that a major site of TORC1 activity is on late endosomal/lysosomal structures (Figure S4E) [5]. Clonal overexpression of stit in the fat body (Figure S4D and G) also resulted in the increase of p-dS6K puncta in starved larvae. This analysis indicates that Stit can induce the accumulation p-dS6K and p-4E-BP, two well-characterized TORC1 targets upon starvation.We then monitored p-4E-BP accumulation, cell growth, and the autophagy reporter in clones of fat body cells expressing stit to ask if Stit acts through the conventional PI3K-I-TORC1 pathway to support growth and suppress starvation-induced autophagy. As previously established, clonal expression of PI3K, Akt-IR, and RagA in fat body cells all led to reduction of cell growth and p4E-BP levels and entry into autophagy (Figure 4C, E, and G) [3],[19]. Also, expression of Tor led to a strong cell size reduction, rendered cells equal to neighbors in respect to p4E-BP levels, while it induced a high Ch::Atg8a accumulation (Figure 4I). Co-expression of either PI3K, Akt-IR, RagA, and Tor together with stit reversed the effect of Stit in suppressing autophagy as well as its effect in sustaining growth and p-4E-BP levels upon starvation (Figure 4B, D, F, H, J, and K).Collectively, the analysis of stit overexpression in endoreplicating tissues indicates that Stit can signal through the conventional PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway to sustain TORC1 signaling levels and block autophagy upon starvation.
Stit Controls TORC1 Activity During Wing Development
To address whether Stit controls the growth of proliferating epithelial wing discs through the PI3K-I pathway, we first expressed PI3K-CaaX in clones using hs-flp;Act>CD2>GAL4 (AFG4) and recorded the recruitment of the GFP-PH probe at the cell cortex. We detected a marked increase of the GFP-PH signal in the PI3K-CaaX cells, marked with RFP compared to adjacent nonexpressing cells under starvation conditions. This indicated that GFP-PH reliably reflects PI3K-I activation upon starvation in the wing (Figure 5A). Similarly to PI3K-CaaX, overexpression of stit by MS1096-GAL4 resulted in an increase of the GFP-PH signal along the membranes of the Stit overexpressing cells compared to their neighbors expressing endogenous levels (Figure 5B). This indicated that Stit could activate the PI3K-I pathway in the wing discs. However, neither the clonal inactivation of Stit nor interference with InR signaling by the expression of the dominant negative constructs was sufficient to induce a change in the intensity or the localization of the PI3K-I activity reporter (Figure 5C,D). By contrast, the concurrent expression of both Stit and InR using the same driver lead to a marked decrease in the GFP-PH intensity in the cells expressing both constructs compared to their neighbors (Figure 5E). This was most evident at the interface of cells expressing both Stit and InR. This suggests that Stit and InR co-operate to activate PI3K-I in the wing.
Figure 5
Stit and the insulin receptor cooperate to activate the PI3K-I pathway.
(A) Clones of cells (marked with RFP) expressing PI3K-CaaX in the larval wing discs led to an increased recruitment of the tubulin::GFP-PH probe (tGPH) to the plasma membrane detectable following 24-h starvation. Inset X–Z section (3–4 µm) and line intensity graph is through/over the indicated region in merged panels. RFP (red) and GFP (green) intensities are represented as line intensity graphs. Peaks represent membrane-localized GFP, while troughs correspond to cytoplasmic signal. GFP-PH membrane-associated intensity in the PI3K-CaaX-expressing region is higher than the nonexpressing region. (B) MS1096 expression of stit (red) causes increased GFP-PH membrane recruitment in the expressing cells. (C) Clones of cells expressing Stit or (D) InR alone did not decrease membrane GFP-PH localization. (E) Clones expressing both Stit and InR had lower levels of membrane-localized GFP-PH than wild-type neighbors. Arrowheads denote clone boundaries. Insets show X–Z projections spanning the clones. All images are thin (8 µm) confocal projections. Scale bars, 10 µm.
Stit and the insulin receptor cooperate to activate the PI3K-I pathway.
(A) Clones of cells (marked with RFP) expressing PI3K-CaaX in the larval wing discs led to an increased recruitment of the tubulin::GFP-PH probe (tGPH) to the plasma membrane detectable following 24-h starvation. Inset X–Z section (3–4 µm) and line intensity graph is through/over the indicated region in merged panels. RFP (red) and GFP (green) intensities are represented as line intensity graphs. Peaks represent membrane-localized GFP, while troughs correspond to cytoplasmic signal. GFP-PH membrane-associated intensity in the PI3K-CaaX-expressing region is higher than the nonexpressing region. (B) MS1096 expression of stit (red) causes increased GFP-PH membrane recruitment in the expressing cells. (C) Clones of cells expressing Stit or (D) InR alone did not decrease membrane GFP-PH localization. (E) Clones expressing both Stit and InR had lower levels of membrane-localized GFP-PH than wild-type neighbors. Arrowheads denote clone boundaries. Insets show X–Z projections spanning the clones. All images are thin (8 µm) confocal projections. Scale bars, 10 µm.We further investigated the interplay of Stit and InR during wing growth by monitoring TORC1-dependent dS6K phosphorylation. We first asked whether in situ staining with the p-dS6K antibody provides a reliable readout for the detection of dS6K activation in the wing discs. We expressed dS6K in the dorsal compartment of the wing discs and stained for p-dS6K. We detected an increase of the p-dS6K signal selectively in the basal side of the epithelial cells expressing dS6K (Figure S5A). Conversely, dS6K inactivation by expression dS6K-IR in the posterior compartment of wing discs resulted in the reduction of the pdS6K basal signal in the posterior cells (Figure S5B). This prompted us to use the p-dS6K antibody for the in situ analysis of dS6K activation upon localized inactivation of Stit and members of the InR pathway in the wing discs. We expressed RagA, raptor-IR (an RNAi construct directed against the TORC1 component raptor), InR, stit-IR, and Stit together with GFP in the dorsal wing compartment and assessed their effects on dS6K phosphorylation. As expected, InR, RagA, or raptor-IR lead to a marked reduction in the intensity of p-dS6K labeling compared to the ventral compartment (Figure 6A, B, C, D, and L). Conversely, Rheb expression resulted in an increase in the intensity of p-dS6K labeling (Figure 6J,L). This indicates that the detected dS6K phosphorylation was responsive to the level of TORC1 activity in the compartment. The expression of Stit or stit-IR with the same driver resulted in a reduction of p-dS6K labeling to similar levels as the inactivation of InR pathway components (Figure 6D, E, F, and L). In accord with the in situ analysis of p-dS6K, we detected a modest but reproducible reduction of p-dS6K levels in Western blots of wing disc protein extracts deriving from stit mutant larvae compared to wild-type controls (Figure 6M). The reduction in dS6K phosphorylation upon Stit or InR pathway component inactivation is in close agreement with the adult wing morphology defects caused by the same constructs. This indicates that Stit and InR in parallel control epithelial tissue growth by inducing dS6K phosphorylation.
Figure 6
Stit and InR cooperatively govern TORC1 activity.
Anti-p-dS6K labeling of third instar larval wing discs revealed discrete puncta lying basally within cells. See Figure S5 for control experiments addressing labeling specificity. Transgenes were expressed by ap-GAL4 and expressing cells were identified by GFP (A–H and J) or by Stit detection (I, K). Arrows or arrowheads mark the D/V compartment boundary. D/V ratios of p-dS6K intensities are quantified in (L). (A) Expression of RagA led to a reduction in basal p-dS6K puncta in the dorsal compartment. X–Z sections of the boxed area are shown in (B). (B–F) X–Z sections of discs expressing RagA, raptor-IR, InR, stit-IR, or Stit in the dorsal compartment. The basal p-dS6K signal of interest is boxed in (B) and the dorsal (D) and ventral (V) compartments indicated. Dividing cells at the top of the panel also label strongly (see Figure S6). The dorsal compartment lies to the right in all X–Z sections and arrowheads mark the compartment borders. (G) Expression of stit caused overgrowth of the dorsal region of the disc accompanied by a change in disc morphology, preventing analysis of basal p-dS6K levels. (H) Co-expression of Stit and InR reduced the p-dS6K signal, to a similar extent as either inactivation alone; see (L) for quantification. (I) Co-expression of stit with Stit leads to a reduction of the stit overgrowth phenotype but gave excessively high p-dS6K levels precluding quantification. (J) Rheb expression increased p-dS6K levels within the dorsal region. (K) Co-expression of Rheb with Stit reverted the decrease in p-dS6K levels resulting from Stit inactivation (see L). Scale bar, 50 µm. (L) The intensity of basal p-dS6K within both dorsal and ventral compartments was measured and the D/V ratio for each genotype calculated. Student's t test showed p<0,001 when wild-type D/V ratios were compared with all genotypes except when compared to ap>Stit (p<0.01). ap>Stit was significantly different from ap>Stit (p = 0.0015). (M) Immunoblots of total lysates prepared from third instar larval wing discs of wild-type, wild-type starved, and stit mutant larvae. The ratio of p-dS6k/dS6K was reproducibly lower (40% average reduction (45% in M), 15% standard error, 5 independent experiments, 7 samples) in stit mutant discs compared to wild-type fed animals. Arrowhead indicates the band recognized by the anti p-dS6K antibody.
Stit and InR cooperatively govern TORC1 activity.
Anti-p-dS6K labeling of third instar larval wing discs revealed discrete puncta lying basally within cells. See Figure S5 for control experiments addressing labeling specificity. Transgenes were expressed by ap-GAL4 and expressing cells were identified by GFP (A–H and J) or by Stit detection (I, K). Arrows or arrowheads mark the D/V compartment boundary. D/V ratios of p-dS6K intensities are quantified in (L). (A) Expression of RagA led to a reduction in basal p-dS6K puncta in the dorsal compartment. X–Z sections of the boxed area are shown in (B). (B–F) X–Z sections of discs expressing RagA, raptor-IR, InR, stit-IR, or Stit in the dorsal compartment. The basal p-dS6K signal of interest is boxed in (B) and the dorsal (D) and ventral (V) compartments indicated. Dividing cells at the top of the panel also label strongly (see Figure S6). The dorsal compartment lies to the right in all X–Z sections and arrowheads mark the compartment borders. (G) Expression of stit caused overgrowth of the dorsal region of the disc accompanied by a change in disc morphology, preventing analysis of basal p-dS6K levels. (H) Co-expression of Stit and InR reduced the p-dS6K signal, to a similar extent as either inactivation alone; see (L) for quantification. (I) Co-expression of stit with Stit leads to a reduction of the stit overgrowth phenotype but gave excessively high p-dS6K levels precluding quantification. (J) Rheb expression increased p-dS6K levels within the dorsal region. (K) Co-expression of Rheb with Stit reverted the decrease in p-dS6K levels resulting from Stit inactivation (see L). Scale bar, 50 µm. (L) The intensity of basal p-dS6K within both dorsal and ventral compartments was measured and the D/V ratio for each genotype calculated. Student's t test showed p<0,001 when wild-type D/V ratios were compared with all genotypes except when compared to ap>Stit (p<0.01). ap>Stit was significantly different from ap>Stit (p = 0.0015). (M) Immunoblots of total lysates prepared from third instar larval wing discs of wild-type, wild-type starved, and stit mutant larvae. The ratio of p-dS6k/dS6K was reproducibly lower (40% average reduction (45% in M), 15% standard error, 5 independent experiments, 7 samples) in stit mutant discs compared to wild-type fed animals. Arrowhead indicates the band recognized by the anti p-dS6K antibody.To address possible intersection points of InR and Stit signaling, we overexpressed Rheb and inactivated Stit in the same cells using ap-GAL4. UAS-Rheb expression ameliorated the decrease in p-dS6K labeling caused by Stit inactivation (Figure 6F, K, and L). The restoration of p-dS6K staining intensity to 80% of wild-type together with the strong suppression of the adult wing-bending phenotype caused by Rheb expression in Stit-deficient cells indicate that Stit acts through Rheb to activate TORC1 during wing development (Figures 6K,L and 2A). We concluded that Stit and InR collectively activate PI3K-I and regulate TORC1 levels in the wing imaginal disc to control tissue growth.
Stit and InR Cooperatively Prevent the Catabolic Switch to Autophagy
InR and Stit control TORC1 activity during wing growth while Stit can block autophagy in endoreplicating larval tissues in response to starvation. To directly monitor starvation-induced autophagy in the wing, we used the Ch::Atg8a reporter under the control of its endogenous promoter. We first expressed either GFP alone, or TOR, or RagA or InR or PTEN together with GFP using ptc-GAL4. While GFP alone had no effect on the induction of autophagy (Figures S6A and 7G), both TOR and PTEN caused a marked increase in the number of Ch::Atg8a puncta forming within the GFP marked expression domain (Figure 7A, B, and G), indicating that the PI3K-I/TORC1 axis functions to suppress autophagy in the wing. Surprisingly, RagA and InR or InR-IR showed little or no accumulation of Ch::Atg8a puncta in the ptc expression domain (Figures 7C,G and S6B) despite each causing a substantial decrease in the levels of TOR target p-dS6K (Figure 6 and unpublished data). This argues that p-dS6K phosphorylation and the activation of autophagy markers respond to different levels of InR and TORC1 activity in the wing. This contrasts the analysis of TORC1 activation in the fat body, where InR signaling is the dominant receptor activating PI3K-I. In this tissue, InR mutant cells or cells expressing InR-IR or InR both restrict growth and activate the catabolic process of autophagy (Figure S3E, F) [19]. Like the InR, Stit inactivation by either Stit or stit-IR using ptc-GAL4 (Figure 7D, G and unpublished data) did not increase Ch::Atg8a puncta formation. This analysis indicates that although inactivation of TORC1 alone leads to autophagy, inactivation of either of its upstream receptors is not sufficient to induce the catabolic response in epithelial proliferating cells.
Figure 7
Stit and InR are interchangeably sufficient to block autophagy.
ptc-GAL4 was used to drive transgenes and GFP in the wing discs of third-instar larvae expressing a Cherry-tagged Atg8a autophagy reporter under the control of its own promoter (Ch::Atg8a). GFP expression did not affect the formation of Ch::Atg8a puncta (see Figures S6A and 7G). (A) Expression of a dominant negative form of TOR (TOR) led to a robust induction of autophagic puncta compared to wild-type neighboring tissue. Quantified in (G). (B) Expression of PTEN induced the formation of autophagic puncta, indicating PI3K-I signaling normally holds the autophagic machinery dormant. Expression of either (C) InR-IR or (D) Stit in the ptc domain did not trigger an increase in punctate Ch::Atg8a accumulation. (E) Co-expression of InR-IR together with Stit led to a robust increase in the formation of autophagic Atg8a puncta. Comparable levels of autophagic puncta were observed upon co-reduction of InR/Stit signaling via double RNAi or double dominant negative approaches (see G and Figure S6). (F) Rearing Stit-expressing animals on nutrient-restricted (N.R.) low-energy food led to a notable induction of autophagic puncta, quantified in (G). Scale bar, 50 µm. (G) Graph displaying the ratios obtained from comparison of Ch::Atg8a intensities within the ptc-GFP stripe with the flanking tissue. Student's t test scores for significant differences to control are indicated.
Stit and InR are interchangeably sufficient to block autophagy.
ptc-GAL4 was used to drive transgenes and GFP in the wing discs of third-instar larvae expressing a Cherry-tagged Atg8a autophagy reporter under the control of its own promoter (Ch::Atg8a). GFP expression did not affect the formation of Ch::Atg8a puncta (see Figures S6A and 7G). (A) Expression of a dominant negative form of TOR (TOR) led to a robust induction of autophagic puncta compared to wild-type neighboring tissue. Quantified in (G). (B) Expression of PTEN induced the formation of autophagic puncta, indicating PI3K-I signaling normally holds the autophagic machinery dormant. Expression of either (C) InR-IR or (D) Stit in the ptc domain did not trigger an increase in punctate Ch::Atg8a accumulation. (E) Co-expression of InR-IR together with Stit led to a robust increase in the formation of autophagic Atg8a puncta. Comparable levels of autophagic puncta were observed upon co-reduction of InR/Stit signaling via double RNAi or double dominant negative approaches (see G and Figure S6). (F) Rearing Stit-expressing animals on nutrient-restricted (N.R.) low-energy food led to a notable induction of autophagic puncta, quantified in (G). Scale bar, 50 µm. (G) Graph displaying the ratios obtained from comparison of Ch::Atg8a intensities within the ptc-GFP stripe with the flanking tissue. Student's t test scores for significant differences to control are indicated.We hypothesized that InR and Stit signaling may cooperatively drive TORC1 activation, and hence only a reduction of both pathways would mimic the effect of TOR on autophagy. We introduced either Stit or Stit-IR InR-IR or Stit into the ptc-GAL4 Ch::Atg8a background to examine the effect of inactivating both receptors on autophagy (Figures 7E, G and S6). Each manipulation resulted in a striking increase in the levels of Ch::Atg8a puncta comparable to the one caused by TOR expression. Finally we challenged ptc>Stit animals with prolonged nutrient restriction on low-energy food. This regime delays development by 2–3 d but is sufficient to support larval development to adulthood. Remarkably, constant nutrient restriction gave an increase in autophagy specifically within the ptc domain upon reduction of Stit signaling (Figure 7F, G). We conclude that Stit and InR are interchangeably required to sustain TORC1 activity and to prevent a catabolic switch in wing discs (Figure 8). Thereby, they endow proliferating imaginal epithelial tissues with a two-tiered control of growth and autophagy.
