1,177,054 Matching Annotations
  1. Oct 2024
    1. he found the man whose existence had been doubted by many of the Indians, and believed to have been only seen by deceived eyes, heard by foolish ears, and talked of by lying tongues, living in a deep cave near the end of the island, nearest the setting sun.

      when the tales are passed down from generation to generation it is believed they are only stories to scare children or to pass the time but often the hold a lesson or some manner of truth and tackanash found this out.

    2. This was the beginning of fog, which since, for the long space between the Frog-month and the Hunting-month, has at times obscured Nope and all the shores of the Indian people.

      i believe what is being implied here is that when moshup smokes his pipe since it is so big and he smokes for so long it creates an obscuring fog which is actually just smoke.

    3. If it is not true, I am not the liar…”

      is he implying in some way that while smoking he could have went to this island and ate the children himself, not being the hero in the story but the villian?

    4. hills of the thunder?

      what are the hills of thunder and are they connected to spirits in some way?

    5. Folk tales offer a valuable window into the ways that Native Americans understood themselves and the wider world.

      the native American people and access to there folk tales were very rare and restricted as the natives at first only shared the stories among themselves so these stories to us are newer and less understood.

    1. hackers stealing the names, Social Security numbers, and birthdates of 143 million Americans from Equifax

      The social security breach that happened recently was incredibly unwarranted, especially since there was a huge responsibility on the protection of social security information. It climaxed to the point where everyone was informed online to shut down their credit cards immediately, as having your Social Security stolen leaves you in an extremely vulnerable position.

    2. But social media companies often fail at keeping our information secure.

      I once heard a lecture from a cybersecurity expert, and they had us understand that cybersecurity is a matter of balancing needs against profit. The example he gave was that if you had $100, you wouldn't buy a $100 locked box to keep it safe, maybe a 5 or 15 dollar lock. So it's never a matter of what is the "most" secure, but what can be the most practically secured.

    3. But while that is the proper security for storing passwords. So for example, Facebook stored millions of Instagram passwords in plain text, meaning the passwords weren’t encrypted and anyone with access to the database could simply read everyone’s passwords. And Adobe encrypted their passwords improperly and then hackers leaked their password database of 153 million users. From a security perspective there are many risks that a company faces, such as: Employees at the company misusing their access, like Facebook employees using their database permissions to stalk women Hackers finding a vulnerability and inserting, modifying, or downloading information. For example: hackers stealing the names, Social Security numbers, and birthdates of 143 million Americans from Equifax hackers posting publicly the phone numbers, names, locations, and some email addresses of 530 million Facebook users, or about 7% of all people on Earth

      This is so fascinating to me. As they were mentioning risks they used real-world situations and linked the articles to learn more about the event. Each one of these events seems crazy and I can't believe I haven't heard of most of them. This shows that even when you think you are being private some things are just out of your control.

    4. Hacking attempts can be made on individuals, whether because the individual is the goal target, or because the individual works at a company which is the target. Hackers can target individuals with attacks like:

      This really emphasizes that cybersecurity goes beyond just technology; it also involves human behavior. People often reuse passwords for convenience, unaware of how easily that habit can be exploited. It’s both fascinating and a bit frightening how trust can be manipulated—take the example of the NSA impersonating Google. Social engineering serves as a perfect reminder that hackers don’t always need sophisticated tools; sometimes, they just need to deceive people into trusting the wrong thing. Phishing emails and fake QR codes are particularly clever because they depend on people acting quickly without thinking. The reference to Frank Abagnale from Catch Me If You Can re

    1. There might be some things that we just feel like aren’t for public sharing (like how most people wear clothes in public, hiding portions of their bodies)

      I think that a less obvious reason for privacy on social media is the fear of garnering an online presence that isn't true to who you actually are as a person. More specifically, if someone were to post certain aspects like their body, expensive clothes, or expensive food for example, a false narrative that the user is uber-rich may be fostered and ultimately may affect the user's relationships with others in real life.

    2. In some cases we might want a social media company

      Another example of "private" data you want companies to have access to may be your user meta-data. In the case that you lose access to your account, you would want to be able to recover it via a password change.

    3. # Some governments and laws protect the privacy of individuals (using a Natural Rights ethical framing). These include the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which includes a “right to be forgotten”, and the United State’s Supreme Court has at times inferred a constitutional right to privacy.

      One excellent example is the European Union's GDPR(General Data Protection Regulation), which protects privacy as a fundamental right. The "right to be forgotten," which enables people to ask for the removal of personal information, is one noteworthy clause that reflects the idea that people should have control over their information in the digital age. However, the U.S. lacks the comprehensive, overarching structure found in the EU, and privacy rights are frequently sector-specific (e.g., health, financial).

    4. There are many reasons, both good and bad, that we might want to keep information private. There might be some things that we just feel like aren’t for public sharing (like how most people wear clothes in public, hiding portions of their bodies) We might want to discuss something privately, avoiding embarrassment that might happen if it were shared publicly We might want a conversation or action that happens in one context not to be shared in another (context collapse) We might want to avoid the consequences of something we’ve done (whether ethically good or bad), so we keep the action or our identity private We might have done or said something we want to be forgotten or make at least made less prominent We might want to prevent people from stealing our identities or accounts, so we keep information (like passwords) private We might want to avoid physical danger from a stalker, so we might keep our location private We might not want to be surveilled by a company or government that could use our actions or words against us (whether what we did was ethically good or bad) When we use social media platforms though, we at least partially give up some of our privacy.

