TLecuitLab

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TLecuitLab

TLecuitLab

@LecuitLab

GL @IBDMmarseille, dir. Turing Center for living systems @centuri_ls. Professor at Collège de France.

参加日 Ağustos 2017
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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
Here is video of 1st lecture at College de France on Biological computation 😊. I defend the necessity to access Algorithmic & Computational levels of analysis in cell & dev. biol. proposed by David Marr in neuroscience. Logic & Function matter 🤩. Video: tinyurl.com/55yejk5f
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Oded Rechavi
Oded Rechavi@OdedRechavi·
A new mechanism for “RNA memory”! 😱 Thrilled to share another crazy paper from the lab (can’t believe we posted 2 in 2 days!), summarizing >10 years of research: Work on transgenerational inheritance of small RNAs in the powerful model organism C. elegans changed how we think about what’s possible in inheritance and evolution, because it allows the most heretical thing: inheritance of parental responses to the environment! However, it’s still unclear whether RNAs are inherited across generations in other animals, largely because the RNA-dependent RNA polymerases that amplify heritable small RNAs and prevent their dilution in C. elegans are not conserved in mammals. In this new work, an amazing collaboration with the Rink and Wurtzel labs, we show that planarians establish long-lasting and heritable small RNA–based gene regulatory states despite lacking canonical RNA-dependent RNA polymerases and nuclear RNAi machinery (that are required in C. elegans). You might say “they are both worms…” BUT planarians are evolutionarily very distant from C. elegans (flatworms vs. roundworms, diverged more than 500 million years ago), making this particularly surprising. These are totally different animals. We find that ingestion of double-stranded RNA induces sequence-specific silencing that persists for months and survives repeated cycles of whole-body regeneration. Even more strikingly, RNAi can be transferred between animals, echoing James V. McConnell’s controversial “RNA memory” experiments from the 1970s (his lab was targeted by the Unabomber terrorist Ted Kaczynski, who sent McConnell a bomb. This and other controversies ended this line of experiments…) Mechanistically, we find that the response transitions from a transient systemic dsRNA-triggered phase to a stable, cell-autonomous post-transcriptional “memory phase” maintained by antisense small RNAs. Using a new luminescence reporter (transgenesis is currently impossible in planarians), we show that silencing spreads along the targeted gene and identify a weird type of planarian small RNAs with untemplated polyA tails. RNAi inheritance without canonical RdRPs establishes planarians as a powerful system for studying RNA-based regulatory inheritance beyond C. elegans and raises the possibility that RNA-mediated inheritance may be more broadly conserved in animals, potentially even in mammals. Here’s a video of a planarian that is treated by RNAi against β-catenin and develops multiple heads instead of just one. This is one of the phenotypes that is inherited. Another phenotype is “loss of eyes” (which we show is not only inherited across multiple regeneration cycles, but can also be transmitted between animals in transplantation experiments). Amazing work led by first authors Prakash Cherian and Idit Aviram (co-supervised by Omri and me). Please read the preprint, the link is in the next tweet, and share!
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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
@AMartinezArias Beyond the specifics of this article are you suggesting that all computer simulations of biological processes are unhelpful because they are not « the thing »? I contend that simulations are useful precisely because they are simplified representation of « the thing ».
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Alfonso Martinez Arias
Alfonso Martinez Arias@AMartinezArias·
These gimmicks are not helpful. This is NOT a cell.
Bo Wang@BoWang87

This is really cool (and wild): Scientists simulated a complete living cell for the first time. Every molecule, every reaction, from DNA replication to cell division. The paper (Luthey-Schulten et al., Cell 2026, doi.org/10.1016/j.cell…), just out today, used JCVI-Syn3A — a synthetic minimal bacterium with fewer than 500 genes. A 3D+time simulation of the full 105-minute cell cycle: DNA replication, protein translation, metabolism, division. Every gene, protein, RNA, and chemical reaction tracked through physical space. It took years to build. Multiple GPUs. Six days of compute time per run. And this is the simplest possible cell. A human cell has ~20,000 genes. It lives in tissue. It interacts with neighbors. It differentiates. It responds to drugs in ways that depend on context we haven't fully measured. Mechanistic simulation of the minimal cell costs 6 GPU-days for 105 minutes of biology. You cannot scale that to human cells. The complexity isn't 40x harder. It's exponentially harder. This is why the field pivoted to data-driven models. You can't hand-encode the regulatory wiring of a human hepatocyte. But you can learn it — if you have the right perturbation data collected across enough diverse biological contexts. The two approaches aren't competing. Papers like this generate the ground truth that future ML models need for validation. But the path to a clinically useful virtual cell runs through foundation models, not through scaling up mechanistic simulation. Amazing work!