Figure 8
A model for the different modes of autophagy regulation in tissues that express stit.
(A) A model depicting Stit and its intersection with the InR/PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway. As Stit is required and sufficient for PI3K-I activation, we place it in parallel to the InR. While InR is known to signal through Chico (IRS) and Lnk, the RTK adaptor that couples Stit to PI3K-I signaling is unknown (X). (B) The presence of InR or stit is sufficient to block autophagy in the wing, while both are required for optimal wing growth. When reared on low-energy food, Stit is required for repressing autophagy. These findings predict a two-tiered model for the switch between anabolism to catabolism in epithelial tissues.
A model for the different modes of autophagy regulation in tissues that express stit.
(A) A model depicting Stit and its intersection with the InR/PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway. As Stit is required and sufficient for PI3K-I activation, we place it in parallel to the InR. While InR is known to signal through Chico (IRS) and Lnk, the RTK adaptor that couples Stit to PI3K-I signaling is unknown (X). (B) The presence of InR or stit is sufficient to block autophagy in the wing, while both are required for optimal wing growth. When reared on low-energy food, Stit is required for repressing autophagy. These findings predict a two-tiered model for the switch between anabolism to catabolism in epithelial tissues.
Discussion
Animals modulate organ-specific growth according to their developmental stage and homeostatic needs. This is particularly evident during nutrient starvation, when organisms respond by relocating stored energy resources and by recycling of cellular material. The starvation response is, however, not equal in every organ in regards to growth (anabolism) and shrinkage (catabolism) and the molecular mechanisms involved in these different responses are poorly understood. Several findings suggest that variations of insulin-signalling-mediated growth are at play in different organs. In adult Drosophila, the size of the gut is dynamically regulated depending on food availability and InR signaling [29]. Another recent study revealed that growth can be controlled by an alternative RTK when Insulin signaling is reduced in the developing larval Drosophila brain [22]. When larvae were cultivated under nutrient-restricted conditions and InR signaling was low, neuroblasts (NBs) were still able to proliferate. This “brain sparing” is dependent on the ALK receptor in neuronal lineages and its ligand Jelly Belly, which is expressed in glia [30]. Importantly, under normal feeding conditions, ALK is essential for NB development, showing that the ALK signaling pathway is not merely a general backup for the InR upon low nutrition; it rather promotes the growth of specific NB lineages at low InR signaling levels. In this respect, Stit, like ALK, supports growth under variable nutrient conditions, promoting proliferation in epithelial tissues upon low InR signaling but is also necessary for optimal epithelial growth under normal conditions. Curiously, the signaling pathways supporting growth and proliferation downstream of ALK and Stit appear to be different. TSC1/2, Rheb, and TORC1 were dispensable for ALK function in growth and proliferation, while the direct TORC1 downstream targets S6K and 4E-BP were required. Stit, in contrast to ALK, utilizes the classical PI3K-I/TORC1 pathway to drive growth. First, Stit is sufficient to drive PI3K-I activation and suppress autophagy in starved fat body cells. Second, the suppression of autophagy is rapamycin-sensitive and hence TORC1 dependent. Third, Stit and InR cooperate to control PI3K-I activity and autophagy suppression in the wing, and finally, PI3K-I and Rheb overexpression can rescue Stit inactivation phenotypes. As ALK does not signal through TORC1, it is hence unlikely to regulate autophagy. Thus, apart from the insulin receptor, Stit provides the first example of an RTK that negatively regulates autophagy.Simultaneous reduction of the signaling activity of both Insulin and Stit receptors, or prolonged starvation together with reduced Stit activity, leads to the induction of autophagy in the wing. We propose that the simultaneous inactivation of Stit and InR reduces PI3K-I activity and TORC1 signaling to a critically low level, beyond the limit of our p-dS6K detection range. This reveals a mechanism where Stit or InR signaling prevent TORC1 activity from dropping below a threshold where it can no longer suppress autophagy. Thus, while anabolic growth can vary in response to RTK signaling, autophagy and catabolism in proliferating epithelia are strictly inhibited by signaling from either Stit or InR. The cooperative functions of Stit and InR provide a novel failsafe mechanism, allowing TORC1 activity to variably modulate growth under fluctuating nutrient conditions without incurring a transition to catabolism (Figure 8). As Stit is selectively expressed in imaginal discs giving rise to adult epithelial organs, it may function to safeguard the growth of these tissues during conditions of low nutrient availability, at the expense of nonexpressing tissues.The product of the mammalianRet oncogene and Stit share several distinctive features. Their amino acid sequences are 42% identical and 64% homologous within the kinase domain. Both Stit and Ret are composed of an extracellular region with a Cadherin domain, a transmembrane stretch, and an intracellular tyrosine kinase domain. Apart from Stit the fly genome encodes a second Ret paralog (dRet) predominantly expressed in neurons. Although the signals that activate the DrosophilaRet-like proteins remain unknown, Stit is activated upon epidermal wounding to initiate re-epithelialization and barrier repair. MammalianRet is activated by GDNF to instruct epithelial morphogenesis in the uteric duct of the kidney [31] and Ret-activating mutations have been implicated in a variety of humancancers including epithelial cancers (breast and lung) and multiple endocrine neoplasia (men2) [32]–[35]. More recently, overexpression of an activated form of DrosophilaRet that mimics the mutation that leads to men2 has been used to identify potential Ret signal transducers and drugs that interfere with its aberrant activation [36]. Our analysis reveals the physiological role of Stitcher in epithelial tissue growth and proliferation and strengthens the notion that Stit and Ret share the same functions in controlling PI3K-I and TORC1 activity in epithelial tissues. The newly identified function of Stit in sparing proliferating epithelial organs from starvation-induced autophagy raises the question of whether Ret activation may suppress autophagy as well. Since oncogenic Ret mutations promote cancer growth in part by activation of the TORC1 pathway [36],[37], our findings suggest that aberrant Ret signaling may suppress autophagy during cancerous growth, potentially providing an advantageous mechanism or driving force for the growth of Ret-expressing tumors.
Experimental Procedures
Fly Cultivation and Stocks
Flies were cultivated at 25°C on our standard lab fly medium consisting of, per liter, 32.7 g dried potato powder, 60 g sucrose, 27.3 g dry yeast, 7.3 g agar, 4.55 ml propionic acid, and 2 g nipagin, giving a final concentration of 15.3 g/l protein and 6 g/l sugar. Low-energy food consisted of 35 g dried potato powder, 10 g glucose, and 8 g agar per liter. For starvation experiments, larvae were transferred to PBS Agar (1%) for defined periods. Rapamycin (Santa Cruz Biotech, sc-3504A resuspended in Methanol) was diluted to 100 uM in 20% SucrosePBS and mixed to a paste 1∶1 with dry yeast, which was added to PBS agar vials to which larvae were placed for defined periods.The fly stocks w, ap-GAL4/CyO, MS1096-GAL4
[38], en-GAL4, da-GAL4, UAS-InR (K1409A), UAS-InR-CA(R418P), UAS-InR-IR, UAS-Rheb, UAS-PTEN, UAS-PTEN-IR, raptor-IR, UAS-Akt, UAS-PI3K-CaaX, UAS-PI3K-I, UAS-dS6K alleles (wild type and constitutive active, S6KTE, S6KSTDE, or S6KSTDETE, which are intrinsically active due multiple serine/threonine to acidic amino acid substitutions [39]), UAS-TOR, UAS-CycB, UAS-CycE.L, CycE, dap, UAS-FLP, FRT82B Ubi-GFP, UAS-GFP, hs-flp; FRT82B, yw hs-flp;Dr/Tm3,Sb(1), y,w, hs-flp; Act>CD2>GAL4; UAS-GFP, and UAS-p35 were from Bloomington, while UAS-stit-IR (1091 and 8401) and UAS-dS6K-IR (18126) were from VDRC. UAS-Stit, UAS-stit, stit-α-gfp, stit, and stit were described previously [24]. The pWIZ RNAi vector was used to generate the UAS-stit-IR that targets the third exon of stit. Other stocks included hs-flp,UAS-RFP (kind gift from D. Hipfner), UAS-RagAT16N, designated RagA, act>CD2>GAL4/CyO;tGFP-PH (gift from Stephen M. Cohen) [40], pmCh::Atg8a/CyO
[41], yw FLPf36a; FRT82B UbqGFP 83f+ 87D M(3)95A/Tm6b, Tb(1) (gift from Dr. Fernando Roch), and hsp70-Flp; UAS-Dicer; r4-mCh::Atg8a, act>CD2>GAL4, and UAS-GFPnls (generously provided by Thomas Neufeld). The last stock has a leaky heat shock promoter requiring no heat shock, otherwise 20 or 75 min heat shock in a 37°C water bath was applied for fat body or wing clones, respectively. hs-flp; act >CD2>GAL4–generated clones are denoted as AFG4.
Immmunohistochemistry and Microscopy
Larval fat body and/or discs were dissected from larvae, fixed in 4% formaldehyde/PBS (either Sigma F1635 or polysciences #18814 ultrapure) for 20 min, and labeled immediately afterward following standard protocols (PBSBT containing 0.5% BSA). Primary anti-sera included rabbit anti-GFP (Invitrogen, 1/300), rabbit anti-p-dS6K and p-4E-BP (Cell signaling #9209 and #2855, each diluted 1/100), rabbit anti-PH3 (sigma, 1/200), rabbit anti-CycB (D. Glover, 1/750), rat anti-dGem (H. Richardson, 1/300), mouse anti-Fas3 (1/100), and rat anti-DE-Cad (1/30) from DSHB and guinea-pig anti-Stit (1/5,000) [24]. Secondary antibodies were from Jackson Immunolab and Molecular probes. TUNEL and EdU assay kits were from Roche and performed as detailed therein. Samples were mounted in Vectashield H-1000 (vectorlabs) for imaging on either Zeiss LSM510, 710, or 780 confocal microscopes or Zeiss Axioplan2. Western blotting was performed using HRP-conjugated antibodies (Jackson Immunolabs). Rabbit p-dS6K (as above) was used at 1/1,000, mouse anti-tubulin (sigma, T5168) was used at 1/100,000, while rabbit anti-dS6K (kind gift of T. Neufeld) was used at 1/1,000. Twenty larval wing discs per well were run on 10% mini-PROTEAN TGX gels (Biorad). Wild-type animals were starved for 48 h on PBS agar. Densitometric analysis was performed using ImageJ and Image Studio Lite Western Blot Analysis Software (LI-COR).
Image Analysis
Image analysis was performed using ImageJ. For DE-Cad pupal wing labeling and PH3 mitotic cell counting in the wing, a cell counting grid was applied to a projection of the confocal stack to aid manual counting. In the case of pupal wing cell quantification, projections of the dorsal or ventral apical cell surfaces immediately overlaying each other were analyzed. GAL4-driven expression of GFP or RFP allowed distinction of cells of interest in all cases. For intensity measurements (e.g., p-dS6K), thin (10 µm) projections of stacks were analyzed. In brief, the threshold function was applied to images and the dorsal and ventral regions (or in the fat body cells expressing GFP versus their immediate neighbors) were manually highlighted and the intensities measured using the analyzed particles function. Care was taken to ensure that control cells or regions of tissues from different samples and genotypes gave similar background values to which test cells or regions were compared. From this the intensity relative to area was determined for both background and test regions. For AFG4 clones, the number of GFP-positive cells within a clone was manually counted from confocal stacks spanning the entire disc. CDT was calculated using the formula (log2/logn)h, where n = median number of cells per clone and h = age of the clone [25]. The adult wing hair measurements were aided by the image J. In Figure S1C, the posterior region is defined as the area from L4 to posterior wing margin and the anterior region is defined as the area from L3 to anterior wing margin. Error bars in all figures represent standard deviation from the mean. All p values were generated by student's t test.Stit is expressed in the wing and required for its optimal growth. (A) ap-GAL4 was used to induce FRT stit mutant clones (marked by the absence of GFP) in third-instar larval wing discs. Stit protein was not detectably decreased in clones (anti-Stit labeling in red). Scale bar, 50 µm. (B) Pupal wing discs from the same genotype as in (A). Thirty hours after pupal formation (APF), Stit protein was undetectable in GFP negative stit clones. Scale bar, 50 µm. (C) Quantification of relative cell numbers estimated by comparing the growth (counting wing hairs) of f-marked wild-type and f-marked stit mutant clones opposing minute mutant cells. Wild-type clones near entirely outgrew minute cells and were assigned a relative cell number of 1 to which stit versus minute was compared. The number of wings counted (n) is indicated. (D) DE-Cadherin labeling of pupal wings expressing Stit in the dorsal compartment. The number and height (X-Z sections below) of dorsal cells was reduced compared to the ventral cells (see also Figure 1). ap>GFP wings served as controls. Scale bar, 10 µm. (E) Labelling control or ap>Stit third-instar larval wing discs with EdU (left) or dGeminin, (right) revealed an overall decrease of labeling both in dorsal and ventral compartments, quantified in the graph. The number of wing discs included in the analysis (n) is indicated. Student's t test values inset. (F) The expression of Stit in the dorsal compartment led to an accumulation of Cyclin B in the ventral compartment, indicative of cell cycle arrest or delay. This was not observed in the controls (ap>GFP), quantified in the graph. The number of wing discs analyzed is indicated. (G) Control or ap>Stit third-instar larval discs were labeled with TUNEL to detect apoptosis. No notable difference in labeling was detectable between the two genotypes (p>0.5). Arrowheads in (E–G) mark the D-V boundary. The number of wing discs examined is indicated. Scale bar, 50 µm in (E–G).(TIF)Click here for additional data file.Stit overexpression leads to tissue overgrowth. (A) Low-level expression of stit in the dorsal domain (18°C) led to mild and reproducible downwards bending of the adult wing. Expression at higher temperatures resulted in lethality. (B) ap>stit discs labeled for Stit, BrdU, and PH3. The signal for the proliferation markers BrdU and anti-PH3, is increased in the stit-expressing domain (outlined with a hatched line) compared to the rest of the disc.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.InR but not Stit kinase activity supports growth and suppresses autophagy in the fat body. Inactivation of InR and/or Stit in clones of larval fat body cells (labelled by RFP). (A–D) Clonal disruption of InR (InR) or Stit (Stit), separately or together, had no detectable effect on PI3K-I activity as judged by the tGPH probe (green). (E, F) InR inactivations cause the punctate accumulation of the Ch::Atg8a autophagy reporter in the expressing cells. DNA staining reveals the reduced ploidy/cell size in InR- or InR-IR-expressing cells (GFP positive and hatched outline). (G) Fat body clones expressing Stit (GFP positive and hatched outline) did not induce changes in the accumulation of the autophagy marker in FB cells. (H) Effects of both InR-IR and Stit expression in clones were comparable to InR-IR alone. Scale bar, 50 µm.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.The PI3K-I/TORC1 signaling cassette is required for Stit-dependent protection against starvation. (A) Clones of fat body cells expressing RagA (marked with GFP in green) showed reduced p-4E-BP levels under fed conditions. (B) Cells expressing RagA (GFP positive cells outlined with hatched line) showed lower p-dS6K labeling, while wild-type neighbor cells displayed a punctate cytoplasmic labeling pattern. The nuclear p-dS6K labeling was unaltered under these and other conditions (see C and D) and is therefore likely unspecific. Scale bar, 50 µm. (C) Cell clones overexpressing dS6K in larvae under starvation showed increased levels of cytoplasmic p-dS6K signal, while the nuclear labeling remained unaltered. Scale bar, 50 µm. (D) stit expression in cell clones showed increased cytoplasmic accumulation of p-dS6K under starvation conditions. (E) The cytoplasmic puncta of p-dS6K coincided with the late endosomal/lysosomal GFP-tagged protein Lamp1, coating the exterior of the lysosome, in fat body cells undergoing programmed autophagy (P.A.). Inset shows an enlargement of the highlighted area. Scale bar, 10 µm. (G) The intensity of p-dS6K in cells overexpressing dS6K (following 5-h starvation), RagA, stit (following 24-h starvation), and neighboring wild-type cells was quantified and the ratios were calculated and plotted. The number of overexpressing/neighbor cells (n = overexpressing cells/neighbor cells) quantified is indicated. *indicates significant p values (<0.005) between overexpressing cells and nearest neighbor cells. Error bars indicate standard deviation.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.Stit is required for optimal TORC1 signaling in the wing. (A) dS6K overexpression in the dorsal compartment led to a selective basal accumulation of p-dS6K puncta in the dorsal cells of third-instar larval wing discs (right and X–Z section). Dashed line or arrowhead (X–Z section) marks the D/V compartment boundary. Larger clusters of p-dS6K located apically (left) correspond to mitotic cells, magnified in the far right lower panel. Magnified panel measures 25×25 µm. (B) Expression of dS6K-IR in the posterior wing compartment (labelled by GFP) via en-GAL4 lead to a reduction of the basal p-S6K positive puncta, indicating its specificity. The labeling of apical mitotic cells appeared unchanged. Hatching and arrowheads (X–Z section) mark the position of the compartment boundaries in (B) and (C). The basal location of the p-dS6K signal is indicated with a directional arrowhead in X–Z sections. (C) Expression of Stit in the posterior compartment led to a reduction of the basal p-dS6K signal in the posterior compartment. Scale bar, 50 µm.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.Stit and InR are required to suppress autophagy in the wing. (A) Expression of GFP in the ptc domain of third-instar wing discs did not cause a notable change in the accumulation of Ch::Atg8a expressed under the control of its own promoter. The regions selected for intensity quantification (GFP positive and neighbor region) are indicated. (B) Knock-down of InR (InR) in the ptc domain did not change Ch::Atg8a accumulation. (C) Co-expression of InR-IR and stit-IR induced an increase in punctate Ch::Atg8a accumulation. (D) Expression of TOR together with Stit did not lead to a further increase in autophagy compared to TOR alone (Figure 7A). See Figure 7G for quantification. Scale bar, 50 µm.(TIF)Click here for additional data file.Phenotype strength was graded from severe (++++) to nil (−) unless not determined (ND). Additional phenotypes such as lethality (L) or semilethality (S.L.) were also noted. The percentage flies showing the grade of phenotype is given, as is the number of flies displaying the phenotype when totaling less than 50. Otherwise, greater than 50 flies were examined. Second or third indicates the chromosome the transgene is inserted on when more than one transgene stock was tested. All dS6K transgenes were mutated with different point mutations to be constitutively active. * An extremely small crumpled wing phenotype, while U denotes a bent upward wing and D a bent downward wing.(DOCX)Click here for additional data file.
