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Review Editor 1st version

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Independent Review Report Submitted: 01 Apr 2012
REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
GENERAL EVALUATION
Me (Reviewer 1)
SPECIFIC EVALUATION
OTHER COMMENTS
Objective Errors Objective Errors
Ratings
Main Message
Ethical Standarts
Clinical Trials
Complementary Data
Biosecurity Standards
Mandatory Sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article Lenght
Language and Grammar
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described below? If not,
please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis, study, and methods of
original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion of possible implications. They
may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimination, reformulation and/or report on
the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Manuscript Accepted Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
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Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara, Akio Adachi*
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology, Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Independent Review Report Submitted: 01 Apr 2012
REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
GENERAL EVALUATION
Me (Reviewer 1)
SPECIFIC EVALUATION
OTHER COMMENTS
Objective Errors Objective Errors
Ratings
Main Message
Ethical Standarts
Clinical Trials
Complementary Data
Biosecurity Standards
Mandatory Sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article Lenght
Language and Grammar
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described below? If not,
please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis, study, and methods of
original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion of possible implications. They
may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimination, reformulation and/or report on
the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Manuscript Accepted Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
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Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara, Akio Adachi*
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology, Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology, Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described below? If not,
please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis, study, and methods of
original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion of possible implications. They
may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimination, reformulation and/or report on
the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
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Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Material and Methods
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Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described below? If not,
please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis, study, and methods of
original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion of possible implications. They
may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimination, reformulation and/or report on
the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
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What is the main finding of this article?
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Manuscript Accepted Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
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Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara, Akio Adachi*
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology, Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Independent Review Report Submitted: 01 Apr 2012
REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
GENERAL EVALUATION
Me (Reviewer 1)
SPECIFIC EVALUATION
OTHER COMMENTS
Objective Errors Objective Errors
Ratings
Main Message
Ethical Standarts
Clinical Trials
Complementary Data
Biosecurity Standards
Mandatory Sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article Lenght
Language and Grammar
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described below? If not,
please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis, study, and methods of
original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion of possible implications. They
may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimination, reformulation and/or report on
the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Manuscript Accepted Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Download latest PDF
View previous versions
Download images/tables
Reviewer performance Graph
Withdraw from Review
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara, Akio Adachi*
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology, Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
Manuscript Status:
Interactive Review not yet activated.
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Independent Review Report Submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive Review Activated: 12 Apr 2012
REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
3
GENERAL EVALUATION
Me (Reviewer 1)
#10
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the
dorso-ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
SPECIFIC EVALUATION
OTHER COMMENTS
Objective Errors Objective Errors
Ratings
Main Message
Ethical Standarts
Clinical Trials
Complementary Data
Biosecurity Standards
Mandatory Sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article Lenght
Language and Grammar
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described below? If not,
please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis, study, and methods of
original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion of possible implications. They
may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimination, reformulation and/or report on
the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
#1
#2
#3
#4
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Yui Matsumoto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#5
#6
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#9 Editorial Office: Mikako Fujita | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#7
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 2: Yui Matsumoto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
#8
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Add Comment
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Save and Notify Save and Resume Later Finalize Review
Add Comment
#3
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the
dorso-ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
#2 Editorial Office: Mikako Fujita | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Add Comment
Add Comment
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
#3
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the
dorso-ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
#2 Editorial Office: Mikako Fujita | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Add Comment
Add Comment
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
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Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara, Akio Adachi*
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology, Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
History
Reviewer 2 Reviewer 3 Reviewer 4 Reviewer 5 Reviewer 6
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Independent Review Report Submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive Review Activated: 12 Apr 2012
REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
3
GENERAL EVALUATION
Me (Reviewer 1)
#10
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the
dorso-ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
SPECIFIC EVALUATION
OTHER COMMENTS
Objective Errors Objective Errors
Ratings
Main Message
Ethical Standarts
Clinical Trials
Complementary Data
Biosecurity Standards
Mandatory Sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article Lenght
Language and Grammar
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described below? If not,
please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis, study, and methods of
original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion of possible implications. They
may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimination, reformulation and/or report on
the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
#1
#2
#3
#4
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Yui Matsumoto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#5
#6
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#9 Editorial Office: Mikako Fujita | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#7
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 2: Yui Matsumoto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
#8
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Add Comment
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Save and Notify Save and Resume Later Finalize Review
#3
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the
dorso-ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
#2 Editorial Office: Mikako Fujita | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Add Comment
Add Comment
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
#3
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the
dorso-ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
#2 Editorial Office: Mikako Fujita | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
No.