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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
Wonderful to be part of exciting Program at Harvard University & CMSA, Mathematics &Biology: Morphometry, Morphogenesis and Mathematics. Thank you 🙏🏼 and congrats to organizers for their invitation. Great to see and discuss with wonderful colleagues, not least Akankshi Munjal! 🤩
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Development
Development@Dev_journal·
Tissue phase transitions in development: more than just mechanics In this Review, Laura Rustarazo-Calvo, Karen Grace Soans and Nicoletta I. Petridou discuss tissue phase transitions in development: doi.org/10.1242/dev.20…
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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
Spring is just around the corner in Marseille 😊
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Society for Developmental Biology
SDB is sad to announce the passing of Gail R. Martin (1944-2026) after a short illness in San Francisco. Martin served as SDB President in 2007 and was the recipient the Conklin Medal in 2002 and the @FASEBorg Excellence in Science Award in 2011. bit.ly/4aIfu5d
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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
I am now ⁦@AshokaUniv⁩ for a 2 day visit. I look forward to interacting with students and faculty, and giving a College de France lecture on « The logic of biological computation from cells to embryos and organisms. » The campus of beautiful and full of students 🤩
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Yann LeCun
Yann LeCun@ylecun·
Hugo Duminil-Copin, French mathematician and 2022 Field Medalist told me he never participated in math competition and was very bad at it. Innovative mathematics requires creativity, intuition, intense concentration, and long reflections, sometimes spread over several years. Good performance at a math olympiad merely tests fast problem solving abilities. AI can do that nowadays. One of the big activities of a researcher, in mathematics and elsewhere, is not to answer questions but to ask the right questions.
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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
Last but not least, @NCBS_Bangalore hosts remarkable plants and biodiversity. The garden is beautiful, at any season. Always refreshing to be exposed to nature while working on « life in a lab »… a glimpse below 🤩
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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
Another treat visiting ⁦@ictstifr⁩, welcomed & stimulated by ⁦@Vijay_K_Murthy⁩. Exciting work on non-trivial & remarkable interactions btw mechanics & geometry in morphogenesis. Check what will come out… + Do visit ICTS biological physics groups. 🙏🏼 for hosting me!
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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
A very interesting article « De novo emergence of metabolically active protocols ». Complex chemistry, organisation from few input constituants. Very intriguing. Congrats Shashi Thutupalli and colleagues ⁦@stpalli⁩ Link: arxiv.org/abs/2601.11013
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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
Among outstanding scientists ⁦@NCBS_Bangalore⁩ are the physicists. Colleagues & friends Madan Rao, Mukund Thattai, ⁦@stpalli⁩ Shashi Thutupalli, w. visitors Shiva GV, Irene Giardina. Always learn from them. Great discussions on Information & computation in biology.
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TLecuitLab
TLecuitLab@LecuitLab·
15 yrs ago, I spent 1y sabbatical ⁦@NCBS_Bangalore⁩, with family, hosted by ⁦@kvijayraghavan⁩, starting long standing coll. with ⁦@jitumayor_lab⁩ & Madan Rao. The discovery of this exceptionally diverse, creative & energetic community transformed me 🤩. Huge 🙏🏼
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Les Echos
Les Echos@LesEchos·
💥 « Notre problème est le réveil technologique de l'Europe, pas la taxe Zucman » ➡️ trib.al/UFyMHBh
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Gayatri Mundhe
Gayatri Mundhe@Mundhe_Gayatri_·
Thrilled to share that my PhD work from @LecuitLab is out in Nature Communications! We reveal how the GPCR ligand Fog acts as a mechanogen, forming a self-renewing activity gradient that drives tissue morphogenesis in Drosophila. nature.com/articles/s4146…
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