Authors: R Böhni; J Riesgo-Escovar; S Oldham; W Brogiolo; H Stocker; B F Andruss; K Beckingham; E Hafen Journal: Cell Date: 1999-06-25 Impact factor: 41.582
Authors: Louise Y Cheng; Andrew P Bailey; Sally J Leevers; Timothy J Ragan; Paul C Driscoll; Alex P Gould Journal: Cell Date: 2011-08-05 Impact factor: 41.582
Authors: Daniel J Klionsky; Amal Kamal Abdel-Aziz; Sara Abdelfatah; Mahmoud Abdellatif; Asghar Abdoli; Steffen Abel; Hagai Abeliovich; Marie H Abildgaard; Yakubu Princely Abudu; Abraham Acevedo-Arozena; Iannis E Adamopoulos; Khosrow Adeli; Timon E Adolph; Annagrazia Adornetto; Elma Aflaki; Galila Agam; Anupam Agarwal; Bharat B Aggarwal; Maria Agnello; Patrizia Agostinis; Javed N Agrewala; Alexander Agrotis; Patricia V Aguilar; S Tariq Ahmad; Zubair M Ahmed; Ulises Ahumada-Castro; Sonja Aits; Shu Aizawa; Yunus Akkoc; Tonia Akoumianaki; Hafize Aysin Akpinar; Ahmed M Al-Abd; Lina Al-Akra; Abeer Al-Gharaibeh; Moulay A Alaoui-Jamali; Simon Alberti; Elísabet Alcocer-Gómez; Cristiano Alessandri; Muhammad Ali; M Abdul Alim Al-Bari; Saeb Aliwaini; Javad Alizadeh; Eugènia Almacellas; Alexandru Almasan; Alicia Alonso; Guillermo D Alonso; Nihal Altan-Bonnet; Dario C Altieri; Élida M C Álvarez; Sara Alves; Cristine Alves da Costa; Mazen M Alzaharna; Marialaura Amadio; Consuelo Amantini; Cristina Amaral; Susanna Ambrosio; Amal O Amer; Veena Ammanathan; Zhenyi An; Stig U Andersen; Shaida A Andrabi; Magaiver Andrade-Silva; Allen M Andres; Sabrina Angelini; David Ann; Uche C Anozie; Mohammad Y Ansari; Pedro Antas; Adam Antebi; Zuriñe Antón; Tahira Anwar; Lionel Apetoh; Nadezda Apostolova; Toshiyuki Araki; Yasuhiro Araki; Kohei Arasaki; Wagner L Araújo; Jun Araya; Catherine Arden; Maria-Angeles Arévalo; Sandro Arguelles; Esperanza Arias; Jyothi Arikkath; Hirokazu Arimoto; Aileen R Ariosa; Darius Armstrong-James; Laetitia Arnauné-Pelloquin; Angeles Aroca; Daniela S Arroyo; Ivica Arsov; Rubén Artero; Dalia Maria Lucia Asaro; Michael Aschner; Milad Ashrafizadeh; Osnat Ashur-Fabian; Atanas G Atanasov; Alicia K Au; Patrick Auberger; Holger W Auner; Laure Aurelian; Riccardo Autelli; Laura Avagliano; Yenniffer Ávalos; Sanja Aveic; Célia Alexandra Aveleira; Tamar Avin-Wittenberg; Yucel Aydin; Scott Ayton; Srinivas Ayyadevara; Maria Azzopardi; Misuzu Baba; Jonathan M Backer; Steven K Backues; Dong-Hun Bae; Ok-Nam Bae; Soo Han Bae; Eric H Baehrecke; Ahruem Baek; Seung-Hoon Baek; Sung Hee Baek; Giacinto Bagetta; Agnieszka Bagniewska-Zadworna; Hua Bai; Jie Bai; Xiyuan Bai; Yidong Bai; Nandadulal Bairagi; Shounak Baksi; Teresa Balbi; Cosima T Baldari; Walter Balduini; Andrea Ballabio; Maria Ballester; Salma Balazadeh; Rena Balzan; Rina Bandopadhyay; Sreeparna Banerjee; Sulagna Banerjee; Ágnes Bánréti; Yan Bao; Mauricio S Baptista; Alessandra Baracca; Cristiana Barbati; Ariadna Bargiela; Daniela Barilà; Peter G Barlow; Sami J Barmada; Esther Barreiro; George E Barreto; Jiri Bartek; Bonnie Bartel; Alberto Bartolome; Gaurav R Barve; Suresh H Basagoudanavar; Diane C Bassham; Robert C Bast; Alakananda Basu; Henri Batoko; Isabella Batten; Etienne E Baulieu; Bradley L Baumgarner; Jagadeesh Bayry; Rupert Beale; Isabelle Beau; Florian Beaumatin; Luiz R G Bechara; George R Beck; Michael F Beers; Jakob Begun; Christian Behrends; Georg M N Behrens; Roberto Bei; Eloy Bejarano; Shai Bel; Christian Behl; Amine Belaid; Naïma Belgareh-Touzé; Cristina Bellarosa; Francesca Belleudi; Melissa Belló Pérez; Raquel Bello-Morales; Jackeline Soares de Oliveira Beltran; Sebastián Beltran; Doris Mangiaracina Benbrook; Mykolas Bendorius; Bruno A Benitez; Irene Benito-Cuesta; Julien Bensalem; Martin W Berchtold; Sabina Berezowska; Daniele Bergamaschi; Matteo Bergami; Andreas Bergmann; Laura Berliocchi; Clarisse Berlioz-Torrent; Amélie Bernard; Lionel Berthoux; Cagri G Besirli; Sebastien Besteiro; Virginie M Betin; Rudi Beyaert; Jelena S Bezbradica; Kiran Bhaskar; Ingrid Bhatia-Kissova; Resham Bhattacharya; Sujoy Bhattacharya; Shalmoli Bhattacharyya; Md Shenuarin Bhuiyan; Sujit Kumar Bhutia; Lanrong Bi; Xiaolin Bi; Trevor J Biden; Krikor Bijian; Viktor A Billes; Nadine Binart; Claudia Bincoletto; Asa B Birgisdottir; Geir Bjorkoy; Gonzalo Blanco; Ana Blas-Garcia; Janusz Blasiak; Robert Blomgran; Klas Blomgren; Janice S Blum; Emilio Boada-Romero; Mirta Boban; Kathleen Boesze-Battaglia; Philippe Boeuf; Barry Boland; Pascale Bomont; Paolo Bonaldo; Srinivasa Reddy Bonam; Laura Bonfili; Juan S Bonifacino; Brian A Boone; Martin D Bootman; Matteo Bordi; Christoph Borner; Beat C Bornhauser; Gautam Borthakur; Jürgen Bosch; Santanu Bose; Luis M Botana; Juan Botas; Chantal M Boulanger; Michael E Boulton; Mathieu Bourdenx; Benjamin Bourgeois; Nollaig M Bourke; Guilhem Bousquet; Patricia Boya; Peter V Bozhkov; Luiz H M Bozi; Tolga O Bozkurt; Doug E Brackney; Christian H Brandts; Ralf J Braun; Gerhard H Braus; Roberto Bravo-Sagua; José M Bravo-San Pedro; Patrick Brest; Marie-Agnès Bringer; Alfredo Briones-Herrera; V Courtney Broaddus; Peter Brodersen; Jeffrey L Brodsky; Steven L Brody; Paola G Bronson; Jeff M Bronstein; Carolyn N Brown; Rhoderick E Brown; Patricia C Brum; John H Brumell; Nicola Brunetti-Pierri; Daniele Bruno; Robert J Bryson-Richardson; Cecilia Bucci; Carmen Buchrieser; Marta Bueno; Laura Elisa Buitrago-Molina; Simone Buraschi; Shilpa Buch; J Ross Buchan; Erin M Buckingham; Hikmet Budak; Mauricio Budini; Geert Bultynck; Florin Burada; Joseph R Burgoyne; M Isabel Burón; Victor Bustos; Sabrina Büttner; Elena Butturini; Aaron Byrd; Isabel Cabas; Sandra Cabrera-Benitez; Ken Cadwell; Jingjing Cai; Lu Cai; Qian Cai; Montserrat Cairó; Jose A Calbet; Guy A Caldwell; Kim A Caldwell; Jarrod A Call; Riccardo Calvani; Ana C Calvo; Miguel Calvo-Rubio Barrera; Niels Os Camara; Jacques H Camonis; Nadine Camougrand; Michelangelo Campanella; Edward M Campbell; François-Xavier Campbell-Valois; Silvia Campello; Ilaria Campesi; Juliane C Campos; Olivier Camuzard; Jorge Cancino; Danilo Candido de Almeida; Laura Canesi; Isabella Caniggia; Barbara Canonico; Carles Cantí; Bin Cao; Michele Caraglia; Beatriz Caramés; Evie H Carchman; Elena Cardenal-Muñoz; Cesar Cardenas; Luis Cardenas; Sandra M Cardoso; Jennifer S Carew; Georges F Carle; Gillian Carleton; Silvia Carloni; Didac Carmona-Gutierrez; Leticia A Carneiro; Oliana Carnevali; Julian M Carosi; Serena Carra; Alice Carrier; Lucie Carrier; Bernadette Carroll; A Brent Carter; Andreia Neves Carvalho; Magali Casanova; Caty Casas; Josefina Casas; Chiara Cassioli; Eliseo F Castillo; Karen Castillo; Sonia Castillo-Lluva; Francesca Castoldi; Marco Castori; Ariel F Castro; Margarida Castro-Caldas; Javier Castro-Hernandez; Susana Castro-Obregon; Sergio D Catz; Claudia Cavadas; Federica Cavaliere; Gabriella Cavallini; Maria Cavinato; Maria L Cayuela; Paula Cebollada Rica; Valentina Cecarini; Francesco Cecconi; Marzanna Cechowska-Pasko; Simone Cenci; Victòria Ceperuelo-Mallafré; João J Cerqueira; Janete M Cerutti; Davide Cervia; Vildan Bozok Cetintas; Silvia Cetrullo; Han-Jung Chae; Andrei S Chagin; Chee-Yin Chai; Gopal Chakrabarti; Oishee Chakrabarti; Tapas Chakraborty; Trinad Chakraborty; Mounia Chami; Georgios Chamilos; David W Chan; Edmond Y W Chan; Edward D Chan; H Y Edwin Chan; Helen H Chan; Hung Chan; Matthew T V Chan; Yau Sang Chan; Partha K Chandra; Chih-Peng Chang; Chunmei Chang; Hao-Chun Chang; Kai Chang; Jie Chao; Tracey Chapman; Nicolas Charlet-Berguerand; Samrat Chatterjee; Shail K Chaube; Anu Chaudhary; Santosh Chauhan; Edward Chaum; Frédéric Checler; Michael E Cheetham; Chang-Shi Chen; Guang-Chao Chen; Jian-Fu Chen; Liam L Chen; Leilei Chen; Lin Chen; Mingliang Chen; Mu-Kuan Chen; Ning Chen; Quan Chen; Ruey-Hwa Chen; Shi Chen; Wei Chen; Weiqiang Chen; Xin-Ming Chen; Xiong-Wen Chen; Xu Chen; Yan Chen; Ye-Guang Chen; Yingyu Chen; Yongqiang Chen; Yu-Jen Chen; Yue-Qin Chen; Zhefan Stephen Chen; Zhi Chen; Zhi-Hua Chen; Zhijian J Chen; Zhixiang Chen; Hanhua Cheng; Jun Cheng; Shi-Yuan Cheng; Wei Cheng; Xiaodong Cheng; Xiu-Tang Cheng; Yiyun Cheng; Zhiyong Cheng; Zhong Chen; Heesun Cheong; Jit Kong Cheong; Boris V Chernyak; Sara Cherry; Chi Fai Randy Cheung; Chun Hei Antonio Cheung; King-Ho Cheung; Eric Chevet; Richard J Chi; Alan Kwok Shing Chiang; Ferdinando Chiaradonna; Roberto Chiarelli; Mario Chiariello; Nathalia Chica; Susanna Chiocca; Mario Chiong; Shih-Hwa Chiou; Abhilash I Chiramel; Valerio Chiurchiù; Dong-Hyung Cho; Seong-Kyu Choe; Augustine M K Choi; Mary E Choi; Kamalika Roy Choudhury; Norman S Chow; Charleen T Chu; Jason P Chua; John Jia En Chua; Hyewon Chung; Kin Pan Chung; Seockhoon Chung; So-Hyang Chung; Yuen-Li Chung; Valentina Cianfanelli; Iwona A Ciechomska; Mariana Cifuentes; Laura Cinque; Sebahattin Cirak; Mara Cirone; Michael J Clague; Robert Clarke; Emilio Clementi; Eliana M Coccia; Patrice Codogno; Ehud Cohen; Mickael M Cohen; Tania Colasanti; Fiorella Colasuonno; Robert A Colbert; Anna Colell; Miodrag Čolić; Nuria S Coll; Mark O Collins; María I Colombo; Daniel A Colón-Ramos; Lydie Combaret; Sergio Comincini; Márcia R Cominetti; Antonella Consiglio; Andrea Conte; Fabrizio Conti; Viorica Raluca Contu; Mark R Cookson; Kevin M Coombs; Isabelle Coppens; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Dale P Corkery; Nils Cordes; Katia Cortese; Maria do Carmo Costa; Sarah Costantino; Paola Costelli; Ana Coto-Montes; Peter J Crack; Jose L Crespo; Alfredo Criollo; Valeria Crippa; Riccardo Cristofani; Tamas Csizmadia; Antonio Cuadrado; Bing Cui; Jun Cui; Yixian Cui; Yong Cui; Emmanuel Culetto; Andrea C Cumino; Andrey V Cybulsky; Mark J Czaja; Stanislaw J Czuczwar; Stefania D'Adamo; Marcello D'Amelio; Daniela D'Arcangelo; Andrew C D'Lugos; Gabriella D'Orazi; James A da Silva; Hormos Salimi Dafsari; Ruben K Dagda; Yasin Dagdas; Maria Daglia; Xiaoxia Dai; Yun Dai; Yuyuan Dai; Jessica Dal Col; Paul Dalhaimer; Luisa Dalla Valle; Tobias Dallenga; Guillaume Dalmasso; Markus Damme; Ilaria Dando; Nico P Dantuma; April L Darling; Hiranmoy Das; Srinivasan Dasarathy; Santosh K Dasari; Srikanta Dash; Oliver Daumke; Adrian N Dauphinee; Jeffrey S Davies; Valeria A Dávila; Roger J Davis; Tanja Davis; Sharadha Dayalan Naidu; Francesca De Amicis; Karolien De Bosscher; Francesca De Felice; Lucia De Franceschi; Chiara De Leonibus; Mayara G de Mattos Barbosa; Guido R Y De Meyer; Angelo De Milito; Cosimo De Nunzio; Clara De Palma; Mauro De Santi; Claudio De Virgilio; Daniela De Zio; Jayanta Debnath; Brian J DeBosch; Jean-Paul Decuypere; Mark A Deehan; Gianluca Deflorian; James DeGregori; Benjamin Dehay; Gabriel Del Rio; Joe R Delaney; Lea M D Delbridge; Elizabeth Delorme-Axford; M Victoria Delpino; Francesca Demarchi; Vilma Dembitz; Nicholas D Demers; Hongbin Deng; Zhiqiang Deng; Joern Dengjel; Paul Dent; Donna Denton; Melvin L DePamphilis; Channing J Der; Vojo Deretic; Albert Descoteaux; Laura Devis; Sushil Devkota; Olivier Devuyst; Grant Dewson; Mahendiran Dharmasivam; Rohan Dhiman; Diego di Bernardo; Manlio Di Cristina; Fabio Di Domenico; Pietro Di Fazio; Alessio Di Fonzo; Giovanni Di