#1
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-
ventral frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Add Comment
Add Comment
Enter your comment here.
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
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Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara, Akio Adachi*
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology, Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Add comment
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Add comment
Add comment
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Here you can post and reply to comments within this Review Forum. On completion, please ensure you Save and
notify changes in order to alert the other participants. Please note that unsaved comments will be lost.
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REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
DELAYED
Authors are delayed to respond in the discussion forum.
Remind the authors to respond OR Re-Submit the manuscript.
Download latest PDF
View previous versions
Reviewer progress
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Final Decision Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
History
Reviewer 2 3
Me
Active Active
Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Add comment
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Add comment
Add comment
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Here you can post and reply to comments within this Review Forum. On completion, please ensure you Save and
notify changes in order to alert the other participants. Please note that unsaved comments will be lost.
My Interactive Review
Q1
Q15
Q16
#1
#2
#3
#5
#4
#6
#1
#2
#3
#1
#2
Submit my comments Endorse publication
OR
Submit my comments Endorse publication
OR
120 px
View Manuscripts
Displayed are all manuscript submis-
sions for this article. Click on any link
to either download or display the
files.
Submitted by Submitted on
20 Jun 2012
Version
01 Steven Huber Tyrosine phosphorylation of the BRI1 receptor kinase
occurs via a posttransational modification and is acti-
vated by the juxtamembrane domain.
Abstract | 31733_Huber_Manuscript | Table 1.DOCX |
Picture_1.TIFF | Figure_1.XLS | Figure_2.XLS
REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
DELAYED
Authors are delayed to respond in the discussion forum.
Remind the authors to respond OR Re-Submit the manuscript.
Download latest PDF
View previous versions
Reviewer progress
Withdraw from review
Final Decision Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
History
Reviewer 2 3
Me
Active Active
Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Add comment
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Add comment
Add comment
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Here you can post and reply to comments within this Review Forum. On completion, please ensure you Save and
notify changes in order to alert the other participants. Please note that unsaved comments will be lost.
My Interactive Review
Q1
Q15
Q16
#1
#2
#3
#5
#4
#6
#1
#2
#3
#1
#2
Submit my comments Endorse publication
OR
Submit my comments Endorse publication
OR
120 px
View Manuscripts
Displayed are all manuscript submis-
sions for this article. Click on any link
to either download or display the
files.
Submitted by Submitted on
20 Jun 2012
Version
01 Steven Huber Tyrosine phosphorylation of the BRI1 receptor kinase
occurs via a posttransational modification and is acti-
vated by the juxtamembrane domain.
Abstract | 31733_Huber_Manuscript | Table 1.DOCX |
Picture_1.TIFF | Figure_1.XLS | Figure_2.XLS
Download Download Download
REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
DELAYED
Authors are delayed to respond in the discussion forum.
Remind the authors to respond OR Re-Submit the manuscript.
Download latest PDF
View previous versions
Download images/tables
Reviewer progress
Withdraw from review
Final Decision Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
History
Reviewer 2 3
Me
Active Active
Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Add comment
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Add comment
Add comment
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Here you can post and reply to comments within this Review Forum. On completion, please ensure you Save and
notify changes in order to alert the other participants. Please note that unsaved comments will be lost.