      I believe that being overly private is better than being excessively public. You do not know what information someone is looking for or needs from you, so giving the bare minimum allows you to stay more private. Another thing I think is that while you are signing up for most social media, you are willingly giving up some forms of privacy. It may be small or unuseful, but social media weren't created to be private, so it's exactly what you're signing up for.

    5. I am happy that some governments make it a priority to protect individuals privacy rights. The European unions general data protection regulation is a great piece of legislation and is a step in the right direction.

    1. She doesn't cling to her own comfort;thus problems are no problem for her

      I immediately thought of this quotes from Buddha "In the end, only three things matter: how much you loved, how gently you lived, and how gracefully you let go of things not meant for you." and "The root of all suffering is attachment.". I believe that in order to achieve fulfillment and peace one should go with the flow of life and to not cling to her own comfort and expectations.

    2. The Master never reaches for the great;thus she achieves greatness.

      There is this saying "Exactly what you run away from you end up chasing" and I believe the opposite works as well. What you do not chase you attract.

    3. Think of the small as largeand the few as many

      This is all about noticing small components that make up the whole picture and appreciating those.

    Annotators

    1. I had chosen to write aboutbetrayal for our creative writing exercise, and instead ofdissuading nine-year-old me from the mature topic, shegave me books to read, offered out-of-class writingassignments that she would grade on her own time, andnominated my name for every speaking role in anyschool event. Miss Sandy was the most underpaid andunderappreciated teacher, and yet she taught me farbeyond the 4th grade. In fact, the lessons she impartedstill influence my learning now, and one day thesenuances of language will be impressed onto my children.

      Another moment in which her life lesson has benefited her to become a better writer gaining more languages to use for herself and as she states for her kids.

    2. . I was able to amend the story then, and thispaper is my way of fixing it now, and I will continue to be aware of single stories. Consider it myway of saying a person’s true measure is what they choose to do with their power, regardless of itsmagnitude.

      Context: in this sentence it feels like she is telling essentially people the old famous quote "with power comes responsibility".

    3. A person’s true measure iswhat they choose to do withtheir power, regardless of itsmagnitude. The power tocombat ignorance andpromote freedom of thought;that is to know every sidethere is to know about astory and have the liberty totake a stance, make a choice,or simply just have the fullknowledge.

      Design: she uses a unique design here as if she was writing a news letter for the new York times

    4. . It all made sense now: these rules grant us chances to think about our words onemore time before they transform into something bigger than words. They limit how impulsive onecan be. In between choosing “to” and “too” are scant milliseconds for you to stop and think. Assomeone who always comes up with better comebacks the day after in the shower, I appreciate theextra time—in fact, I need the extra time.This has changed my perspective completely on viewing grammar and spelling as burdenswhile writing. I enjoyed learning it and applying it throughout my writing.

      Context: In this scene the author is explaining to us the perspective she gained on people when writing often times then not people tend to just simply write sometimes without even checking or choosing between different words and as result just like her teacher explained has consequences of taking wrong turns due to the human nature of impulsiveness. and with that understanding gains a new perspective on spelling and grammar as a whole.

    5. In spite of my male-dominated community, I was able to interact with individuals ofthe opposite sex, as lab partners and even as best friends, as opposed to my neighbor who onlyknew of them through her experience with the one that she would be forced to marry. Thisprepared me for my later reality, beyond my school’s protective wings. It empowered me to find myfemale voice, acknowledge its importance, and to use it positively and influentially. This hasultimately made me the vocal person I am, and this translates into my writing as much as it doesanything else. Here, along with the basketball court, is where my inner leader was born, where myability to socially influence people toward a bigger goal originated.

      Details: what the author shows us is added layer on to what she has become today. The issues of forced marriage in her country and the overwhelming reality of what might happen pushes her to be the loud voice in both speech and in words that she continues to use till this day and how it is also used to bring out the inner leader in her giving her the ability to influence others even after her story.

    1. Usernames will need to be unique and have two numbers appended to the end of them, which Signal states was done in order to help keep usernames "egalitarian and to minimize spoofing."
    1. it had College Football Playoff implications.

      This article is an example of timeliness, as the game happened on Wednesday night, impact, as it will effect a lot of people both involved with the two teams that played, as well as most of the college football world, and prominence, as the college football playoff is significant and heavily followed by millions of people around the world

    2. One of the most significant college football results of this week took place on—believe it or not—Wednesday night.

      The statement of this game being one of the most significant college football results of the week is an opinion as other people can disagree by the time the college football week is over

    3. According to ESPN, it was just the sixth time in the AP poll era (since 1936) that a team with a record of 0–5 or worse beat a team with a record of 5–0 or better. It hadn’t happened since 2001, when North Texas beat Middle Tennessee.

      This is a statement of fact. The reporter cited a source (ESPN) to back up his claim and further clarified by stating "the AP poll era (since 1936)" in the statement.

    1. I consider Valentines 'designer' typewriters, and generally overrated. If you want to write on an Olivetti, I'd go for the Lettera 22/32/DL. The Valentine is based on the Lettera 32, so the mechanical part is solid, but the Valentine is not as well-balanced as the 32. And about ten times more expensive.

      Me starts thinking about cornering the market in Lettera 32s and 3D printing Valentine cases to put onto them...

    1. Unexplained PnL

      I think the title of this section should be the MRCombined Cube - all the other sections go by the name of the cube.