Guardo; Gianni M Di Guglielmo; Luca Di Leo; Chiara Di Malta; Alessia Di Nardo; Martina Di Rienzo; Federica Di Sano; George Diallinas; Jiajie Diao; Guillermo Diaz-Araya; Inés Díaz-Laviada; Jared M Dickinson; Marc Diederich; Mélanie Dieudé; Ivan Dikic; Shiping Ding; Wen-Xing Ding; Luciana Dini; Jelena Dinić; Miroslav Dinic; Albena T Dinkova-Kostova; Marc S Dionne; Jörg H W Distler; Abhinav Diwan; Ian M C Dixon; Mojgan Djavaheri-Mergny; Ina Dobrinski; Oxana Dobrovinskaya; Radek Dobrowolski; Renwick C J Dobson; Jelena Đokić; Serap Dokmeci Emre; Massimo Donadelli; Bo Dong; Xiaonan Dong; Zhiwu Dong; Gerald W Dorn Ii; Volker Dotsch; Huan Dou; Juan Dou; Moataz Dowaidar; Sami Dridi; Liat Drucker; Ailian Du; Caigan Du; Guangwei Du; Hai-Ning Du; Li-Lin Du; André du Toit; Shao-Bin Duan; Xiaoqiong Duan; Sónia P Duarte; Anna Dubrovska; Elaine A Dunlop; Nicolas Dupont; Raúl V Durán; Bilikere S Dwarakanath; Sergey A Dyshlovoy; Darius Ebrahimi-Fakhari; Leopold Eckhart; Charles L Edelstein; Thomas Efferth; Eftekhar Eftekharpour; Ludwig Eichinger; Nabil Eid; Tobias Eisenberg; N Tony Eissa; Sanaa Eissa; Miriam Ejarque; Abdeljabar El Andaloussi; Nazira El-Hage; Shahenda El-Naggar; Anna Maria Eleuteri; Eman S El-Shafey; Mohamed Elgendy; Aristides G Eliopoulos; María M Elizalde; Philip M Elks; Hans-Peter Elsasser; Eslam S Elsherbiny; Brooke M Emerling; N C Tolga Emre; Christina H Eng; Nikolai Engedal; Anna-Mart Engelbrecht; Agnete S T Engelsen; Jorrit M Enserink; Ricardo Escalante; Audrey Esclatine; Mafalda Escobar-Henriques; Eeva-Liisa Eskelinen; Lucile Espert; Makandjou-Ola Eusebio; Gemma Fabrias; Cinzia Fabrizi; Antonio Facchiano; Francesco Facchiano; Bengt Fadeel; Claudio Fader; Alex C Faesen; W Douglas Fairlie; Alberto Falcó; Bjorn H Falkenburger; Daping Fan; Jie Fan; Yanbo Fan; Evandro F Fang; Yanshan Fang; Yognqi Fang; Manolis Fanto; Tamar Farfel-Becker; Mathias Faure; Gholamreza Fazeli; Anthony O Fedele; Arthur M Feldman; Du Feng; Jiachun Feng; Lifeng Feng; Yibin Feng; Yuchen Feng; Wei Feng; Thais Fenz Araujo; Thomas A Ferguson; Álvaro F Fernández; Jose C Fernandez-Checa; Sonia Fernández-Veledo; Alisdair R Fernie; Anthony W Ferrante; Alessandra Ferraresi; Merari F Ferrari; Julio C B Ferreira; Susan Ferro-Novick; Antonio Figueras; Riccardo Filadi; Nicoletta Filigheddu; Eduardo Filippi-Chiela; Giuseppe Filomeni; Gian Maria Fimia; Vittorio Fineschi; Francesca Finetti; Steven Finkbeiner; Edward A Fisher; Paul B Fisher; Flavio Flamigni; Steven J Fliesler; Trude H Flo; Ida Florance; Oliver Florey; Tullio Florio; Erika Fodor; Carlo Follo; Edward A Fon; Antonella Forlino; Francesco Fornai; Paola Fortini; Anna Fracassi; Alessandro Fraldi; Brunella Franco; Rodrigo Franco; Flavia Franconi; Lisa B Frankel; Scott L Friedman; Leopold F Fröhlich; Gema Frühbeck; Jose M Fuentes; Yukio Fujiki; Naonobu Fujita; Yuuki Fujiwara; Mitsunori Fukuda; Simone Fulda; Luc Furic; Norihiko Furuya; Carmela Fusco; Michaela U Gack; Lidia Gaffke; Sehamuddin Galadari; Alessia Galasso; Maria F Galindo; Sachith Gallolu Kankanamalage; Lorenzo Galluzzi; Vincent Galy; Noor Gammoh; Boyi Gan; Ian G Ganley; Feng Gao; Hui Gao; Minghui Gao; Ping Gao; Shou-Jiang Gao; Wentao Gao; Xiaobo Gao; Ana Garcera; Maria Noé Garcia; Verónica E Garcia; Francisco García-Del Portillo; Vega Garcia-Escudero; Aracely Garcia-Garcia; Marina Garcia-Macia; Diana García-Moreno; Carmen Garcia-Ruiz; Patricia García-Sanz; Abhishek D Garg; Ricardo Gargini; Tina Garofalo; Robert F Garry; Nils C Gassen; Damian Gatica; Liang Ge; Wanzhong Ge; Ruth Geiss-Friedlander; Cecilia Gelfi; Pascal Genschik; Ian E Gentle; Valeria Gerbino; Christoph Gerhardt; Kyla Germain; Marc Germain; David A Gewirtz; Elham Ghasemipour Afshar; Saeid Ghavami; Alessandra Ghigo; Manosij Ghosh; Georgios Giamas; Claudia Giampietri; Alexandra Giatromanolaki; Gary E Gibson; Spencer B Gibson; Vanessa Ginet; Edward Giniger; Carlotta Giorgi; Henrique Girao; Stephen E Girardin; Mridhula Giridharan; Sandy Giuliano; Cecilia Giulivi; Sylvie Giuriato; Julien Giustiniani; Alexander Gluschko; Veit Goder; Alexander Goginashvili; Jakub Golab; David C Goldstone; Anna Golebiewska; Luciana R Gomes; Rodrigo Gomez; Rubén Gómez-Sánchez; Maria Catalina Gomez-Puerto; Raquel Gomez-Sintes; Qingqiu Gong; Felix M Goni; Javier González-Gallego; Tomas Gonzalez-Hernandez; Rosa A Gonzalez-Polo; Jose A Gonzalez-Reyes; Patricia González-Rodríguez; Ing Swie Goping; Marina S Gorbatyuk; Nikolai V Gorbunov; Kıvanç Görgülü; Roxana M Gorojod; Sharon M Gorski; Sandro Goruppi; Cecilia Gotor; Roberta A Gottlieb; Illana Gozes; Devrim Gozuacik; Martin Graef; Markus H Gräler; Veronica Granatiero; Daniel Grasso; Joshua P Gray; Douglas R Green; Alexander Greenhough; Stephen L Gregory; Edward F Griffin; Mark W Grinstaff; Frederic Gros; Charles Grose; Angelina S Gross; Florian Gruber; Paolo Grumati; Tilman Grune; Xueyan Gu; Jun-Lin Guan; Carlos M Guardia; Kishore Guda; Flora Guerra; Consuelo Guerri; Prasun Guha; Carlos Guillén; Shashi Gujar; Anna Gukovskaya; Ilya Gukovsky; Jan Gunst; Andreas Günther; Anyonya R Guntur; Chuanyong Guo; Chun Guo; Hongqing Guo; Lian-Wang Guo; Ming Guo; Pawan Gupta; Shashi Kumar Gupta; Swapnil Gupta; Veer Bala Gupta; Vivek Gupta; Asa B Gustafsson; David D Gutterman; Ranjitha H B; Annakaisa Haapasalo; James E Haber; Aleksandra Hać; Shinji Hadano; Anders J Hafrén; Mansour Haidar; Belinda S Hall; Gunnel Halldén; Anne Hamacher-Brady; Andrea Hamann; Maho Hamasaki; Weidong Han; Malene Hansen; Phyllis I Hanson; Zijian Hao; Masaru Harada; Ljubica Harhaji-Trajkovic; Nirmala Hariharan; Nigil Haroon; James Harris; Takafumi Hasegawa; Noor Hasima Nagoor; Jeffrey A Haspel; Volker Haucke; Wayne D Hawkins; Bruce A Hay; Cole M Haynes; Soren B Hayrabedyan; Thomas S Hays; Congcong He; Qin He; Rong-Rong He; You-Wen He; Yu-Ying He; Yasser Heakal; Alexander M Heberle; J Fielding Hejtmancik; Gudmundur Vignir Helgason; Vanessa Henkel; Marc Herb; Alexander Hergovich; Anna Herman-Antosiewicz; Agustín Hernández; Carlos Hernandez; Sergio Hernandez-Diaz; Virginia Hernandez-Gea; Amaury Herpin; Judit Herreros; Javier H Hervás; Daniel Hesselson; Claudio Hetz; Volker T Heussler; Yujiro Higuchi; Sabine Hilfiker; Joseph A Hill; William S Hlavacek; Emmanuel A Ho; Idy H T Ho; Philip Wing-Lok Ho; Shu-Leong Ho; Wan Yun Ho; G Aaron Hobbs; Mark Hochstrasser; Peter H M Hoet; Daniel Hofius; Paul Hofman; Annika Höhn; Carina I Holmberg; Jose R Hombrebueno; Chang-Won Hong Yi-Ren Hong; Lora V Hooper; Thorsten Hoppe; Rastislav Horos; Yujin Hoshida; I-Lun Hsin; Hsin-Yun Hsu; Bing Hu; Dong Hu; Li-Fang Hu; Ming Chang Hu; Ronggui Hu; Wei Hu; Yu-Chen Hu; Zhuo-Wei Hu; Fang Hua; Jinlian Hua; Yingqi Hua; Chongmin Huan; Canhua Huang; Chuanshu Huang; Chuanxin Huang; Chunling Huang; Haishan Huang; Kun Huang; Michael L H Huang; Rui Huang; Shan Huang; Tianzhi Huang; Xing Huang; Yuxiang Jack Huang; Tobias B Huber; Virginie Hubert; Christian A Hubner; Stephanie M Hughes; William E Hughes; Magali Humbert; Gerhard Hummer; James H Hurley; Sabah Hussain; Salik Hussain; Patrick J Hussey; Martina Hutabarat; Hui-Yun Hwang; Seungmin Hwang; Antonio Ieni; Fumiyo Ikeda; Yusuke Imagawa; Yuzuru Imai; Carol Imbriano; Masaya Imoto; Denise M Inman; Ken Inoki; Juan Iovanna; Renato V Iozzo; Giuseppe Ippolito; Javier E Irazoqui; Pablo Iribarren; Mohd Ishaq; Makoto Ishikawa; Nestor Ishimwe; Ciro Isidoro; Nahed Ismail; Shohreh Issazadeh-Navikas; Eisuke Itakura; Daisuke Ito; Davor Ivankovic; Saška Ivanova; Anand Krishnan V Iyer; José M Izquierdo; Masanori Izumi; Marja Jäättelä; Majid Sakhi Jabir; William T Jackson; Nadia Jacobo-Herrera; Anne-Claire Jacomin; Elise Jacquin; Pooja Jadiya; Hartmut Jaeschke; Chinnaswamy Jagannath; Arjen J Jakobi; Johan Jakobsson; Bassam Janji; Pidder Jansen-Dürr; Patric J Jansson; Jonathan Jantsch; Sławomir Januszewski; Alagie Jassey; Steve Jean; Hélène Jeltsch-David; Pavla Jendelova; Andreas Jenny; Thomas E Jensen; Niels Jessen; Jenna L Jewell; Jing Ji; Lijun Jia; Rui Jia; Liwen Jiang; Qing Jiang; Richeng Jiang; Teng Jiang; Xuejun Jiang; Yu Jiang; Maria Jimenez-Sanchez; Eun-Jung Jin; Fengyan Jin; Hongchuan Jin; Li Jin; Luqi Jin; Meiyan Jin; Si Jin; Eun-Kyeong Jo; Carine Joffre; Terje Johansen; Gail V W Johnson; Simon A Johnston; Eija Jokitalo; Mohit Kumar Jolly; Leo A B Joosten; Joaquin Jordan; Bertrand Joseph; Dianwen Ju; Jeong-Sun Ju; Jingfang Ju; Esmeralda Juárez; Delphine Judith; Gábor Juhász; Youngsoo Jun; Chang Hwa Jung; Sung-Chul Jung; Yong Keun Jung; Heinz Jungbluth; Johannes Jungverdorben; Steffen Just; Kai Kaarniranta; Allen Kaasik; Tomohiro Kabuta; Daniel Kaganovich; Alon Kahana; Renate Kain; Shinjo Kajimura; Maria Kalamvoki; Manjula Kalia; Danuta S Kalinowski; Nina Kaludercic; Ioanna Kalvari; Joanna Kaminska; Vitaliy O Kaminskyy; Hiromitsu Kanamori; Keizo Kanasaki; Chanhee Kang; Rui Kang; Sang Sun Kang; Senthilvelrajan Kaniyappan; Tomotake Kanki; Thirumala-Devi Kanneganti; Anumantha G Kanthasamy; Arthi Kanthasamy; Marc Kantorow; Orsolya Kapuy; Michalis V Karamouzis; Md Razaul Karim; Parimal Karmakar; Rajesh G Katare; Masaru Kato; Stefan H E Kaufmann; Anu Kauppinen; Gur P Kaushal; Susmita Kaushik; Kiyoshi Kawasaki; Kemal Kazan; Po-Yuan Ke; Damien J Keating; Ursula Keber; John H Kehrl; Kate E Keller; Christian W Keller; Jongsook Kim Kemper; Candia M Kenific; Oliver Kepp; Stephanie Kermorgant; Andreas Kern; Robin Ketteler; Tom G Keulers; Boris Khalfin; Hany Khalil; Bilon Khambu; Shahid Y Khan; Vinoth Kumar Megraj Khandelwal; Rekha Khandia; Widuri Kho; Noopur V Khobrekar; Sataree Khuansuwan; Mukhran Khundadze; Samuel A Killackey; Dasol Kim; Deok Ryong Kim; Do-Hyung Kim; Dong-Eun Kim; Eun Young Kim; Eun-Kyoung Kim; Hak-Rim Kim; Hee-Sik Kim; Jeong Hun Kim; Jin Kyung Kim; Jin-Hoi Kim; Joungmok Kim; Ju Hwan Kim; Keun Il Kim; Peter K Kim; Seong-Jun Kim; Scot R Kimball; Adi Kimchi; Alec C Kimmelman; Tomonori Kimura; Matthew A King; Kerri J Kinghorn; Conan G Kinsey; Vladimir Kirkin; Lorrie A Kirshenbaum; Sergey L Kiselev; Shuji Kishi; Katsuhiko Kitamoto; Yasushi Kitaoka; Kaio Kitazato; Richard N Kitsis; Josef T Kittler; Ole Kjaerulff; Peter S Klein; Thomas Klopstock; Jochen Klucken; Helene Knævelsrud; Roland L Knorr; Ben C B Ko; Fred Ko; Jiunn-Liang Ko; Hotaka Kobayashi; Satoru Kobayashi; Ina Koch; Jan C Koch; Ulrich Koenig; Donat Kögel; Young Ho Koh; Masato Koike; Sepp D Kohlwein; Nur M Kocaturk; Masaaki Komatsu; Jeannette König; Toru Kono; Benjamin T Kopp; Tamas Korcsmaros; Gözde Korkmaz; Viktor I Korolchuk; Mónica Suárez Korsnes; Ali Koskela; Janaiah Kota; Yaichiro Kotake; Monica L Kotler; Yanjun Kou; Michael I Koukourakis; Evangelos Koustas; Attila L Kovacs; Tibor Kovács; Daisuke Koya; Tomohiro Kozako; Claudine Kraft; Dimitri Krainc; Helmut Krämer; Anna D Krasnodembskaya; Carole Kretz-Remy; Guido Kroemer; Nicholas T Ktistakis; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; Sabine Kuenen; Lars Kuerschner; Thomas Kukar; Ajay Kumar; Ashok Kumar; Deepak Kumar; Dhiraj Kumar; Sharad Kumar; Shinji Kume; Caroline Kumsta; Chanakya N Kundu; Mondira Kundu; Ajaikumar B