My Interactive Review
Q1
Q15
Q16
#1
#2
#3
#5
#4
#6
#1
#2
#3
#1
#2
Submit my comments Endorse publication
OR
Submit my comments Endorse publication
OR
120 px
View Manuscripts
Displayed are all manuscript submis-
sions for this article. Click on any link
to either download or display the
files.
Submitted by Submitted on
20 Jun 2012
Version
01 Steven Huber Tyrosine phosphorylation of the BRI1 receptor kinase
occurs via a posttransational modification and is acti-
vated by the juxtamembrane domain.
article.pdf | 31733_Huber_picture.jpg | Table 1.DOCX
Abstract
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse luctus,
nibh eu adipiscing facilisis, velit libero consectetur lectus, ut vestibulum arcu nisi
et metus. Duis semper aliquet nulla vitae lobortis. Mauris eu leo in justo semper
accumsan ac nec mi. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient
montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Fusce sapien arcu, gravida quis pharetra in,
feugiat ut turpis. Pellentesque dapibus malesuada ipsum consectetur congue. In
imperdiet sagittis ullamcorper. Aliquam eu sem tortor, non ullamcorper felis.
Fusce at sem in nisl suscipit auctor id in elit. Duis ullamcorper magna id tortor
sollicitudin rutrum. Integer venenatis, enim vel consectetur malesuada, tellus
erat porttitor enim, nec faucibus sem ante rutrum lorem. Curabitur pulvinar
venenatis augue et euismod. Proin vitae quam tempus dui interdum imperdiet.
Suspendisse potenti. Curabitur lectus odio, dictum non pretium ac, placerat sit
amet nulla.
Sed mauris nisi, varius ut vulputate vitae, convallis at elit. Nam ut lectus eget
lacus tincidunt suscipit vitae ut odio. In iaculis tincidunt mauris id pharetra.
Nullam ut augue at purus blandit tincidunt non vel augue. Phasellus placerat
ligula eget velit sollicitudin ac vulputate lectus semper. Integer nibh ligula, mollis
a feugiat sed, pretium vitae tellus. Donec venenatis mattis accumsan. Donec et
odio at sem fringilla rhoncus eget ultrices dolor. Morbi ut interdum mauris.
Donec et odio at sem fringilla rhoncus eget ultrices dolor.
REVIEW FORUM Review Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
DELAYED
Authors are delayed to respond in the discussion forum.
Remind the authors to respond OR Re-Submit the manuscript.
Download latest PDF
View previous versions
Download images/tables
Reviewer progress
Withdraw from review
Final Decision Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
History
Reviewer 2 3
Me
Active Active
Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Add comment
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Add comment
Add comment
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
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Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Add comment
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Add comment
Add comment
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
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Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto , Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
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Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Reviewer 1 Reviewer 2
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
1 Reviewer(s) delayed in submitting the independent review report.
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Submitted by Submitted on Version
22 Aug 2012 02 Steven Huber Tyrosine phosphorylation of the BRI1 receptor kinase
occurs via a posttransational modification and is acti-
vated by the juxtamembrane domain.
Cover letter | Abstract | article_Original Manuscript.PDF
| article_Original Manuscript.DOC | article Manuscript |
31733_Huber_picture.jpg | Table 1.DOCX
20 Jun 2012 01 Steven Huber Tyrosine phosphorylation of the BRI1 receptor kinase
occurs via a posttransational modification and is acti-
vated by the juxtamembrane domain.
Cover letter | Abstract | article_Original Manuscript.PDF
| article_Original Manuscript.DOC | article Manuscript |
31733_Huber_picture.jpg | Table 1.DOCX
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
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Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
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Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
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Q1
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#1
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#3
#5
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#1
#2
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#1
#2
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Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Add comment
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Add comment
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Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Q1
Q15
Q16
#1
#2
#3
#5
#4
#6
#1
#2
#3
#1
#2
Re-activate review
Final comments to authors (optional)
Final evaluation
Were all your comments sufficiently addressed?