    1. eLife Assessment

      In this useful study, the authors tested a novel approach to eradicating HIV reservoirs by constructing a herpes simplex virus (HSV)-based therapeutic vaccine and evaluating efficacy in experimental infections of chronically SIV-infected, antiretroviral therapy (ART)-treated macaques. While mean viremia at rebound was lower in the HSV vaccine-treated group, the evidence presented appears to be incomplete, as the group size was small and the viral load at rebound was highly variable. This is a revised paper, but the support for the conclusions, particularly the effect of the HSV-vectored therapeutic vaccine on the SIV reservoir in the SIV-infected macaques, remains limited.

    2. Reviewer #1 (Public review):

      Summary:

      The authors constructed a novel HSV-based therapeutic vaccine to cure SIV in a primate model. The novel HSV vector is deleted for ICP34.5. Evidence is given that this protein blocks HIV reactivation by interference with the NFkappaB pathway. The deleted construct supposedly would reactivate SIV from latency. The SIV genes carried by the vector ought to elicit a strong immune response. Together the HSV vector would elicit a shock and kill effect. This is tested in a primate model.

      Strengths and weaknesses:

      (1) Deleting ICP34.5 from the HSV construct has a very strong effect on HIV reactivation. The mechanism underlying increased activation by deleting ICP34.5 is only partially explored. Overexpression of ICP34.5 has a much smaller effect (reduction in reactivation) than deletion of ICP34.5 (strong activation); this is acknowledged by the authors that no full mechanistic explanation can be given at this moment.

      (2) No toxicity data are given for deleting ICP34.5. How specific is the effect for HIV reactivation? A RNA seq analysis is required to show the effect on cellular genes.

      A RNA seq analysis was done in the revised manuscript comparing the effect of HSV-1 and deleted vector in J-LAT cells (Fig S5). More than 2000 genes are upregulated after transduction with the modified vector in comparison with the WT vector. Hence, the specificity of upregulation of SIV genes is questioned. Authors do NOT comment on these findings. In my view it questions the utility of this approach.

      (3) The primate groups are too small and the results to variable to make averages. In Fig 5, the group with ART and saline has two slow rebounders. It is not correct to average those with the single quick rebounder. Here the interpretation is NOT supported by the data.

      Although authors provided some promising SIV DNA data, no additional animals were added. Groups of 3 animals are too small to make any conclusion, especially since the huge variability in response. The average numbers out of 3 are still presented in the paper, which is not proper science.

      No data are given of the effect of the deletion in primates. Now the deleted construct is compared with an empty vector containing no SIV genes. Authors provide new data in Fig S2 on the comparison of WT and modified vector in cells from PLWH, but data are not that convincing. A significant difference in reactivation is seen for LTR in only 2/4 donors and in Gag in 3/4 donors. (Additional question what is meaning of LTR mRNA, do authors relate to genomic RNA??)

      Discussion

      HSV vectors are mainly used in cancer treatment partially due to induced inflammation. Whether these are suitable to cure PLWH without major symptoms is a bit questionable to me and should at least be argued for.

      The RNA seq data add on to this worry and should at least be discussed.

    3. Reviewer #2 (Public review):

      Summary:

      In this article Wen et. al., describe the development of a 'proof-of-concept' bi-functional vector based out of HSV-deltaICP-34.5's ability to purge latent HIV-1 and SIV genomes from cells. They show that co-infection of latent J-lat T-cell lines with a HSV-deltaICP-34.5 vector can reactivate HIV-1 from a latent state. Over- or stable expression of ICP 34.5 ORF in these cells can arrest latent HIV-1 genomes from transcription, even in the presence of latency reversal agents. ICP34.5 can co-IP with- and de-phosphorylate IKKa/b to block its interaction with NF-k/B transcription factor. Additionally, ICP34.5 can interact with HSF1 which was identified by mass-spec. Thus, the authors propose that the latency reversal effect of HSV-deltaICP-34.5 in co-infected JLat cells is due to modulatory effects on the IKKa/b-NF-kB and PP1-HSF-1 pathway.

      Next the authors cleverly construct a bifunctional HSV based vector with deleted ICP34.5 and 47 ORFs to purge latency and avoid immunological refluxes, and additionally expand the application of this construct as a vaccine by introducing SIV genes. They use this 'vaccine' in mouse models and show the expected SIV-immune responses. Experiments in rhesus macaques (RM), further elicit potential for their approach to reactivate SIV genomes and at the same time block their replication by antibodies. What was interesting in the SIV experiments is that the dual-functional vector vaccine containing sPD1- and SIV Gag/Env ORFs effectively delayed SIV rebound in RMs and in some cases almost neutralized viral DNA copy detection in serum. Very promising indeed, however there are some questions I wish the authors explored to answer, detailed below.

      Overall, this is an elegant and timely work demonstrating the feasibility of reducing virus rebound in animals, and potentially expand to clinical studies. The work was well written, and sections were clearly discussed.

      Strengths:

      The work is well designed, rationale explained and written very clearly for lay readers.<br /> Claims are adequately supported by evidence and well designed experiments including controls.

      Weaknesses:

      (1) It looks like ICP0 is also involved in latency reversal effects. More follow-up work will be required to test if this is in fact true.

      (2) It is difficult to estimate the depletion of the latent viral reservoir. The authors have tried to address this issue. A more convincing argument to this reviewer will be data to demonstrate that after the bi-functional vaccine, the animals show overall reduction in the number of circulating latent cells. The feasibility to obtain such a result is not clearly demonstrated.

