Science 14Feb2020

(Wang) #1
PHOTO: NIGEL CATTLIN/MINDEN PICTURES

sciencemag.org SCIENCE

new information, researchers
can construct a more complete
picture of the predation, diet,
geography, and ecology of this
species. —DHE
Sci. Adv. 10.1126/sciadv. aay4593
(2020).

PHYSICS
Understanding
fragile topology
Exploiting topological features
in materials is being pursued as
a route to build in robustness of
particular properties. Stemming
from crystalline symmetries,

GERM CELL BIOLOGY
Conserved gene
specifies germ cell
Germ cells are the exclusive
progenitors of gametes. In
most studied animals, includ-
ing humans, germ cells are
produced only once during
embryogenesis and are not
replenished in adult life. DuBuc
et al. studied germ cell induc-
tion in the clonal cnidarian
Hydractinia symbiolongicarpus,
an animal that forms germ
cells continuously in adult
life from stem cells that also
generate somatic cells. A single

transcription factor is capable
of converting the animal’s adult
stem cells to germ cells. A
similar gene also controls germ
cell induction in mammalian
embryos, but its action there is
limited to a single event in early
embryogenesis. —BAP
Science, this issue p. 757

PALEONTOLOGY
More evidence for
a massive turtle
Partial specimens of the extinct,
nonmarine turtle Stupendemys
geographicus have given

paleontologists some indica-
tion of its truly massive size,
but the biology and systemat-
ics of this species remained
unclear. Cadena et al. found
remains in La Tatacoa Desert in
Colombia that set a size record
for the largest known complete
turtle shell—2.40 meters from
neck to tail—and represent
the first lower-jaw specimens
from the Urumaco region since


  1. These data support the
    interpretation that there was
    only one giant erymnochelyin
    taxon that exhibited sexual
    dimorphism, with horns in males
    and hornless females. With this


PLANT PATHOLOGY

A plant pan-genome


immunity landscape


P


lant pathogens elicit an immune
response through effector
proteins. In turn, plant genomes
encode genes that determine
species-specific recognition of
these effectors by a process known
collectively as effector-triggered immu-
nity (ETI). By examining a range of
strains of the pathogen Pseudomonas
syringae that infect the model plant
Arabidopsis thaliana, Laflamme et al.
generated a P. s y r i n g a e Type III Effector
Compendium (PsyTEC) and in turn
identified the genes responsible for
ETI in Arabidopsis. This pan-genome
analysis revealed that relatively few
A. thaliana genes are responsible for
recognizing the majority of P. syringae
effectors. These results provide insight
into why most pathogenic microbes
only infect specific plant species. —LMZ
Science, this issue p. 763

IN SCIENCE JOURNALS


English laurel afflicted by the bacterial plant
pathogen Pseudomonas syringae, subspecies
of which cause various diseases in plants.

Edited by Michael Funk

RESEARCH


752 14 FEBRUARY 2020 • VOL 367 ISSUE 6479
Published by AAAS
Free download pdf