Yes
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque augue mi, euismod iaculis fringilla lacinia, venena-
tis vel eros. Curabitur dictum suscipit tempor. Curabitur neque ligula, posuere in rutrum vestibulum, semper ac
lectus. Curabitur dapibus, risus vel luctus semper, mauris nulla ornare sapien, eu ultricies arcu dui eleifend nulla.
Nunc ornare tempor enim, vel tristique ligula scelerisque et.
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto , Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
All (2) assigned reviewers finalized their reviews.
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Take a final decision on the manuscript.
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Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Final Report Submitted: 21 Aug 2012
Re-activate review
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Q1
Q15
Q16
#1
#2
#3
#5
#4
#6
#1
#2
#3
#1
#2
Re-activate review
Final comments to authors (optional)
Final evaluation
Were all your comments sufficiently addressed?
Yes
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque augue mi, euismod iaculis fringilla lacinia, venena-
tis vel eros. Curabitur dictum suscipit tempor. Curabitur neque ligula, posuere in rutrum vestibulum, semper ac
lectus. Curabitur dapibus, risus vel luctus semper, mauris nulla ornare sapien, eu ultricies arcu dui eleifend nulla.
Nunc ornare tempor enim, vel tristique ligula scelerisque et.
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
All (2) assigned reviewers finalized their reviews.
You are on-time in taking the final decision.
Take a final decision on the manuscript.
Final Decision Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
History
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Reviewers
Reviewer 1
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Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Final Report Submitted: 21 Aug 2012
Re-activate review
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Q1
Q15
Q16
#1
#2
#3
#5
#4
#6
#1
#2
#3
#1
#2
Re-activate review
Final comments to authors (optional)
Final evaluation
Were all your comments sufficiently addressed?
Yes
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque augue mi, euismod iaculis fringilla lacinia, venena-
tis vel eros. Curabitur dictum suscipit tempor. Curabitur neque ligula, posuere in rutrum vestibulum, semper ac
lectus. Curabitur dapibus, risus vel luctus semper, mauris nulla ornare sapien, eu ultricies arcu dui eleifend nulla.
Nunc ornare tempor enim, vel tristique ligula scelerisque et.
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto , Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Download latest PDF
View all files
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
All (2) assigned reviewers finalized their reviews.
You are on-time in taking the final decision.
Take a final decision on the manuscript.
Final Decision Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
History
Manage
Reviewers
Reviewer 1
Reviewer 2
Finalized
Finalized
3
Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Final Report Submitted: 21 Aug 2012
Re-activate review
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of these
mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understandably, authors
want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results correctly) they may
want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited significance (perhaps
in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under specific developmental or
functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Q1
Q15
Q16
#1
#2
#3
#5
#4
#6
#1
#2
#3
#1
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semper ac lectus. Curabitur dapibus, risus vel luctus semper, mauris nulla ornare sapien, eu ultricies arcu dui
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Masako Nomaguchi, Naoya Doi, Yui Matsumoto, Yosuke Sakai, Sachi Fujiwara
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Take a final decision on the manuscript.
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Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Final Report Submitted: 21 Aug 2012
Re-activate review
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Q1
Q15
Q16
#1
#2
#3
#5
#4
#6
#1
#2
#3
#1
#2
Re-activate review
Final comments to authors (optional)
Final evaluation
Were all your comments sufficiently addressed?
Yes
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque augue mi, euismod iaculis fringilla lacinia, venena-
tis vel eros. Curabitur dictum suscipit tempor. Curabitur neque ligula, posuere in rutrum vestibulum, semper ac
lectus. Curabitur dapibus, risus vel luctus semper, mauris nulla ornare sapien, eu ultricies arcu dui eleifend nulla.
Nunc ornare tempor enim, vel tristique ligula scelerisque et.
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REVIEW FORUM Associate Editor
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
All (2) assigned reviewers finalized their reviews.