      (3) The authors state that the reduced virus rebound detected following bi-functional vaccine delivery is due to latent genomes becoming activated and steady-state neutralization of these viruses by antibody response. This needs to be demonstrated. Perhaps cell-culture experiments from specimen taken from animals might help address this issue. In lab cultures one could create environments without antibody responses, under these conditions one would expect higher level of viral loads being released in response to the vaccine in question.

    4. Author response:

      The following is the authors’ response to the original reviews.

      Reviewer #1 (Public Review):

      Summary:

      The authors constructed a novel HSV-based therapeutic vaccine to cure SIV in a primate model. The novel HSV vector is deleted for ICP34.5. Evidence is given that this protein blocks HIV reactivation by interference with the NF-kB pathway. The deleted construct supposedly would reactivate SIV from latency. The SIV genes carried by the vector ought to elicit a strong immune response. Together the HSV vector would elicit a shock and kill effect. This is tested in a primate model.

      Thank you for your kind comments and suggestions, which are very helpful in improving our manuscript. We have carefully revised our manuscript and performed additional experiments accordingly, and we now think this version has been substantially improved for your reconsideration.

      Strengths and weaknesses:

      (1) Deleting ICP34.5 from the HSV construct has a very strong effect on HIV reactivation. Why is no eGFP readout given in Figure 1C as for WT HSV? The mechanism underlying increased activation by deleting ICP34.5 is only partially explored. Overexpression of ICP34.5 has a much smaller effect (reduction in reactivation) than deletion of ICP34.5 (strong activation); so the story seems incomplete.

      Thank you for your careful review and kind reminder.

      (1) We are sorry for the misunderstanding of Figure 1C. In the experiment of Figue 1C, we used an HSV-1 17 strain containing GFP (HSV-GFP) and HSV-DICP34.5 (recombinant HSV-1 17 strain with ICP34.5 deletion based on HSV-GFP) to reactivate the HIV latency cell line (J-Lat 10.6 cell). Since detecting GFP cannot distinguish between HSV infection and HIV reactivation, we assessed the reactivation by measuring the mRNA levels of HIV LTR upon stimulation with either HSV-GFP or HSV-ΔICP34.5. Actually, in Figure 1B, we had verified the reactivation efficacy by infecting J-Lat 10.6 cells with the HSV-1 17 strain containing GFP (HSV-GFP) and found significant upregulation of mRNA levels of HIV-1 LTR, Tat, Gag, Vif, and Vpr. We have adjusted the corresponding descriptions accordingly in the revised manuscript.

      (2) We agree with your insightful mention that the mechanism underlying increased activation by HSV-ΔICP34.5 is worthy to be further explored in the future study. In this study, we found that ICP34.5 play an antagonistic role with the reactivation of HIV latency by HSV-1 mainly through the modulation of host NF-κB and HSF1 pathways, while HSV-1 (especially HSV-ΔICP34.5) might reactivate HIV latency through NF-κB, HSF1, and other yet-to-be-determined mechanisms. Thus, ICP34.5 overexpression can only a partial effect on the reduction of the HIV latency reactivation by HSV-1. We have mentioned this issue in the revised “Discussion section”. Intriguingly, these findings collectively indicated that ICP34.5 might play an antagonistic role in the reactivation of HIV by HSV-1, and thus our modified HSV-DICP34.5 constructs can effectively reactivate HIV/SIV latency through the release of imprisonment from ICP34.5. However, ICP34.5 overexpression had only a partial effect on the reduction of the HIV latency reactivation, indicating that HSV-DICP34.5-based constructs can also reactivate HIV latency through other yet-to-be-determined mechanisms. (Lines 334 to 340).

      (2) No toxicity data are given for deleting ICP34.5. How specific is the effect for HIV reactivation? An RNA seq analysis is required to show the effect on cellular genes.

      Thank you for your questions and suggestions.

      (1) It’s well known that ICP34.5 is a neurotoxicity factor that can antagonize host immune responses, and previous studies (in gene therapy and oncolytic virotherapy) have shown that the safety of recombinant HSV-based vector can be improved by deleting ICP34.5. In this study, we also found that HSV-DICP34.5 exhibited lower virulence and replication ability than its parental strain (HSV-GFP) (Figure 1D, Figure S1). In addition, HSV-DICP34.5 induced a lower level of inflammatory cytokines (including IL-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α) in primary CD4+ T cells from PLWH compared to HSV-GFP stimulation, likely due to its lower virulence and replication ability (Figure 1I-K). In addition, the CD4+ /CD8+ T cell ratio (Figure 5I) and body weight (Figure S9) after treatment were effectively ameliorated in the SIV-infected macaques of the ART+HSV-DICP34.5-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group. Our data also demonstrated that there was no significant effect on the cell composition of peripheral blood in the SIV-infected macaques of ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group (Figure S10). Thus, these data suggest the safety of HSV-DICP34.5 in PLWH might be tolerable. We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript.

      (2) In our study, we found both adenovirus and vaccinia virus cannot reactivate HIV latency (Figure S3). In addition, the deletion of ICP0 gene from HSV-1 diminished the reactivation effect of HIV latency by HSV-1 (Figure S4). Thus, these data suggested the reactivation of HIV latency by HSV-1 might be virus-specific. Of course, this might be further investigated in future studies. We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript.

      (3) To explore the mechanism of reactivating viral latency by HSV-DICP34.5-based constructs, we performed RNA-seq analysis (Figure S5). We have added the corresponding description accordingly in the revised manuscript.

      (3) The primate groups are too small and the results to variable to make averages. In Figure 5, the group with ART and saline has two slow rebounders. It is not correct to average those with a single quick rebounder. Here the interpretation is NOT supported by the data.