Kunnumakkara; Lukasz Kurgan; Tatiana G Kutateladze; Ozlem Kutlu; SeongAe Kwak; Ho Jeong Kwon; Taeg Kyu Kwon; Yong Tae Kwon; Irene Kyrmizi; Albert La Spada; Patrick Labonté; Sylvain Ladoire; Ilaria Laface; Frank Lafont; Diane C Lagace; Vikramjit Lahiri; Zhibing Lai; Angela S Laird; Aparna Lakkaraju; Trond Lamark; Sheng-Hui Lan; Ane Landajuela; Darius J R Lane; Jon D Lane; Charles H Lang; Carsten Lange; Ülo Langel; Rupert Langer; Pierre Lapaquette; Jocelyn Laporte; Nicholas F LaRusso; Isabel Lastres-Becker; Wilson Chun Yu Lau; Gordon W Laurie; Sergio Lavandero; Betty Yuen Kwan Law; Helen Ka-Wai Law; Rob Layfield; Weidong Le; Herve Le Stunff; Alexandre Y Leary; Jean-Jacques Lebrun; Lionel Y W Leck; Jean-Philippe Leduc-Gaudet; Changwook Lee; Chung-Pei Lee; Da-Hye Lee; Edward B Lee; Erinna F Lee; Gyun Min Lee; He-Jin Lee; Heung Kyu Lee; Jae Man Lee; Jason S Lee; Jin-A Lee; Joo-Yong Lee; Jun Hee Lee; Michael Lee; Min Goo Lee; Min Jae Lee; Myung-Shik Lee; Sang Yoon Lee; Seung-Jae Lee; Stella Y Lee; Sung Bae Lee; Won Hee Lee; Ying-Ray Lee; Yong-Ho Lee; Youngil Lee; Christophe Lefebvre; Renaud Legouis; Yu L Lei; Yuchen Lei; Sergey Leikin; Gerd Leitinger; Leticia Lemus; Shuilong Leng; Olivia Lenoir; Guido Lenz; Heinz Josef Lenz; Paola Lenzi; Yolanda León; Andréia M Leopoldino; Christoph Leschczyk; Stina Leskelä; Elisabeth Letellier; Chi-Ting Leung; Po Sing Leung; Jeremy S Leventhal; Beth Levine; Patrick A Lewis; Klaus Ley; Bin Li; Da-Qiang Li; Jianming Li; Jing Li; Jiong Li; Ke Li; Liwu Li; Mei Li; Min Li; Min Li; Ming Li; Mingchuan Li; Pin-Lan Li; Ming-Qing Li; Qing Li; Sheng Li; Tiangang Li; Wei Li; Wenming Li; Xue Li; Yi-Ping Li; Yuan Li; Zhiqiang Li; Zhiyong Li; Zhiyuan Li; Jiqin Lian; Chengyu Liang; Qiangrong Liang; Weicheng Liang; Yongheng Liang; YongTian Liang; Guanghong Liao; Lujian Liao; Mingzhi Liao; Yung-Feng Liao; Mariangela Librizzi; Pearl P Y Lie; Mary A Lilly; Hyunjung J Lim; Thania R R Lima; Federica Limana; Chao Lin; Chih-Wen Lin; Dar-Shong Lin; Fu-Cheng Lin; Jiandie D Lin; Kurt M Lin; Kwang-Huei Lin; Liang-Tzung Lin; Pei-Hui Lin; Qiong Lin; Shaofeng Lin; Su-Ju Lin; Wenyu Lin; Xueying Lin; Yao-Xin Lin; Yee-Shin Lin; Rafael Linden; Paula Lindner; Shuo-Chien Ling; Paul Lingor; Amelia K Linnemann; Yih-Cherng Liou; Marta M Lipinski; Saška Lipovšek; Vitor A Lira; Natalia Lisiak; Paloma B Liton; Chao Liu; Ching-Hsuan Liu; Chun-Feng Liu; Cui Hua Liu; Fang Liu; Hao Liu; Hsiao-Sheng Liu; Hua-Feng Liu; Huifang Liu; Jia Liu; Jing Liu; Julia Liu; Leyuan Liu; Longhua Liu; Meilian Liu; Qin Liu; Wei Liu; Wende Liu; Xiao-Hong Liu; Xiaodong Liu; Xingguo Liu; Xu Liu; Xuedong Liu; Yanfen Liu; Yang Liu; Yang Liu; Yueyang Liu; Yule Liu; J Andrew Livingston; Gerard Lizard; Jose M Lizcano; Senka Ljubojevic-Holzer; Matilde E LLeonart; David Llobet-Navàs; Alicia Llorente; Chih Hung Lo; Damián Lobato-Márquez; Qi Long; Yun Chau Long; Ben Loos; Julia A Loos; Manuela G López; Guillermo López-Doménech; José Antonio López-Guerrero; Ana T López-Jiménez; Óscar López-Pérez; Israel López-Valero; Magdalena J Lorenowicz; Mar Lorente; Peter Lorincz; Laura Lossi; Sophie Lotersztajn; Penny E Lovat; Jonathan F Lovell; Alenka Lovy; Péter Lőw; Guang Lu; Haocheng Lu; Jia-Hong Lu; Jin-Jian Lu; Mengji Lu; Shuyan Lu; Alessandro Luciani; John M Lucocq; Paula Ludovico; Micah A Luftig; Morten Luhr; Diego Luis-Ravelo; Julian J Lum; Liany Luna-Dulcey; Anders H Lund; Viktor K Lund; Jan D Lünemann; Patrick Lüningschrör; Honglin Luo; Rongcan Luo; Shouqing Luo; Zhi Luo; Claudio Luparello; Bernhard Lüscher; Luan Luu; Alex Lyakhovich; Konstantin G Lyamzaev; Alf Håkon Lystad; Lyubomyr Lytvynchuk; Alvin C Ma; Changle Ma; Mengxiao Ma; Ning-Fang Ma; Quan-Hong Ma; Xinliang Ma; Yueyun Ma; Zhenyi Ma; Ormond A MacDougald; Fernando Macian; Gustavo C MacIntosh; Jeffrey P MacKeigan; Kay F Macleod; Sandra Maday; Frank Madeo; Muniswamy Madesh; Tobias Madl; Julio Madrigal-Matute; Akiko Maeda; Yasuhiro Maejima; Marta Magarinos; Poornima Mahavadi; Emiliano Maiani; Kenneth Maiese; Panchanan Maiti; Maria Chiara Maiuri; Barbara Majello; Michael B Major; Elena Makareeva; Fayaz Malik; Karthik Mallilankaraman; Walter Malorni; Alina Maloyan; Najiba Mammadova; Gene Chi Wai Man; Federico Manai; Joseph D Mancias; Eva-Maria Mandelkow; Michael A Mandell; Angelo A Manfredi; Masoud H Manjili; Ravi Manjithaya; Patricio Manque; Bella B Manshian; Raquel Manzano; Claudia Manzoni; Kai Mao; Cinzia Marchese; Sandrine Marchetti; Anna Maria Marconi; Fabrizio Marcucci; Stefania Mardente; Olga A Mareninova; Marta Margeta; Muriel Mari; Sara Marinelli; Oliviero Marinelli; Guillermo Mariño; Sofia Mariotto; Richard S Marshall; Mark R Marten; Sascha Martens; Alexandre P J Martin; Katie R Martin; Sara Martin; Shaun Martin; Adrián Martín-Segura; Miguel A Martín-Acebes; Inmaculada Martin-Burriel; Marcos Martin-Rincon; Paloma Martin-Sanz; José A Martina; Wim Martinet; Aitor Martinez; Ana Martinez; Jennifer Martinez; Moises Martinez Velazquez; Nuria Martinez-Lopez; Marta Martinez-Vicente; Daniel O Martins; Joilson O Martins; Waleska K Martins; Tania Martins-Marques; Emanuele Marzetti; Shashank Masaldan; Celine Masclaux-Daubresse; Douglas G Mashek; Valentina Massa; Lourdes Massieu; Glenn R Masson; Laura Masuelli; Anatoliy I Masyuk; Tetyana V Masyuk; Paola Matarrese; Ander Matheu; Satoaki Matoba; Sachiko Matsuzaki; Pamela Mattar; Alessandro Matte; Domenico Mattoscio; José L Mauriz; Mario Mauthe; Caroline Mauvezin; Emanual Maverakis; Paola Maycotte; Johanna Mayer; Gianluigi Mazzoccoli; Cristina Mazzoni; Joseph R Mazzulli; Nami McCarty; Christine McDonald; Mitchell R McGill; Sharon L McKenna; BethAnn McLaughlin; Fionn McLoughlin; Mark A McNiven; Thomas G McWilliams; Fatima Mechta-Grigoriou; Tania Catarina Medeiros; Diego L Medina; Lynn A Megeney; Klara Megyeri; Maryam Mehrpour; Jawahar L Mehta; Alfred J Meijer; Annemarie H Meijer; Jakob Mejlvang; Alicia Meléndez; Annette Melk; Gonen Memisoglu; Alexandrina F Mendes; Delong Meng; Fei Meng; Tian Meng; Rubem Menna-Barreto; Manoj B Menon; Carol Mercer; Anne E Mercier; Jean-Louis Mergny; Adalberto Merighi; Seth D Merkley; Giuseppe Merla; Volker Meske; Ana Cecilia Mestre; Shree Padma Metur; Christian Meyer; Hemmo Meyer; Wenyi Mi; Jeanne Mialet-Perez; Junying Miao; Lucia Micale; Yasuo Miki; Enrico Milan; Małgorzata Milczarek; Dana L Miller; Samuel I Miller; Silke Miller; Steven W Millward; Ira Milosevic; Elena A Minina; Hamed Mirzaei; Hamid Reza Mirzaei; Mehdi Mirzaei; Amit Mishra; Nandita Mishra; Paras Kumar Mishra; Maja Misirkic Marjanovic; Roberta Misasi; Amit Misra; Gabriella Misso; Claire Mitchell; Geraldine Mitou; Tetsuji Miura; Shigeki Miyamoto; Makoto Miyazaki; Mitsunori Miyazaki; 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Per Nilsson; Shunbin Ning; Rituraj Niranjan; Hiroshi Nishimune; Mireia Niso-Santano; Ralph A Nixon; Annalisa Nobili; Clevio Nobrega; Takeshi Noda; Uxía Nogueira-Recalde; Trevor M Nolan; Ivan Nombela; Ivana Novak; Beatriz Novoa; Takashi Nozawa; Nobuyuki Nukina; Carmen Nussbaum-Krammer; Jesper Nylandsted; Tracey R O'Donovan; Seónadh M O'Leary; Eyleen J O'Rourke; Mary P O'Sullivan; Timothy E O'Sullivan; Salvatore Oddo; Ina Oehme; Michinaga Ogawa; Eric Ogier-Denis; Margret H Ogmundsdottir; Besim Ogretmen; Goo Taeg Oh; Seon-Hee Oh; Young J Oh; Takashi Ohama; Yohei Ohashi; Masaki Ohmuraya; Vasileios Oikonomou; Rani Ojha; Koji Okamoto; Hitoshi Okazawa; Masahide Oku; Sara Oliván; Jorge M A Oliveira; Michael Ollmann; James A Olzmann; Shakib Omari; M Bishr Omary; Gizem Önal; Martin Ondrej; Sang-Bing Ong; Sang-Ging Ong; Anna Onnis; Juan A Orellana; Sara Orellana-Muñoz; Maria Del Mar Ortega-Villaizan; Xilma R Ortiz-Gonzalez; Elena Ortona; Heinz D Osiewacz; Abdel-Hamid K Osman; Rosario Osta; Marisa S Otegui; 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Francesca Pentimalli; Cláudia Mf Pereira; Gustavo J S Pereira; Lilian C Pereira; Luis Pereira de Almeida; Nirma D Perera; Ángel Pérez-Lara; Ana B Perez-Oliva; María Esther Pérez-Pérez; Palsamy Periyasamy; Andras Perl; Cristiana Perrotta; Ida Perrotta; Richard G Pestell; Morten Petersen; Irina Petrache; Goran Petrovski; Thorsten Pfirrmann; Astrid S Pfister; Jennifer A Philips; Huifeng Pi; Anna Picca; Alicia M Pickrell; Sandy Picot; Giovanna M Pierantoni; Marina Pierdominici; Philippe Pierre; Valérie Pierrefite-Carle; Karolina Pierzynowska; Federico Pietrocola; Miroslawa Pietruczuk; Claudio Pignata; Felipe X Pimentel-Muiños; Mario Pinar; Roberta O Pinheiro; Ronit Pinkas-Kramarski; Paolo Pinton; Karolina Pircs; Sujan Piya; Paola Pizzo; Theo S Plantinga; Harald W Platta; Ainhoa Plaza-Zabala; Markus Plomann; Egor Y Plotnikov; Helene Plun-Favreau; Ryszard Pluta; Roger Pocock; Stefanie Pöggeler; Christian Pohl; Marc Poirot; Angelo Poletti; Marisa Ponpuak; Hana Popelka; Blagovesta Popova; Helena Porta; Soledad Porte Alcon; Eliana Portilla-Fernandez; Martin Post; Malia B Potts; Joanna Poulton; Ted Powers; Veena Prahlad; Tomasz K Prajsnar; Domenico Praticò; Rosaria Prencipe; Muriel Priault; Tassula Proikas-Cezanne; Vasilis J Promponas; Christopher G Proud; Rosa Puertollano; Luigi Puglielli; Thomas Pulinilkunnil; Deepika Puri; Rajat Puri; Julien Puyal; Xiaopeng Qi; Yongmei Qi; Wenbin Qian; Lei Qiang; Yu Qiu; Joe Quadrilatero; Jorge Quarleri; Nina Raben; Hannah Rabinowich; Debora Ragona; Michael J Ragusa; Nader Rahimi; Marveh Rahmati; Valeria Raia; Nuno Raimundo; Namakkal-Soorappan Rajasekaran; Sriganesh Ramachandra Rao; Abdelhaq Rami; Ignacio Ramírez-Pardo; David B Ramsden; Felix Randow; Pundi N Rangarajan; Danilo Ranieri; Hai Rao; Lang Rao; Rekha Rao; Sumit Rathore; J Arjuna Ratnayaka; Edward A Ratovitski; Palaniyandi Ravanan; Gloria Ravegnini; Swapan K Ray; Babak Razani; Vito Rebecca; Fulvio Reggiori; Anne Régnier-Vigouroux; Andreas S Reichert; David Reigada; Jan H Reiling; Theo Rein; Siegfried Reipert; Rokeya Sultana Rekha; Hongmei Ren; Jun Ren; Weichao Ren; Tristan Renault; Giorgia Renga; Karen Reue; Kim Rewitz; Bruna Ribeiro de Andrade Ramos; S Amer Riazuddin; Teresa M Ribeiro-Rodrigues; Jean-Ehrland Ricci; Romeo Ricci; Victoria Riccio; Des R Richardson; Yasuko Rikihisa; Makarand V Risbud; Ruth M Risueño; Konstantinos Ritis; Salvatore Rizza; Rosario Rizzuto; Helen C Roberts; Luke D Roberts; Katherine J Robinson; Maria Carmela Roccheri; Stephane Rocchi; George G Rodney; Tiago Rodrigues; Vagner Ramon Rodrigues Silva; Amaia Rodriguez; Ruth Rodriguez-Barrueco; Nieves Rodriguez-Henche; Humberto Rodriguez-Rocha; Jeroen Roelofs; Robert S Rogers; Vladimir V Rogov; Ana I Rojo; Krzysztof Rolka; Vanina Romanello; Luigina Romani; Alessandra Romano; Patricia S Romano; David Romeo-Guitart; Luis C Romero; Montserrat Romero; Joseph C Roney; Christopher Rongo; Sante Roperto; Mathias T Rosenfeldt; Philip Rosenstiel; Anne G Rosenwald; Kevin A Roth; Lynn Roth; Steven Roth; Kasper M A Rouschop; 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Laura Segatori; Nava Segev; Per O Seglen; Iban Seiliez; Ekihiro Seki; Scott B Selleck; Frank W Sellke; Joshua T Selsby; Michael