You are on-time in taking the final decision.
Take a final decision on the manuscript.
Final Decision Submission Independent Review Interactive Review Review Finalized
History
Manage
Reviewers
Reviewer 1
Reviewer 2
Finalized
Finalized
3
Reviewer 1: Mark Moore
Independent review report submitted: 01 Apr 2012
Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
Final Report Submitted: 21 Aug 2012
Re-activate review
Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
below? If not, please contact the Editorial Office. Original Research Articles describe the hypothesis,
study, and methods of original research. Results are reported, interpreted and may include a discussion
of possible implications. They may also encompass disconfirming results which allow hypothesis elimi-
nation, reformulation and/or report on the non-reproducibility of previously published results.
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
General evaluation
Specific evaluation
Other comments
Main message
Ratings
Objective errors
Ethical standarts
Clinical trials
Complementary data
Biosecurity standards
Mandatory sections
Abstract
Introduction
Material and methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Article lenght
Language and grammar
Q1
Q15
Q16
#1
#2
#3
#5
#4
#6
#1
#2
#3
#1
#2
Re-activate review
Final comments to authors (optional)
Final evaluation
Were all your comments sufficiently addressed?
Yes
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Quisque augue mi, euismod iaculis fringilla lacinia, venena-
tis vel eros. Curabitur dictum suscipit tempor. Curabitur neque ligula, posuere in rutrum vestibulum, semper ac
lectus. Curabitur dapibus, risus vel luctus semper, mauris nulla ornare sapien, eu ultricies arcu dui eleifend nulla.
Nunc ornare tempor enim, vel tristique ligula scelerisque et.
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
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Associate Editor: Sige Zou | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43 #1
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Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
Final Decision Submission Interactive Review Review Finalized
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Interactive review activated: 12 Apr 2012
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ments in order to alert the other participants to your changes. Please note that unsaved comments will be lost.
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Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
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Associate Editor: Sige Zou | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43 #1
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
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REVIEW FORUM Frontiers Microbiology Editorial Office (EOF)
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
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Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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REVIEW FORUM Frontiers Microbiology Editorial Office (EOF)
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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REVIEW FORUM Frontiers Microbiology Editorial Office (EOF)
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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REVIEW FORUM Frontiers Microbiology Editorial Office (EOF)
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
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1 reviewer(s) on-time in responding to the review invitation.
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Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
Re-invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Interested
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
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extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Free
Invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Free
Invite reviewer
Elena Smith
David & Inez Myers Professor in
Computational Neuroscience
Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
Status: Free
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
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1. Mark Moore (31 Aug 2012) 1. Andr Megali Amado
(31 Aug 2012)
Mark Moore (31 Aug 2012) Mark Moore (31 Aug 2012)
Assigned Reviewers Pending Invitations Declined Invitations
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REVIEW FORUM Frontiers Microbiology Editorial Office (EOF)
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
The required number of reviewers is not yet reached.
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REVIEW FORUM Frontiers Microbiology Editorial Office (EOF)
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REVIEW FORUM Frontiers Microbiology Editorial Office (EOF)
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
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Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
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REVIEW FORUM Frontiers Microbiology Editorial Office (EOF)
Species tropism of HIV-1 modulated by viral accessory proteins
Review, Front. Microbio. - Virology,
Submitted on: 02 Jul 2012, Edited by: Mikako Fujita
Research Topic: Receptor-independent/ - associeted viral tropism
ON-TIME
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David & Inez Myers Professor in
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Keywords: Metagenomics, bioinformatics,
extremophiles, microbial lipid biosynthesis.
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Does this manuscript conform to the style guidelines for Original Research articles, described
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Add comment
Authors use multiple techniques to document the (infrequent) presence of mixed chemical/electrical synapses
between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal neurons in rat hippocampus.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 05:43
When a human brain is morphed to the dimensions of the Neanderthal cranial volume, the dorso-ventral
frontolimbic distance becomes smaller and the rostro-caudal white matter distance becomes larger.