      We agree with you that this is a pilot study with limited numbers of rhesus macaques. Although the number of macaques was relatively limited, these nine macaques were distributed evenly based on the background level of age, sex, weight, CD4 count, and viral load (VL) (Table S2). All SIV-infected macaques used in this study had a long history of SIV infection and had several courses of ART therapy, which mimics treatment of chronic HIV-1 infection in humans. These macaques were infected with SIVmac239 for more than 5 years, and highly pathogenic SIV-infected macaques have been well-validated as a stringent model to recapitulate HIV-1 pathogenesis and persistence during ART therapy in humans. Indeed, in our Chinese rhesus model, ART treatment effectively suppressed SIV infection to undetectable levels in plasma, and upon ART discontinuation, virus rapidly rebounded, which is very similar with that in ART-treated HIV patients. We think the results of this pilot study were very promising for further studies which will be expanded the scale of animals and then to preclinical and clinical study in our next projects. Thank you for your understanding.

      As for your question regarding “the two animals with low VL and slow rebound”, our explanation is following: As mentioned above, these macaques were distributed evenly based on the background level of CD4 count and VL (Table S2), and then there were different change of viral load and viral rebound in different groups. Thus, we think these data can support our interpretation. Moreover, our conclusion can also be supported from at least three evidences.

      (1) The VL in the ART+saline group promptly rebounded after ART discontinuation, with an average 8.63-fold increase in the rebounded peak VL compared with the pre-ART VL (Figure 5A, D and E). However, plasma VL in the ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group exhibited a delayed rebound interval (Figure 5B-D).

      (2) There was a lower rebounded peak VL than pre-ART VL in the ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group (average 12.20-fold decrease), while a higher rebounded peak VL than pre-ART VL in the ART+HSV-empty group (average 2.74-fold increase) (Figure 5E).

      (3) We found significant suppression of total SIV DNA and integrated SIV DNA provirus in the ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group. However, the copies of the SIV DNA provirus were significantly improved in the ART+HSV-empty group and ART+saline group (Figure 5F-G).

      Thank you for your understanding.

      Discussion

      HSV vectors are mainly used in cancer treatment partially due to induced inflammation. Whether these are suitable to cure PLWH without major symptoms is a bit questionable to me and should at least be argued for.

      Thank you for your kind question comment and question. We confirmed the enhanced reactivation of HIV latency by HSV-∆ICP34.5 in primary CD4+ T cells from people living with HIV (PLWH) (Figure S2). As mentioned above, previous studies have shown that the safety of recombinant HSV-based vector can be improved by deleting ICP34.5. In this study, we also found that HSV-DICP34.5 exhibited lower virulence and replication ability than its parental strain (HSV-GFP) (Figure 1D, Figure S1). In addition, HSV-DICP34.5 induced a lower level of inflammatory cytokines (including IL-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α) in primary CD4+ T cells from PLWH compared to HSV-GFP stimulation, likely due to its lower virulence and replication ability (Figure 1I-K). In addition, the CD4+ /CD8+ T cell ratio (Figure 5I) and body weight (Figure S9) after treatment were effectively ameliorated in the SIV-infected macaques of the ART+HSV-DICP34.5-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group. Our data also demonstrated that there was no significant effect on the cell composition of peripheral blood in the SIV-infected macaques of ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group (Figure S10). Thus, these data suggest the safety of HSV-DICP34.5 in PLWH might be tolerable. We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript.

      Reviewer #2 (Public Review):

      Summary:

      In this article, Wen et. al. describe the development of a 'proof-of-concept' bi-functional vector based on HSV-deltaICP-34.5's ability to purge latent HIV-1 and SIV genomes from cells. They show that co-infection of latent J-lat T-cell lines with an HSV-deltaICP-34.5 vector can reactivate HIV-1 from a latent state. Over- or stable expression of ICP 34.5 ORF in these cells can arrest latent HIV-1 genomes from transcription, even in the presence of latency reversal agents. ICP34.5 can co-IP with- and de-phosphorylate IKKa/b to block its interaction with NF-k/B transcription factor. Additionally, ICP34.5 can interact with HSF1 which was identified by mass-spec. Thus, the authors propose that the latency reversal effect of HSV-deltaICP-34.5 in co-infected JLat cells is due to modulatory effects on the IKKa/b-NF-kB and PP1-HSF-1 pathway.

      Next, the authors cleverly construct a bifunctional HSV-based vector with deleted ICP34.5 and 47 ORFs to purge latency and avoid immunological refluxes, and additionally, expand the application of this construct as a vaccine by introducing SIV genes. They use this 'vaccine' in mouse models and show the expected SIV-immune responses. Experiments in rhesus macaques (RM), further elicit the potential for their approach to reactivate SIV genomes and at the same time block their replication by antibodies. What was interesting in the SIV experiments is that the dual-functional vector vaccine containing sPD1- and SIV Gag/Env ORFs effectively delayed SIV rebound in RMs and in some cases almost neutralized viral DNA copy detection in serum. Very promising indeed, however, there are some questions I wish the authors had explored to get answers to, detailed below.

      Overall, this is an elegant and timely work demonstrating the feasibility of reducing virus rebound in animals, with the potential to expand to clinical studies. The work was well-written, and sections were clearly discussed.

      Strengths:

      The work is well designed, rationale explained, and written very clearly for lay readers.<br /> Claims are adequately supported by evidence and well-designed experiments including controls.

      Thank you for your nice comments regarding our work.