Sendtner; Serif Senturk; Elena Seranova; Consolato Sergi; Ruth Serra-Moreno; Hiromi Sesaki; Carmine Settembre; Subba Rao Gangi Setty; Gianluca Sgarbi; Ou Sha; John J Shacka; Javeed A Shah; Dantong Shang; Changshun Shao; Feng Shao; Soroush Sharbati; Lisa M Sharkey; Dipali Sharma; Gaurav Sharma; Kulbhushan Sharma; Pawan Sharma; Surendra Sharma; Han-Ming Shen; Hongtao Shen; Jiangang Shen; Ming Shen; Weili Shen; Zheni Shen; Rui Sheng; Zhi Sheng; Zu-Hang Sheng; Jianjian Shi; Xiaobing Shi; Ying-Hong Shi; Kahori Shiba-Fukushima; Jeng-Jer Shieh; Yohta Shimada; Shigeomi Shimizu; Makoto Shimozawa; Takahiro Shintani; Christopher J Shoemaker; Shahla Shojaei; Ikuo Shoji; Bhupendra V Shravage; Viji Shridhar; Chih-Wen Shu; Hong-Bing Shu; Ke Shui; Arvind K Shukla; Timothy E Shutt; Valentina Sica; Aleem Siddiqui; Amanda Sierra; Virginia Sierra-Torre; Santiago Signorelli; Payel Sil; Bruno J de Andrade Silva; Johnatas D Silva; Eduardo Silva-Pavez; Sandrine Silvente-Poirot; Rachel E Simmonds; Anna Katharina Simon; Hans-Uwe Simon; Matias Simons; Anurag Singh; Lalit P Singh; Rajat Singh; Shivendra V Singh; Shrawan K Singh; Sudha B Singh; Sunaina Singh; Surinder Pal Singh; Debasish Sinha; Rohit Anthony Sinha; Sangita Sinha; Agnieszka Sirko; Kapil Sirohi; Efthimios L Sivridis; Panagiotis Skendros; Aleksandra Skirycz; Iva Slaninová; Soraya S Smaili; Andrei Smertenko; Matthew D Smith; Stefaan J Soenen; Eun Jung Sohn; Sophia P M Sok; Giancarlo Solaini; Thierry Soldati; Scott A Soleimanpour; Rosa M Soler; Alexei Solovchenko; Jason A Somarelli; Avinash Sonawane; Fuyong Song; Hyun Kyu Song; Ju-Xian Song; Kunhua Song; Zhiyin Song; Leandro R Soria; Maurizio Sorice; Alexander A Soukas; Sandra-Fausia Soukup; Diana Sousa; Nadia Sousa; Paul A Spagnuolo; Stephen A Spector; M M Srinivas Bharath; Daret St Clair; Venturina Stagni; Leopoldo Staiano; Clint A Stalnecker; Metodi V Stankov; Peter B Stathopulos; Katja Stefan; Sven Marcel Stefan; Leonidas Stefanis; Joan S Steffan; Alexander Steinkasserer; Harald Stenmark; Jared Sterneckert; Craig Stevens; Veronika Stoka; Stephan Storch; Björn Stork; Flavie Strappazzon; Anne Marie Strohecker; Dwayne G Stupack; Huanxing Su; Ling-Yan Su; Longxiang Su; Ana M Suarez-Fontes; Carlos S Subauste; Selvakumar Subbian; Paula V Subirada; Ganapasam Sudhandiran; Carolyn M Sue; Xinbing Sui; Corey Summers; Guangchao Sun; Jun Sun; Kang Sun; Meng-Xiang Sun; Qiming Sun; Yi Sun; Zhongjie Sun; Karen K S Sunahara; Eva Sundberg; Katalin Susztak; Peter Sutovsky; Hidekazu Suzuki; Gary Sweeney; J David Symons; Stephen Cho Wing Sze; Nathaniel J Szewczyk; Anna Tabęcka-Łonczynska; Claudio Tabolacci; Frank Tacke; Heinrich Taegtmeyer; Marco Tafani; Mitsuo Tagaya; Haoran Tai; Stephen W G Tait; Yoshinori Takahashi; Szabolcs Takats; Priti Talwar; Chit Tam; Shing Yau Tam; Davide Tampellini; Atsushi Tamura; Chong Teik Tan; Eng-King Tan; Ya-Qin Tan; Masaki Tanaka; Motomasa Tanaka; Daolin Tang; Jingfeng Tang; Tie-Shan Tang; Isei Tanida; Zhipeng Tao; Mohammed Taouis; Lars Tatenhorst; Nektarios Tavernarakis; Allen Taylor; Gregory A Taylor; Joan M Taylor; Elena Tchetina; Andrew R Tee; Irmgard Tegeder; David Teis; Natercia Teixeira; Fatima Teixeira-Clerc; Kumsal A Tekirdag; Tewin Tencomnao; Sandra Tenreiro; Alexei V Tepikin; Pilar S Testillano; Gianluca Tettamanti; Pierre-Louis Tharaux; Kathrin Thedieck; Arvind A Thekkinghat; Stefano Thellung; Josephine W Thinwa; V P Thirumalaikumar; Sufi Mary Thomas; Paul G Thomes; Andrew Thorburn; Lipi Thukral; Thomas Thum; Michael Thumm; Ling Tian; Ales Tichy; Andreas Till; Vincent Timmerman; Vladimir I Titorenko; Sokol V Todi; Krassimira Todorova; Janne M Toivonen; Luana Tomaipitinca; Dhanendra Tomar; Cristina Tomas-Zapico; Sergej Tomić; Benjamin Chun-Kit Tong; Chao Tong; Xin Tong; Sharon A Tooze; Maria L Torgersen; Satoru Torii; Liliana Torres-López; Alicia Torriglia; Christina G Towers; Roberto Towns; Shinya Toyokuni; Vladimir Trajkovic; Donatella Tramontano; Quynh-Giao Tran; Leonardo H Travassos; Charles B Trelford; Shirley Tremel; Ioannis P Trougakos; Betty P Tsao; Mario P Tschan; Hung-Fat Tse; Tak Fu Tse; Hitoshi Tsugawa; Andrey S Tsvetkov; David A Tumbarello; Yasin Tumtas; María J Tuñón; Sandra Turcotte; Boris Turk; Vito Turk; Bradley J Turner; Richard I Tuxworth; Jessica K Tyler; Elena V Tyutereva; Yasuo Uchiyama; Aslihan Ugun-Klusek; Holm H Uhlig; Marzena Ułamek-Kozioł; Ilya V Ulasov; Midori Umekawa; Christian Ungermann; Rei Unno; Sylvie Urbe; Elisabet Uribe-Carretero; Suayib Üstün; Vladimir N Uversky; Thomas Vaccari; Maria I Vaccaro; Björn F Vahsen; Helin Vakifahmetoglu-Norberg; Rut Valdor; Maria J Valente; Ayelén Valko; Richard B Vallee; Angela M Valverde; Greet Van den Berghe; Stijn van der Veen; Luc Van Kaer; Jorg van Loosdregt; Sjoerd J L van Wijk; Wim Vandenberghe; Ilse Vanhorebeek; Marcos A Vannier-Santos; Nicola Vannini; M Cristina Vanrell; Chiara Vantaggiato; Gabriele Varano; Isabel Varela-Nieto; Máté Varga; M Helena Vasconcelos; Somya Vats; Demetrios G Vavvas; Ignacio Vega-Naredo; Silvia Vega-Rubin-de-Celis; Guillermo Velasco; Ariadna P Velázquez; Tibor Vellai; Edo Vellenga; Francesca Velotti; Mireille Verdier; Panayotis Verginis; Isabelle Vergne; Paul Verkade; Manish Verma; Patrik Verstreken; Tim Vervliet; Jörg Vervoorts; Alexandre T Vessoni; Victor M Victor; Michel Vidal; Chiara Vidoni; Otilia V Vieira; Richard D Vierstra; Sonia Viganó; Helena Vihinen; Vinoy Vijayan; Miquel Vila; Marçal Vilar; José M Villalba; Antonio Villalobo; Beatriz Villarejo-Zori; Francesc Villarroya; Joan Villarroya; Olivier Vincent; Cecile Vindis; Christophe Viret; Maria Teresa Viscomi; Dora Visnjic; Ilio Vitale; David J Vocadlo; Olga V Voitsekhovskaja; Cinzia Volonté; Mattia Volta; Marta Vomero; Clarissa Von Haefen; Marc A Vooijs; Wolfgang Voos; Ljubica Vucicevic; Richard Wade-Martins; Satoshi Waguri; Kenrick A Waite; Shuji Wakatsuki; David W Walker; Mark J Walker; Simon A Walker; Jochen Walter; Francisco G Wandosell; Bo Wang; Chao-Yung Wang; Chen Wang; Chenran Wang; Chenwei Wang; Cun-Yu Wang; Dong Wang; Fangyang Wang; Feng Wang; Fengming Wang; Guansong Wang; Han Wang; Hao Wang; Hexiang Wang; Hong-Gang Wang; Jianrong Wang; Jigang Wang; Jiou Wang; Jundong Wang; Kui Wang; Lianrong Wang; Liming Wang; Maggie Haitian Wang; Meiqing Wang; Nanbu Wang; Pengwei Wang; Peipei Wang; Ping Wang; Ping Wang; Qing Jun Wang; Qing Wang; Qing Kenneth Wang; Qiong A Wang; Wen-Tao Wang; Wuyang Wang; Xinnan Wang; Xuejun Wang; Yan Wang; Yanchang Wang; Yanzhuang Wang; Yen-Yun Wang; Yihua Wang; Yipeng Wang; Yu Wang; Yuqi Wang; Zhe Wang; Zhenyu Wang; Zhouguang Wang; Gary Warnes; Verena Warnsmann; Hirotaka Watada; Eizo Watanabe; Maxinne Watchon; Anna Wawrzyńska; Timothy E Weaver; Grzegorz Wegrzyn; Ann M Wehman; Huafeng Wei; Lei Wei; Taotao Wei; Yongjie Wei; Oliver H Weiergräber; Conrad C Weihl; Günther Weindl; Ralf Weiskirchen; Alan Wells; Runxia H Wen; Xin Wen; Antonia Werner; Beatrice Weykopf; Sally P Wheatley; J Lindsay Whitton; Alexander J Whitworth; Katarzyna Wiktorska; Manon E Wildenberg; Tom Wileman; Simon Wilkinson; Dieter Willbold; Brett Williams; Robin S B Williams; Roger L Williams; Peter R Williamson; Richard A Wilson; Beate Winner; Nathaniel J Winsor; Steven S Witkin; Harald Wodrich; Ute Woehlbier; Thomas Wollert; Esther Wong; Jack Ho Wong; Richard W Wong; Vincent Kam Wai Wong; W Wei-Lynn Wong; An-Guo Wu; Chengbiao Wu; Jian Wu; Junfang Wu; Kenneth K Wu; Min Wu; Shan-Ying Wu; Shengzhou Wu; Shu-Yan Wu; Shufang Wu; William K K Wu; Xiaohong Wu; Xiaoqing Wu; Yao-Wen Wu; Yihua Wu; Ramnik J Xavier; Hongguang Xia; Lixin Xia; Zhengyuan Xia; Ge Xiang; Jin Xiang; Mingliang Xiang; Wei Xiang; Bin Xiao; Guozhi Xiao; Hengyi Xiao; Hong-Tao Xiao; Jian Xiao; Lan Xiao; Shi Xiao; Yin Xiao; Baoming Xie; Chuan-Ming Xie; Min Xie; Yuxiang Xie; Zhiping Xie; Zhonglin Xie; Maria Xilouri; Congfeng Xu; En Xu; Haoxing Xu; Jing Xu; JinRong Xu; Liang Xu; Wen Wen Xu; Xiulong Xu; Yu Xue; Sokhna M S Yakhine-Diop; Masamitsu Yamaguchi; Osamu Yamaguchi; Ai Yamamoto; Shunhei Yamashina; Shengmin Yan; Shian-Jang Yan; Zhen Yan; Yasuo Yanagi; Chuanbin Yang; Dun-Sheng Yang; Huan Yang; Huang-Tian Yang; Hui Yang; Jin-Ming Yang; Jing Yang; Jingyu Yang; Ling Yang; Liu Yang; Ming Yang; Pei-Ming Yang; Qian Yang; Seungwon Yang; Shu Yang; Shun-Fa Yang; Wannian Yang; Wei Yuan Yang; Xiaoyong Yang; Xuesong Yang; Yi Yang; Ying Yang; Honghong Yao; Shenggen Yao; Xiaoqiang Yao; Yong-Gang Yao; Yong-Ming Yao; Takahiro Yasui; Meysam Yazdankhah; Paul M Yen; Cong Yi; Xiao-Ming Yin; Yanhai Yin; Zhangyuan Yin; Ziyi Yin; Meidan Ying; Zheng Ying; Calvin K Yip; Stephanie Pei Tung Yiu; Young H Yoo; Kiyotsugu Yoshida; Saori R Yoshii; Tamotsu Yoshimori; Bahman Yousefi; Boxuan Yu; Haiyang Yu; Jun Yu; Jun Yu; Li Yu; Ming-Lung Yu; Seong-Woon Yu; Victor C Yu; W Haung Yu; Zhengping Yu; Zhou Yu; Junying Yuan; Ling-Qing Yuan; Shilin Yuan; Shyng-Shiou F Yuan; Yanggang Yuan; Zengqiang Yuan; Jianbo Yue; Zhenyu Yue; Jeanho Yun; Raymond L Yung; David N Zacks; Gabriele Zaffagnini; Vanessa O Zambelli; Isabella Zanella; Qun S Zang; Sara Zanivan; Silvia Zappavigna; Pilar Zaragoza; Konstantinos S Zarbalis; Amir Zarebkohan; Amira Zarrouk; Scott O Zeitlin; Jialiu Zeng; Ju-Deng Zeng; Eva Žerovnik; Lixuan Zhan; Bin Zhang; Donna D Zhang; Hanlin Zhang; Hong Zhang; Hong Zhang; Honghe Zhang; Huafeng Zhang; Huaye Zhang; Hui Zhang; Hui-Ling Zhang; Jianbin Zhang; Jianhua Zhang; Jing-Pu Zhang; Kalin Y B Zhang; Leshuai W Zhang; Lin Zhang; Lisheng Zhang; Lu Zhang; Luoying Zhang; Menghuan Zhang; Peng Zhang; Sheng Zhang; Wei Zhang; Xiangnan Zhang; Xiao-Wei Zhang; Xiaolei Zhang; Xiaoyan Zhang; Xin Zhang; Xinxin Zhang; Xu Dong Zhang; Yang Zhang; Yanjin Zhang; Yi Zhang; Ying-Dong Zhang; Yingmei Zhang; Yuan-Yuan Zhang; Yuchen Zhang; Zhe Zhang; Zhengguang Zhang; Zhibing Zhang; Zhihai Zhang; Zhiyong Zhang; Zili Zhang; Haobin Zhao; Lei Zhao; Shuang Zhao; Tongbiao Zhao; Xiao-Fan Zhao; Ying Zhao; Yongchao Zhao; Yongliang Zhao; Yuting Zhao; Guoping Zheng; Kai Zheng; Ling Zheng; Shizhong Zheng; Xi-Long Zheng; Yi Zheng; Zu-Guo Zheng; Boris Zhivotovsky; Qing Zhong; Ao Zhou; Ben Zhou; Cefan Zhou; Gang Zhou; Hao Zhou; Hong Zhou; Hongbo Zhou; Jie Zhou; Jing Zhou; Jing Zhou; Jiyong Zhou; Kailiang Zhou; Rongjia Zhou; Xu-Jie Zhou; Yanshuang Zhou; Yinghong Zhou; Yubin Zhou; Zheng-Yu Zhou; Zhou Zhou; Binglin Zhu; Changlian Zhu; Guo-Qing Zhu; Haining Zhu; Hongxin Zhu; Hua Zhu; Wei-Guo Zhu; Yanping Zhu; Yushan Zhu; Haixia Zhuang; Xiaohong Zhuang; Katarzyna Zientara-Rytter; Christine M Zimmermann; Elena Ziviani; Teresa Zoladek; Wei-Xing Zong; Dmitry B Zorov; Antonio Zorzano; Weiping Zou; Zhen Zou; Zhengzhi Zou; Steven Zuryn; Werner Zwerschke; Beate Brand-Saberi; X Charlie Dong; Chandra Shekar Kenchappa; Zuguo Li; Yong Lin; Shigeru Oshima; Yueguang Rong; Judith C Sluimer; Christina L Stallings; Chun-Kit Tong Journal: Autophagy Date: 2021-02-08 Impact factor: 13.391
Authors: J Manent; S Banerjee; R de Matos Simoes; T Zoranovic; C Mitsiades; J M Penninger; K J Simpson; P O Humbert; H E Richardson Journal: Oncogene Date: 2017-06-05 Impact factor: 9.867