Reviewer 2: Richard J Weinberg| 17 Mar 2012 | 07:43
The writing here (and throughout) is not as polished as it might be. Authors have put a lot of work into the
experiments, and make a genuine effort to present the results as important, but it doesn't come across very
well, at least for this reader. 1st paragraph, we are told that electrical coupling "is important" for generating
gamma rhythms; this is not my field, but a) perhaps authors mean to cite also Traub J Neurosci '01; b) it
would seem (I haven't read Traub Epilepsia'01) that what is shown is that it 'may be important,' or 'computa-
tional analysis suggests' or some such. While I am prepared to believe the conclusion if worded in a cautious
manner, the same made as a blanket assertion leads me to doubt unnecessarily. As an outsider, I am un-
clear whether the main point of novelty is the existence of mixed synapses as in Mauthner cells, or the exis-
tence of electrical coupling between mossy fibers and CA3 pyramidal cells, or that there are gap junctions
between pre- and postsynaptic elements. This would be less of a problem for a specialist, but a more effec-
tive introduction would make this clear. A few minor text errors are present here and elsewhere that should
be fixed (e.g. 1st paragraph, Dudek et al <no year>; 2nd paragraph "potentially" is poor word choice; 3rd
paragraph first sentence perhaps should be deleted?; 4th paragraph should be "connexin-36."
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 11:43
Yes
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 17 Mar 2012 | 09:43
The manuscript is completely rewritten. Great care has been taken to polish the writing, de-emphasize inap-
propriate or incompletely-documented conclusions, and overall, to polish the manuscript. The major new
finding -- that gap junctions are primarily at glutamatergic mixed synapses on a wide variety of cell types in
all regions of the hippocampus -- are now more carefully explained and documented. Additional figures are
added to document the wide variety of gap junction morphologies and sizes at mixed vs. electrical synapses.
The abstract and introduction now make it clear that the new findings pertain to the widespread distribution
of mixed synapses throughout hippocampus, on a variety of cell types.
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
van though considered complete by reviewer #1, additional essential details are added (as requested by
reviewer #2).
Does the article describe experiments using a select agent or toxin?
Add comment
Add comment
Is it possible that this manuscript contains an NSABB-defined experiment of concern?
No
I don't know enough to judge how reliably authors can judge locations within the tissue and can discriminate
pyramidal cell-mossy fiber connections in freeze-fracture material; I presume identifications are correct, but
the finding is sufficiently infrequent that even rare errors might cause problems.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
We have removed emphasis regarding GJs between MF and CA3pyr and now show widespread glutmatergic
mixed synapses in all layers of hippocampus, including on interneurons and principal cells. A Table is now
included that makes this explicitly clear. The discussion also makes it clear that in addition to GJs at
MF/Ca3pyr, that most GJs occur at glutamatergic mixed synapses in dentate gyrus, stratum lucidum, stra-
tum radiatum, stratum oriens, and CA1 stratum radiatum, and that most of those are glutamatergic mixed
synapses on interneurons.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 13:43
My overall impression is that authors have worked hard to present strong evidence for the existence of
these mixed synapses, but that they are probably both uncommon and electrically weak. Understand-
ably, authors want to emphasize the possible importance of their results, but (if I understand results
correctly) they may want to be more cautious, and at least mention the possibility that they are of limited
significance (perhaps in that case suggesting that these electrical junctions might be stronger under
specific developmental or functional states?)
Yes.
Reviewer 1: James Bonaiuto | 17 Mar 2012 | 03:43
Author: Masako Nomaguchi | 18 Mar 2012 | 09:43
There was no separate Conclusion section in the previous manuscript. That section is now included.
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This reviewer has not yet submitted his independent review report. If the interactive review forum is already active,
the authors are encouraged to start responding to the other comments in the meantime. We will then notify the
authors as soon as this independent report is available.
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