      Weaknesses:

      (1) While the mechanism of ICP34.5 interaction and modulation of the NF-kB and HSF1 pathways are shown, this only proves ICP34.5 interactions but does not give away the mechanism of how the HSV-deltaICP-34.5 vector purges HIV-1 latency. What other components of the vector are required for latency reversal? Perhaps serial deletion experiments of the other ORFs in the HSV-deltaICP-34.5 vector might be revealing.

      Thank you for your valuable suggestion. In fact, we are currently further exploring some potential viral genes of HSV-1 that might play a role in the reactivation of HIV latency. We have found that the deletion of ICP0 gene from HSV-1 diminished the reactivation effect of HIV latency by HSV-1 (Figure S4), showing that ICP0 might play a vital role for the reactivation. Of course, this might be further investigated in future studies. We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript.

      (2) The efficacy of the HSV vaccine vectors was evaluated in Rhesus Macaque model animals. Animals were chronically infected with SIV (a parent of HIV), treated with ART, challenged with bi-functional HSV vaccine or controls, and discontinued treatment, and the resulting virus burden and immune responses were monitored. The animals showed SIV Gag and Env-specific immune responses, and delayed virus rebound (however rebound is still there), and below-detection viral DNA copies. What would make a more convincing argument to this reviewer will be data to demonstrate that after the bi-functional vaccine, the animals show overall reduction in the number of circulating latent cells. The feasibility of obtaining such a result is not clearly demonstrated.

      Thank you for your valuable mention. We have now provided more data about this issue. We found significant suppression of total SIV DNA and integrated SIV DNA provirus in the ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group. However, the copies of the SIV DNA provirus were significantly improved in the ART+HSV-empty group and ART+saline group (Figure 5F-G). We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript.

      (3) The authors state that the reduced virus rebound detected following bi-functional vaccine delivery is due to latent genomes becoming activated and steady-state neutralization of these viruses by antibody response. This needs to be demonstrated. Perhaps cell-culture experiments from specimens taken from animals might help address this issue. In lab cultures one could create environments without antibody responses, under these conditions one would expect a higher level of viral loads to be released in response to the vaccine in question.

      Thanks for your kind mention and suggestion. We performed the following cell experiment to address this issue. Primary CD4+ T cells from people living with HIV (PLWH) were isolated, and then infected with HSV or HSV-∆ICP34.5 constructs. As expected, we confirmed the enhanced reactivation of HIV latency by HSV-∆ICP34.5 (Figure S2). Thank you.

      (4) How do the authors imagine neutralizing HIV-1 envelope epitopes by a similar strategy? A discussion of this point may also help.

      Thank you for your kind comment. We have added the corresponding discussion in the revised manuscript. “The current consensus on HIV/AIDS vaccines emphasizes the importance of simultaneously inducing broadly neutralizing antibodies and cellular immune responses. Therefore, we believe that incorporating the induction of broadly neutralizing antibodies into our future optimizing approaches may lead to better therapeutic outcomes.” (Lines 384 to 388)

      (5) I thought the empty HSV-vector control also elicited somewhat delayed kinetics in virus rebound and neutralization, can the authors comment on why this is the case?

      Thank you for your careful review and mention. We agree with you that the HSV-1 empty vector does exhibit somewhat a delayed rebound. We think the possible reason is: Although the empty HSV-vector cannot elicit SIV-specific CTL responses, it effectively activates the latent SIV reserviors, and then these activated virions can be partially killed by ART drugs. Therefore, even without carrying HIV/SIV antigens, somewhat delayed kinetics in virus rebound may be observed. Thank you.

      Reviewer #1 (Recommendations For The Authors):

      (1) The authors should provide toxicity data for HSV transduction after deleting ICP34.5 and provide an explanation of why overexpression of ICP34.5 has such a small effect.

      Thank you for your questions and suggestions. As mentioned above, we now provided data for the safety of HSV-DICP34.5-based constructs.

      (1) It’s well known that ICP34.5 is a neurotoxicity factor that can antagonize host immune responses, and previous studies (in gene therapy and oncolytic virotherapy) have shown that the safety of recombinant HSV-based vector can be improved by deleting ICP34.5. In this study, we also found that HSV-DICP34.5 exhibited lower virulence and replication ability than its parental strain (HSV-GFP) (Figure 1D, Figure S1). In addition, HSV-DICP34.5 induced a lower level of inflammatory cytokines (including IL-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α) in primary CD4+ T cells from PLWH compared to HSV-GFP stimulation, likely due to its lower virulence and replication ability (Figure 1I-K). In addition, the CD4+ /CD8+ T cell ratio (Figure 5I) and body weight (Figure S9) after treatment were effectively ameliorated in the SIV-infected macaques of the ART+HSV-DICP34.5-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group. Our data also demonstrated that there was no significant effect on the cell composition of peripheral blood in the SIV-infected macaques of ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group (Figure S10). Thus, these data suggest the safety of HSV-DICP34.5 in PLWH might be tolerable. We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript.