Authors: Daniel J Klionsky; Kotb Abdelmohsen; Akihisa Abe; Md Joynal Abedin; Hagai Abeliovich; Abraham Acevedo Arozena; Hiroaki Adachi; Christopher M Adams; Peter D Adams; Khosrow Adeli; Peter J Adhihetty; Sharon G Adler; Galila Agam; Rajesh Agarwal; Manish K Aghi; Maria Agnello; Patrizia Agostinis; Patricia V Aguilar; Julio Aguirre-Ghiso; Edoardo M Airoldi; Slimane Ait-Si-Ali; Takahiko Akematsu; Emmanuel T Akporiaye; Mohamed Al-Rubeai; Guillermo M Albaiceta; Chris Albanese; Diego Albani; Matthew L Albert; Jesus Aldudo; Hana Algül; Mehrdad Alirezaei; Iraide Alloza; Alexandru Almasan; Maylin Almonte-Beceril; Emad S Alnemri; Covadonga Alonso; Nihal Altan-Bonnet; Dario C Altieri; Silvia Alvarez; Lydia Alvarez-Erviti; Sandro Alves; Giuseppina Amadoro; Atsuo Amano; Consuelo Amantini; Santiago Ambrosio; Ivano Amelio; Amal O Amer; Mohamed Amessou; Angelika Amon; Zhenyi An; Frank A Anania; Stig U Andersen; Usha P Andley; Catherine K Andreadi; Nathalie Andrieu-Abadie; Alberto Anel; David K Ann; Shailendra Anoopkumar-Dukie; Manuela Antonioli; Hiroshi Aoki; Nadezda Apostolova; Saveria Aquila; Katia Aquilano; Koichi Araki; Eli Arama; Agustin Aranda; Jun Araya; Alexandre Arcaro; Esperanza Arias; Hirokazu Arimoto; Aileen R Ariosa; Jane L Armstrong; Thierry Arnould; Ivica Arsov; Katsuhiko Asanuma; Valerie Askanas; Eric Asselin; Ryuichiro Atarashi; Sally S Atherton; Julie D Atkin; Laura D Attardi; Patrick Auberger; Georg Auburger; Laure Aurelian; Riccardo Autelli; Laura Avagliano; Maria Laura Avantaggiati; Limor Avrahami; Suresh Awale; Neelam Azad; Tiziana Bachetti; Jonathan M Backer; Dong-Hun Bae; Jae-Sung Bae; Ok-Nam Bae; Soo Han Bae; Eric H Baehrecke; Seung-Hoon Baek; Stephen Baghdiguian; Agnieszka Bagniewska-Zadworna; Hua Bai; Jie Bai; Xue-Yuan Bai; Yannick Bailly; Kithiganahalli Narayanaswamy Balaji; Walter Balduini; Andrea Ballabio; Rena Balzan; Rajkumar Banerjee; Gábor Bánhegyi; Haijun Bao; Benoit Barbeau; Maria D Barrachina; Esther Barreiro; Bonnie Bartel; Alberto Bartolomé; Diane C Bassham; Maria Teresa Bassi; Robert C Bast; Alakananda Basu; Maria Teresa Batista; Henri Batoko; Maurizio Battino; Kyle Bauckman; Bradley L Baumgarner; K Ulrich Bayer; Rupert Beale; Jean-François Beaulieu; George R Beck; Christoph Becker; J David Beckham; Pierre-André Bédard; Patrick J Bednarski; Thomas J Begley; Christian Behl; Christian Behrends; Georg Mn Behrens; Kevin E Behrns; Eloy Bejarano; Amine Belaid; Francesca Belleudi; Giovanni Bénard; Guy Berchem; Daniele Bergamaschi; Matteo Bergami; Ben Berkhout; Laura Berliocchi; Amélie Bernard; Monique Bernard; Francesca Bernassola; Anne Bertolotti; Amanda S Bess; Sébastien Besteiro; Saverio Bettuzzi; Savita Bhalla; Shalmoli Bhattacharyya; Sujit K Bhutia; Caroline Biagosch; Michele Wolfe Bianchi; Martine Biard-Piechaczyk; Viktor Billes; Claudia Bincoletto; Baris Bingol; Sara W Bird; Marc Bitoun; Ivana Bjedov; Craig Blackstone; Lionel Blanc; Guillermo A Blanco; Heidi Kiil Blomhoff; Emilio Boada-Romero; Stefan Böckler; Marianne Boes; Kathleen Boesze-Battaglia; Lawrence H Boise; Alessandra Bolino; Andrea Boman; Paolo Bonaldo; Matteo Bordi; Jürgen Bosch; Luis M Botana; Joelle Botti; German Bou; Marina Bouché; Marion Bouchecareilh; Marie-Josée Boucher; Michael E Boulton; Sebastien G Bouret; Patricia Boya; Michaël Boyer-Guittaut; Peter V Bozhkov; Nathan Brady; Vania Mm Braga; Claudio Brancolini; Gerhard H Braus; José M Bravo-San Pedro; Lisa A Brennan; Emery H Bresnick; Patrick Brest; Dave Bridges; Marie-Agnès Bringer; Marisa Brini; Glauber C Brito; Bertha Brodin; Paul S Brookes; Eric J Brown; Karen Brown; Hal E Broxmeyer; Alain Bruhat; Patricia Chakur Brum; John H Brumell; Nicola Brunetti-Pierri; Robert J Bryson-Richardson; Shilpa Buch; Alastair M Buchan; Hikmet Budak; Dmitry V Bulavin; Scott J Bultman; Geert Bultynck; Vladimir Bumbasirevic; Yan Burelle; Robert E Burke; Margit Burmeister; Peter Bütikofer; Laura Caberlotto; Ken Cadwell; Monika Cahova; Dongsheng Cai; Jingjing Cai; Qian Cai; Sara Calatayud; Nadine Camougrand; Michelangelo Campanella; Grant R Campbell; Matthew Campbell; Silvia Campello; Robin Candau; Isabella Caniggia; Lavinia Cantoni; Lizhi Cao; Allan B Caplan; Michele Caraglia; Claudio Cardinali; Sandra Morais Cardoso; Jennifer S Carew; Laura A Carleton; Cathleen R Carlin; Silvia Carloni; Sven R Carlsson; Didac Carmona-Gutierrez; Leticia Am Carneiro; Oliana Carnevali; Serena Carra; Alice Carrier; Bernadette Carroll; Caty Casas; Josefina Casas; Giuliana Cassinelli; Perrine Castets; Susana Castro-Obregon; Gabriella Cavallini; Isabella Ceccherini; Francesco Cecconi; Arthur I Cederbaum; Valentín Ceña; Simone Cenci; Claudia Cerella; Davide Cervia; Silvia Cetrullo; Hassan Chaachouay; Han-Jung Chae; Andrei S Chagin; Chee-Yin Chai; Gopal Chakrabarti; Georgios Chamilos; Edmond Yw Chan; Matthew Tv Chan; Dhyan Chandra; Pallavi Chandra; Chih-Peng Chang; Raymond Chuen-Chung Chang; Ta Yuan Chang; John C Chatham; Saurabh Chatterjee; Santosh Chauhan; Yongsheng Che; Michael E Cheetham; Rajkumar Cheluvappa; Chun-Jung Chen; Gang Chen; Guang-Chao Chen; Guoqiang Chen; Hongzhuan Chen; Jeff W Chen; Jian-Kang Chen; Min Chen; Mingzhou Chen; Peiwen Chen; Qi Chen; Quan Chen; Shang-Der Chen; Si Chen; Steve S-L Chen; Wei Chen; Wei-Jung Chen; Wen Qiang Chen; Wenli Chen; Xiangmei Chen; Yau-Hung Chen; Ye-Guang Chen; Yin Chen; Yingyu Chen; Yongshun Chen; Yu-Jen Chen; Yue-Qin Chen; Yujie Chen; Zhen Chen; Zhong Chen; Alan Cheng; Christopher Hk Cheng; Hua Cheng; Heesun Cheong; Sara Cherry; Jason Chesney; Chun Hei Antonio Cheung; Eric Chevet; Hsiang Cheng Chi; Sung-Gil Chi; Fulvio Chiacchiera; Hui-Ling Chiang; Roberto Chiarelli; Mario Chiariello; Marcello Chieppa; Lih-Shen Chin; Mario Chiong; Gigi Nc Chiu; Dong-Hyung Cho; Ssang-Goo Cho; William C Cho; Yong-Yeon Cho; Young-Seok Cho; Augustine Mk Choi; Eui-Ju Choi; Eun-Kyoung Choi; Jayoung Choi; Mary E Choi; Seung-Il Choi; Tsui-Fen Chou; Salem Chouaib; Divaker Choubey; Vinay Choubey; Kuan-Chih Chow; Kamal Chowdhury; Charleen T Chu; Tsung-Hsien Chuang; Taehoon Chun; Hyewon Chung; Taijoon Chung; Yuen-Li Chung; Yong-Joon Chwae; Valentina Cianfanelli; Roberto Ciarcia; Iwona A Ciechomska; Maria Rosa Ciriolo; Mara Cirone; Sofie Claerhout; Michael J Clague; Joan Clària; Peter Gh Clarke; Robert Clarke; Emilio Clementi; Cédric Cleyrat; Miriam Cnop; Eliana M Coccia; Tiziana Cocco; Patrice Codogno; Jörn Coers; Ezra Ew Cohen; David Colecchia; Luisa Coletto; Núria S Coll; Emma Colucci-Guyon; Sergio Comincini; Maria Condello; Katherine L Cook; Graham H Coombs; Cynthia D Cooper; J Mark Cooper; Isabelle Coppens; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Marco Corazzari; Ramon Corbalan; Elisabeth Corcelle-Termeau; Mario D Cordero; Cristina Corral-Ramos; Olga Corti; Andrea Cossarizza; Paola Costelli; Safia Costes; Susan L Cotman; Ana Coto-Montes; Sandra Cottet; Eduardo Couve; Lori R Covey; L Ashley Cowart; Jeffery S Cox; Fraser P Coxon; Carolyn B Coyne; Mark S Cragg; Rolf J Craven; Tiziana Crepaldi; Jose L Crespo; Alfredo Criollo; Valeria Crippa; Maria Teresa Cruz; Ana Maria Cuervo; Jose M Cuezva; Taixing Cui; Pedro R Cutillas; Mark J Czaja; Maria F Czyzyk-Krzeska; Ruben K Dagda; Uta Dahmen; Chunsun Dai; Wenjie Dai; Yun Dai; Kevin N Dalby; Luisa Dalla Valle; Guillaume Dalmasso; Marcello D'Amelio; Markus Damme; Arlette Darfeuille-Michaud; Catherine Dargemont; Victor M Darley-Usmar; Srinivasan Dasarathy; Biplab Dasgupta; Srikanta Dash; Crispin R Dass; Hazel Marie Davey; Lester M Davids; David Dávila; Roger J Davis; Ted M Dawson; Valina L Dawson; Paula Daza; Jackie de Belleroche; Paul de Figueiredo; Regina Celia Bressan Queiroz de Figueiredo; José de la Fuente; Luisa De Martino; Antonella De Matteis; Guido Ry De Meyer; Angelo De Milito; Mauro De Santi; Wanderley de Souza; Vincenzo De Tata; Daniela De Zio; Jayanta Debnath; Reinhard Dechant; Jean-Paul Decuypere; Shane Deegan; Benjamin Dehay; Barbara Del Bello; Dominic P Del Re; Régis Delage-Mourroux; Lea Md Delbridge; Louise Deldicque; Elizabeth Delorme-Axford; Yizhen Deng; Joern Dengjel; Melanie Denizot; Paul Dent; Channing J Der; Vojo Deretic; Benoît Derrien; Eric Deutsch; Timothy P Devarenne; Rodney J Devenish; Sabrina Di Bartolomeo; Nicola Di Daniele; Fabio Di Domenico; Alessia Di Nardo; Simone Di Paola; Antonio Di Pietro; Livia Di Renzo; Aaron DiAntonio; Guillermo Díaz-Araya; Ines Díaz-Laviada; Maria T Diaz-Meco; Javier Diaz-Nido; Chad A Dickey; Robert C Dickson; Marc Diederich; Paul Digard; Ivan Dikic; Savithrama P Dinesh-Kumar; Chan Ding; Wen-Xing Ding; Zufeng Ding; Luciana Dini; Jörg Hw Distler; Abhinav Diwan; Mojgan Djavaheri-Mergny; Kostyantyn Dmytruk; Renwick Cj Dobson; Volker Doetsch; Karol Dokladny; Svetlana Dokudovskaya; Massimo Donadelli; X Charlie Dong; Xiaonan Dong; Zheng Dong; Terrence M Donohue; Kelly S Doran; Gabriella D'Orazi; Gerald W Dorn; Victor Dosenko; Sami Dridi; Liat Drucker; Jie Du; Li-Lin Du; Lihuan Du; André du Toit; Priyamvada Dua; Lei Duan; Pu Duann; Vikash Kumar Dubey; Michael R Duchen; Michel A Duchosal; Helene Duez; Isabelle Dugail; Verónica I Dumit; Mara C Duncan; Elaine A Dunlop; William A Dunn; Nicolas Dupont; Luc Dupuis; Raúl V Durán; Thomas M Durcan; Stéphane Duvezin-Caubet; Umamaheswar Duvvuri; Vinay Eapen; Darius Ebrahimi-Fakhari; Arnaud Echard; Leopold Eckhart; Charles L Edelstein; Aimee L Edinger; Ludwig Eichinger; Tobias Eisenberg; Avital Eisenberg-Lerner; N Tony Eissa; Wafik S El-Deiry; Victoria El-Khoury; Zvulun Elazar; Hagit Eldar-Finkelman; Chris Jh Elliott; Enzo Emanuele; Urban Emmenegger; Nikolai Engedal; Anna-Mart Engelbrecht; Simone Engelender; Jorrit M Enserink; Ralf Erdmann; Jekaterina Erenpreisa; Rajaraman Eri; Jason L Eriksen; Andreja Erman; Ricardo Escalante; Eeva-Liisa Eskelinen; Lucile Espert; Lorena Esteban-Martínez; Thomas J Evans; Mario Fabri; Gemma Fabrias; Cinzia Fabrizi; Antonio Facchiano; Nils J Færgeman; Alberto Faggioni; W Douglas Fairlie; Chunhai Fan; Daping Fan; Jie Fan; Shengyun Fang; Manolis Fanto; Alessandro Fanzani; Thomas Farkas; Mathias Faure; Francois B Favier; Howard Fearnhead; Massimo Federici; Erkang Fei; Tania C Felizardo; Hua Feng; Yibin Feng; Yuchen Feng; Thomas A Ferguson; Álvaro F Fernández; Maite G Fernandez-Barrena; Jose C Fernandez-Checa; Arsenio Fernández-López; Martin E Fernandez-Zapico; Olivier Feron; Elisabetta Ferraro; Carmen Veríssima Ferreira-Halder; Laszlo Fesus; Ralph Feuer; Fabienne C Fiesel; Eduardo C Filippi-Chiela; Giuseppe Filomeni; Gian Maria Fimia; John H Fingert; Steven Finkbeiner; Toren Finkel; Filomena Fiorito; Paul B Fisher; Marc Flajolet; Flavio Flamigni; Oliver Florey; Salvatore Florio; R Andres Floto; Marco Folini; Carlo Follo; Edward A Fon; Francesco Fornai; Franco Fortunato; Alessandro Fraldi; Rodrigo Franco; Arnaud Francois; Aurélie François; Lisa B Frankel; Iain Dc Fraser; Norbert Frey; Damien G Freyssenet; Christian Frezza; Scott L Friedman; Daniel E Frigo; Dongxu Fu; José M Fuentes; Juan Fueyo; Yoshio Fujitani; Yuuki Fujiwara; Mikihiro Fujiya; Mitsunori