      (2) We agree with your insightful mention that the mechanism underlying increased activation by HSV-ΔICP34.5 is worthy to be further explored in the future study. In this study, we found that ICP34.5 play an antagonistic role with the reactivation of HIV latency by HSV-1 mainly through the modulation of host NF-κB and HSF1 pathways, while HSV-1 (especially HSV-ΔICP34.5) might reactivate HIV latency through NF-κB, HSF1, and other yet-to-be-determined mechanisms. Thus, ICP34.5 overexpression can only a partial effect on the reduction of the HIV latency reactivation by HSV-1. We have mentioned this issue in the revised “Discussion section”. “Intriguingly, these findings collectively indicated that ICP34.5 might play an antagonistic role in the reactivation of HIV by HSV-1, and thus our modified HSV-DICP34.5 constructs can effectively reactivate HIV/SIV latency through the release of imprisonment from ICP34.5. However, ICP34.5 overexpression had only a partial effect on the reduction of the HIV latency reactivation, indicating that HSV-DICP34.5-based constructs can also reactivate HIV latency through other yet-to-be-determined mechanisms.” (Lines 334 to 340).

      (2) How specific is the effect for HIV reactivation? An RNA seq analysis is required to show the effect on cellular genes.

      Thank you for your questions and suggestions.

      (1) In our study, we found both adenovirus and vaccinia virus cannot reactivate HIV latency (Figure S3). In addition, the deletion of ICP0 gene from HSV-1 diminished the reactivation effect of HIV latency by HSV-1 (Figure S4). Thus, these data suggested the reactivation of HIV latency by HSV-1 might be virus-specific. Of course, this might be further investigated in future studies. We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript.

      (2) To explore the mechanism of reactivating viral latency by HSV-DICP34.5-based constructs, we performed RNA-seq analysis (Figure S5). Results showed that there were numerous differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in response to HSV-ΔICP34.5 infection. Among them, 2288 genes were upregulated, and 611 genes were downregulated. GO analysis showed the enrichment of these DEGs in cellular cycle, cellular development, and cellular proliferation, and KEGG enrichment analysis indicated the enrichment in pathways such as cellular cycle and cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction. We have added the corresponding description accordingly in the revised manuscript.

      (3) A comparison in primates has to be given for constructs with or without ICP34.5 to validate cell culture data (what is an empty vector?)

      Thank you for your reminder. In the revised manuscript, we performed the following cell experiment to address this issue. Primary CD4+ T cells from people living with HIV (PLWH) were isolated, and then infected with HSV or HSV-∆ICP34.5 constructs. As expected, we confirmed the enhanced reactivation of HIV latency by HSV-∆ICP34.5 (Figure S2). Thank you.

      (4) Legends should be improved in writing and content.

      Thank you for your kind mention. In the revised version, we have improved both the manuscript content and the legends of all Figures have been carefully revised in writing and content. Thank you.

      (5) The primate groups should be enlarged before any reliable conclusions can be made. Inflammatory/tox data should be provided.

      Thank you for your question.

      (1) As mentioned above, we agree with you that this is a pilot study with limited numbers of rhesus macaques. Although the number of macaques was relatively limited, these nine macaques were distributed evenly based on the background level of age, sex, weight, CD4 count, and viral load (VL) (Table S2). All SIV-infected macaques used in this study had a long history of SIV infection and had several courses of ART therapy, which mimics treatment of chronic HIV-1 infection in humans. These macaques were infected with SIVmac239 for more than 5 years, and highly pathogenic SIV-infected macaques have been well-validated as a stringent model to recapitulate HIV-1 pathogenesis and persistence during ART therapy in humans. Indeed, in our Chinese rhesus model, ART treatment effectively suppressed SIV infection to undetectable levels in plasma, and upon ART discontinuation, virus rapidly rebounded, which is very similar with that in ART-treated HIV patients. We think the results of this pilot study were very promising for further studies which will be expanded the scale of animals and then to preclinical and clinical study in our next projects. Thank you for your understanding.

      (2) As well known, ICP34.5 is a neurotoxicity factor that can antagonize host immune responses, and previous studies have shown that the safety of recombinant HSV-based vector can be improved by deleting ICP34.5. In this study, we also found that HSV-DICP34.5 exhibited lower virulence and replication ability than its parental strain (HSV-GFP) (Figure 1D, Figure S1). In addition, HSV-DICP34.5 induced a lower level of inflammatory cytokines (including IL-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α) in primary CD4+ T cells from PLWH compared to HSV-GFP stimulation, likely due to its lower virulence and replication ability (Figure 1I-K). In addition, the CD4+ /CD8+ T cell ratio (Figure 5I) and body weight (Figure S9) after treatment were effectively ameliorated in the SIV-infected macaques of the ART+HSV-DICP34.5-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group. Our data also demonstrated that there was no significant effect on the cell composition of peripheral blood in the SIV-infected macaques of ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group (Figure S10). Thus, these data suggest the safety of HSV-DICP34.5 in PLWH might be tolerable. We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript.

      (6) Discuss the potential of inflammatory HSV vaccines to be used in PLWH without clinical symptoms.

      Thank you for your mention. As discussed above, we found that HSV-DICP34.5 exhibited lower virulence and replication ability than its parental strain (Figure 1D, Figure S1), and we also found that HSV-DICP34.5 induced a lower level of inflammatory cytokines (including IL-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α) in primary CD4+ T cells from PLWH compared to HSV-GFP stimulation, likely due to its lower virulence and replication ability (Figure 1I-K). In addition, the CD4+ /CD8+ T cell ratio (Figure 5I) and body weight (Figure S9) after treatment were effectively ameliorated in the SIV-infected macaques of the ART+HSV-DICP34.5-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group. Our data also demonstrated that there was no significant effect on the cell composition of peripheral blood in the SIV-infected macaques of ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group (Figure S10). Thus, these data suggest the safety of HSV-DICP34.5 in PLWH might be tolerable. We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript.