Fukuda; Simone Fulda; Carmela Fusco; Bozena Gabryel; Matthias Gaestel; Philippe Gailly; Malgorzata Gajewska; Sehamuddin Galadari; 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Nelly Godefroy; Robert M Gogal; Kuppan Gokulan; Gustavo H Goldman; Delia Goletti; Michael S Goligorsky; Aldrin V Gomes; Ligia C Gomes; Hernando Gomez; Candelaria Gomez-Manzano; Rubén Gómez-Sánchez; Dawit Ap Gonçalves; Ebru Goncu; Qingqiu Gong; Céline Gongora; Carlos B Gonzalez; Pedro Gonzalez-Alegre; Pilar Gonzalez-Cabo; Rosa Ana González-Polo; Ing Swie Goping; Carlos Gorbea; Nikolai V Gorbunov; Daphne R Goring; Adrienne M Gorman; Sharon M Gorski; Sandro Goruppi; Shino Goto-Yamada; Cecilia Gotor; Roberta A Gottlieb; Illana Gozes; Devrim Gozuacik; Yacine Graba; Martin Graef; Giovanna E Granato; Gary Dean Grant; Steven Grant; Giovanni Luca Gravina; Douglas R Green; Alexander Greenhough; Michael T Greenwood; Benedetto Grimaldi; Frédéric Gros; Charles Grose; Jean-Francois Groulx; Florian Gruber; Paolo Grumati; Tilman Grune; Jun-Lin Guan; Kun-Liang Guan; Barbara Guerra; Carlos Guillen; Kailash Gulshan; Jan Gunst; Chuanyong Guo; Lei Guo; Ming Guo; Wenjie Guo; Xu-Guang Guo; Andrea A Gust; Åsa B Gustafsson; Elaine Gutierrez; Maximiliano G Gutierrez; Ho-Shin Gwak; Albert Haas; James E Haber; Shinji Hadano; Monica Hagedorn; David R Hahn; Andrew J Halayko; Anne Hamacher-Brady; Kozo Hamada; Ahmed Hamai; Andrea Hamann; Maho Hamasaki; Isabelle Hamer; Qutayba Hamid; Ester M Hammond; Feng Han; Weidong Han; James T Handa; John A Hanover; Malene Hansen; Masaru Harada; Ljubica Harhaji-Trajkovic; J Wade Harper; Abdel Halim Harrath; Adrian L Harris; James Harris; Udo Hasler; Peter Hasselblatt; Kazuhisa Hasui; Robert G Hawley; Teresa S Hawley; Congcong He; Cynthia Y He; Fengtian He; Gu He; Rong-Rong He; Xian-Hui He; You-Wen He; Yu-Ying He; Joan K Heath; Marie-Josée Hébert; Robert A Heinzen; Gudmundur Vignir Helgason; Michael Hensel; Elizabeth P Henske; Chengtao Her; Paul K Herman; Agustín Hernández; Carlos Hernandez; Sonia Hernández-Tiedra; Claudio Hetz; P Robin Hiesinger; Katsumi Higaki; Sabine Hilfiker; Bradford G Hill; Joseph A Hill; William D Hill; Keisuke Hino; Daniel Hofius; Paul Hofman; Günter U Höglinger; Jörg Höhfeld; Marina K Holz; Yonggeun Hong; David A Hood; Jeroen Jm Hoozemans; Thorsten Hoppe; Chin Hsu; Chin-Yuan Hsu; Li-Chung Hsu; Dong Hu; Guochang Hu; Hong-Ming Hu; Hongbo Hu; Ming Chang Hu; Yu-Chen Hu; Zhuo-Wei Hu; Fang Hua; Ya Hua; Canhua Huang; Huey-Lan Huang; Kuo-How Huang; Kuo-Yang Huang; Shile Huang; Shiqian Huang; Wei-Pang Huang; Yi-Ran Huang; Yong Huang; Yunfei Huang; Tobias B Huber; Patricia Huebbe; Won-Ki Huh; Juha J Hulmi; Gang Min Hur; James H Hurley; Zvenyslava Husak; Sabah Na Hussain; Salik Hussain; Jung Jin Hwang; Seungmin Hwang; Thomas Is Hwang; Atsuhiro Ichihara; Yuzuru Imai; Carol Imbriano; Megumi Inomata; Takeshi Into; Valentina Iovane; Juan L Iovanna; Renato V Iozzo; Nancy Y Ip; Javier E Irazoqui; Pablo Iribarren; Yoshitaka Isaka; Aleksandra J Isakovic; Harry Ischiropoulos; Jeffrey S Isenberg; Mohammad Ishaq; Hiroyuki Ishida; Isao Ishii; Jane E Ishmael; Ciro Isidoro; Ken-Ichi Isobe; Erika Isono; Shohreh Issazadeh-Navikas; Koji Itahana; Eisuke Itakura; Andrei I Ivanov; Anand Krishnan V Iyer; José M Izquierdo; Yotaro Izumi; Valentina Izzo; Marja Jäättelä; Nadia Jaber; Daniel John Jackson; William T Jackson; Tony George Jacob; Thomas S Jacques; Chinnaswamy Jagannath; Ashish Jain; Nihar Ranjan Jana; Byoung Kuk Jang; Alkesh Jani; Bassam Janji; Paulo Roberto Jannig; Patric J Jansson; Steve Jean; Marina Jendrach; Ju-Hong Jeon; Niels Jessen; Eui-Bae Jeung; Kailiang Jia; Lijun Jia; Hong Jiang; Hongchi Jiang; Liwen Jiang; Teng Jiang; Xiaoyan Jiang; Xuejun Jiang; Xuejun Jiang; Ying Jiang; Yongjun Jiang; Alberto Jiménez; Cheng Jin; Hongchuan Jin; Lei Jin; Meiyan Jin; Shengkan Jin; Umesh Kumar Jinwal; Eun-Kyeong Jo; Terje Johansen; Daniel E Johnson; Gail Vw Johnson; James D Johnson; Eric Jonasch; Chris Jones; Leo Ab Joosten; Joaquin Jordan; Anna-Maria Joseph; Bertrand Joseph; Annie M Joubert; Dianwen Ju; Jingfang Ju; Hsueh-Fen Juan; Katrin Juenemann; Gábor Juhász; Hye Seung Jung; Jae U Jung; Yong-Keun Jung; Heinz Jungbluth; Matthew J Justice; Barry Jutten; Nadeem O Kaakoush; Kai Kaarniranta; Allen Kaasik; Tomohiro Kabuta; Bertrand Kaeffer; Katarina Kågedal; Alon Kahana; Shingo Kajimura; Or Kakhlon; Manjula Kalia; Dhan V Kalvakolanu; Yoshiaki Kamada; Konstantinos Kambas; Vitaliy O Kaminskyy; Harm H Kampinga; Mustapha Kandouz; Chanhee Kang; Rui Kang; Tae-Cheon Kang; Tomotake Kanki; Thirumala-Devi Kanneganti; Haruo Kanno; Anumantha G Kanthasamy; Marc Kantorow; Maria Kaparakis-Liaskos; Orsolya Kapuy; Vassiliki Karantza; Md Razaul Karim; Parimal Karmakar; Arthur Kaser; Susmita Kaushik; Thomas Kawula; A Murat Kaynar; Po-Yuan Ke; Zun-Ji Ke; John H Kehrl; Kate E Keller; Jongsook Kim Kemper; Anne K Kenworthy; Oliver Kepp; Andreas Kern; Santosh Kesari; David Kessel; Robin Ketteler; Isis do Carmo Kettelhut; Bilon Khambu; Muzamil Majid Khan; Vinoth Km Khandelwal; Sangeeta Khare; Juliann G Kiang; Amy A Kiger; Akio Kihara; Arianna L Kim; Cheol Hyeon Kim; Deok Ryong Kim; Do-Hyung Kim; Eung Kweon Kim; Hye Young Kim; Hyung-Ryong Kim; Jae-Sung Kim; Jeong Hun Kim; Jin Cheon Kim; Jin Hyoung Kim; Kwang Woon Kim; Michael D Kim; Moon-Moo Kim; Peter K Kim; Seong Who Kim; Soo-Youl Kim; Yong-Sun Kim; Yonghyun Kim; Adi Kimchi; Alec C Kimmelman; Tomonori Kimura; Jason S King; Karla Kirkegaard; Vladimir Kirkin; Lorrie A Kirshenbaum; Shuji Kishi; Yasuo Kitajima; Katsuhiko Kitamoto; Yasushi Kitaoka; Kaio Kitazato; Rudolf A Kley; Walter T Klimecki; Michael Klinkenberg; Jochen Klucken; Helene Knævelsrud; Erwin Knecht; Laura Knuppertz; Jiunn-Liang Ko; Satoru Kobayashi; Jan C Koch; Christelle Koechlin-Ramonatxo; Ulrich Koenig; Young Ho Koh; Katja Köhler; Sepp D Kohlwein; Masato Koike; Masaaki Komatsu; Eiki Kominami; Dexin Kong; Hee Jeong Kong; Eumorphia G Konstantakou; Benjamin T Kopp; Tamas Korcsmaros; Laura Korhonen; Viktor I Korolchuk; Nadya V Koshkina; Yanjun Kou; Michael I Koukourakis; Constantinos Koumenis; Attila L Kovács; Tibor Kovács; Werner J Kovacs; Daisuke Koya; Claudine Kraft; Dimitri Krainc; Helmut Kramer; Tamara Kravic-Stevovic; Wilhelm Krek; Carole Kretz-Remy; Roswitha Krick; Malathi Krishnamurthy; Janos Kriston-Vizi; Guido Kroemer; Michael C Kruer; Rejko Kruger; Nicholas T Ktistakis; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; Christian Kuhn; Addanki Pratap Kumar; Anuj Kumar; Ashok Kumar; Deepak Kumar; Dhiraj Kumar; Rakesh Kumar; Sharad Kumar; Mondira Kundu; Hsing-Jien Kung; Atsushi Kuno; Sheng-Han Kuo; Jeff Kuret; Tino Kurz; Terry Kwok; Taeg Kyu Kwon; Yong Tae Kwon; Irene Kyrmizi; Albert R La Spada; Frank Lafont; Tim Lahm; Aparna Lakkaraju; Truong Lam; Trond Lamark; Steve Lancel; Terry H Landowski; Darius J R Lane; Jon D Lane; Cinzia Lanzi; Pierre Lapaquette; Louis R Lapierre; Jocelyn Laporte; Johanna Laukkarinen; Gordon W Laurie; Sergio Lavandero; Lena Lavie; Matthew J LaVoie; Betty Yuen Kwan Law; Helen Ka-Wai Law; Kelsey B Law; Robert Layfield; Pedro A Lazo; Laurent Le Cam; Karine G Le Roch; Hervé Le Stunff; Vijittra Leardkamolkarn; Marc Lecuit; Byung-Hoon Lee; Che-Hsin Lee; Erinna F Lee; Gyun Min Lee; He-Jin Lee; Hsinyu Lee; Jae Keun Lee; Jongdae Lee; Ju-Hyun Lee; Jun Hee Lee; Michael Lee; Myung-Shik Lee; Patty J Lee; Sam W Lee; Seung-Jae Lee; Shiow-Ju Lee; Stella Y Lee; Sug Hyung Lee; Sung Sik Lee; Sung-Joon Lee; Sunhee Lee; Ying-Ray Lee; Yong J Lee; Young H Lee; Christiaan Leeuwenburgh; Sylvain Lefort; Renaud Legouis; Jinzhi Lei; Qun-Ying Lei; David A Leib; Gil Leibowitz; Istvan Lekli; Stéphane D Lemaire; John J Lemasters; Marius K Lemberg; Antoinette Lemoine; Shuilong Leng; Guido Lenz; Paola Lenzi; Lilach O Lerman; Daniele Lettieri Barbato; Julia I-Ju Leu; Hing Y Leung; Beth Levine; Patrick A Lewis; Frank Lezoualc'h; Chi Li; Faqiang Li; Feng-Jun Li; Jun Li; Ke Li; Lian Li; Min Li; Min Li; Qiang Li; Rui Li; Sheng Li; Wei Li; Wei Li; Xiaotao Li; Yumin Li; Jiqin Lian; Chengyu Liang; Qiangrong Liang; Yulin Liao; Joana Liberal; Pawel P Liberski; Pearl Lie; Andrew P Lieberman; Hyunjung Jade Lim; Kah-Leong Lim; Kyu Lim; Raquel T Lima; Chang-Shen Lin; Chiou-Feng Lin; Fang Lin; Fangming Lin; Fu-Cheng Lin; Kui Lin; Kwang-Huei Lin; Pei-Hui Lin; Tianwei Lin; Wan-Wan Lin; Yee-Shin Lin; Yong Lin; Rafael Linden; Dan Lindholm; Lisa M Lindqvist; Paul Lingor; Andreas Linkermann; Lance A Liotta; Marta M Lipinski; Vitor A Lira; Michael P Lisanti; Paloma B Liton; Bo Liu; Chong Liu; Chun-Feng Liu; Fei Liu; Hung-Jen Liu; Jianxun Liu; Jing-Jing Liu; Jing-Lan Liu; Ke Liu; Leyuan Liu; Liang Liu; Quentin Liu; Rong-Yu Liu; Shiming Liu; Shuwen Liu; Wei Liu; Xian-De Liu; Xiangguo Liu; Xiao-Hong Liu; Xinfeng Liu; Xu Liu; Xueqin Liu; Yang Liu; Yule Liu; Zexian Liu; Zhe Liu; Juan P Liuzzi; Gérard Lizard; Mila Ljujic; Irfan J Lodhi; Susan E Logue; Bal L Lokeshwar; Yun Chau Long; Sagar Lonial; Benjamin Loos; Carlos López-Otín; Cristina López-Vicario; Mar Lorente; Philip L Lorenzi; Péter Lõrincz; Marek Los; Michael T Lotze; Penny E Lovat; Binfeng Lu; Bo Lu; Jiahong Lu; Qing Lu; She-Min Lu; Shuyan Lu; Yingying Lu; Frédéric Luciano; Shirley Luckhart; John Milton Lucocq; Paula Ludovico; Aurelia Lugea; Nicholas W Lukacs; Julian J Lum; Anders H Lund; Honglin Luo; Jia Luo; Shouqing Luo; Claudio Luparello; Timothy Lyons; Jianjie Ma; Yi Ma; Yong Ma; Zhenyi Ma; Juliano Machado; Glaucia M Machado-Santelli; Fernando Macian; Gustavo C MacIntosh; Jeffrey P MacKeigan; Kay F Macleod; John D MacMicking; Lee Ann MacMillan-Crow; Frank Madeo; Muniswamy Madesh; Julio Madrigal-Matute; Akiko Maeda; Tatsuya Maeda; Gustavo Maegawa; Emilia Maellaro; Hannelore Maes; Marta Magariños; Kenneth Maiese; Tapas K Maiti; Luigi Maiuri; Maria Chiara Maiuri; Carl G Maki; Roland Malli; Walter Malorni; Alina Maloyan; Fathia Mami-Chouaib; Na Man; Joseph D Mancias; Eva-Maria Mandelkow; Michael A Mandell; Angelo A Manfredi; Serge N Manié; Claudia Manzoni; Kai Mao; Zixu Mao; Zong-Wan Mao; Philippe Marambaud; Anna Maria Marconi; Zvonimir Marelja; Gabriella Marfe; Marta Margeta; Eva Margittai; Muriel Mari; Francesca V Mariani; Concepcio Marin; Sara Marinelli; Guillermo Mariño; Ivanka Markovic; Rebecca Marquez; Alberto M Martelli; Sascha Martens; Katie R Martin; Seamus J Martin; Shaun Martin; 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Authors: Gerit A Linneweber; Jake Jacobson; Karl Emanuel Busch; Bruno Hudry; Christo P Christov; Dirk Dormann; Michaela Yuan; Tomoki Otani; Elisabeth Knust; Mario de Bono; Irene Miguel-Aliaga Journal: Cell Date: 2014-01-16 Impact factor: 41.582
Authors: Luis Muniz-Feliciano; Jennifer Van Grol; Jose-Andres C Portillo; Lloyd Liew; Bing Liu; Cathleen R Carlin; Vern B Carruthers; Stephen Matthews; Carlos S Subauste Journal: PLoS Pathog Date: 2013-12-19 Impact factor: 6.823
Authors: Nitha C Mulakkal; Peter Nagy; Szabolcs Takats; Radu Tusco; Gábor Juhász; Ioannis P Nezis Journal: Biomed Res Int Date: 2014-05-18 Impact factor: 3.411