      Reviewer #2 (Recommendations For The Authors):

      I think the authors have done due diligence to the experimental system, and collected evidence to show the feasibility of delaying virus rebound in macaques. However, I would encourage the authors to perform experiments that can back up the claim that delayed virus rebound is due to neutralization effects, or perhaps due to a reduction in viral reservoir. I believe insights into this process will add rigor, and push the relevance of the study to the next level.

      Thank you for your nice comment and valuable suggestion. We have now provided more data about this issue. We found significant suppression of total SIV DNA and integrated SIV DNA provirus in the ART+HSV-sPD1-SIVgag/SIVenv group. However, the copies of the SIV DNA provirus were significantly improved in the ART+HSV-empty group and ART+saline group (Figure 5F-G). We also discussed that incorporating the induction of broadly neutralizing antibodies into our future optimizing approaches may lead to better therapeutic outcomes in the revised Discussion section. We have added the corresponding description in the revised manuscript. Thank you.

      Altogether, all of the above comments and suggestions are very helpful in improving our manuscript. We have taken these comments into account seriously and try our best to address these questions point-by-point. After making extensive revisions, we now submit this revised manuscript for your re-consideration. Thank you again for all of your comments and suggestions.

    1. eLife Assessment

      This useful study reports on the impact of antibiotic pressure on the genomic stability of the mc2155 strain of Mycobacterium smegmatis, a model for Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The findings of the study indicate that exposure to antibiotics did not lead to the development of new adaptive mutations in controlled laboratory environments, challenging the notion that antibiotic resistance arises from drug-induced microevolution. The genomic analysis provides detailed insights into the stability of M. smegmatis following exposure to standard TB treatment antibiotics, and the evidence suggesting that antibiotic pressure does not contribute to the emergence of new adaptive mutations is solid.

    2. Reviewer #1 (Public review):

      Molnar, Suranyi and colleagues have generated a useful dataset characterizing the rate of mutations in Mycobacterium smegmatis - a non-pathogenic model mycobacterial strain, to several antibiotics at sub-lethal dose. The whole genome sequencing approach used is a strength of this study. Overall, the results are consistent with a low rate of mutations, consistent with other reports in Mycobacterium smegmatis and in vitro and clinical studies with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The data supports phenotypic tolerance rather than genetic mutations as a driver.

      The revised manuscript is improved and addresses several concerns raised by the reviewers from the previous rounds. These relate primarily to the presentation of data in the figures, but there is also new data in Figure 2 to show an increased MIC for M. smegmatis under antibiotic pressure. An additional dataset of sequences from ciprofloxacin-treated bacteria has also been generated and made publicly accessible, which will be of interest to the community.

    3. Reviewer #2 (Public review):

      Summary

      In this study, the authors evaluate the impact of selective pressure from chemotherapeutic drugs on the development of drug resistance in Mycobacteria, specifically through the acquisition of genetic mutations or phenotypic tolerance. Their findings indicate that treatment with sublethal concentrations of first-line antibiotics does not lead to enhanced mutation rates.

      Strengths

      The use of the mutation accumulation assay demonstrating low spontaneous mutation rates combined with the display of an increased MIC supports drug resistance as a consequence of phenotypic tolerance. Additionally, the use of the ciprofloxacin tolerance assay in combination with whole genome sequencing demonstrating a lack of mutations provides further support of this. The results now support the authors claims.

      Weaknesses

      Besides an increase in DNA stress response other underlying tolerance mechanisms were not established - increased efflux pump, thickening of the cell wall, decrease in metabolic processes, rerouting of metabolic processes etc.

    4. Reviewer #3 (Public review):

      Summary:

      This manuscript describes how antibiotics influence genetic stability and survival in Mycobacterium smegmatis. Prolonged treatment with first-line antibiotics did not significantly impact mutation rates. Instead, adaptation to these drugs appears to be mediated by upregulation of DNA repair enzymes. While this study offers robust data, findings remain correlative and fall short of providing mechanistic insights.

      Strengths:

      The strength of this study is the use of genome-wide approaches to address the specific question of whether or not mycobacteria induce mutagenic potential upon antibiotic exposure.

      Comments on revised version:

      The authors responded adequately to my comments, and I have no further suggestions for the revised manuscript.

    5. Author response:

      The following is the authors’ response to the original reviews.

      Reviewer #1 (Public Review):

      In this manuscript, Molnar, Suranyi and colleagues have probed the genomic stability of Mycobacterium smegmatis in response to several anti-tuberculosis drugs as monotherapy and in combination. Unlike the study by Nyinoh and McFaddden http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ddr.21497 (which should be cited), the authors use a sub-lethal dose of antibiotic. While this is motivated by sound technical considerations, the biological and therapeutic rationale could be further elaborated.

      In the mutation accumulation experiments, we needed to ensure continuous and reproducible growth of a small number of colonies across multiple passages. This technical requirement necessitated the use of sublethal drug concentrations. However, sublethal doses also have biological relevance. Noncompliance with prescribed antibiotic regimens and the presence of antibiotic residues in food due to the extensive use of antibiotics in agricultural mass production are two obvious sources of prolonged exposure to sublethal antibiotics.

      The results the authors obtain are in line with papers examining the genomic mutation rate in vitro and from patient samples in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, in vitro in Mycobacterium smegmatis and in vitro in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (although the study by HL David (PMID: 4991927) is not cited). The results are confirmatory of previous studies.

      The two cited studies, along with several others, did not distinguish between genetic mutations and phenotypic responses to drug exposure (the fluctuation test alone is not suitable for this). Therefore, their objectives are not comparable to ours, which specifically investigated whether resistant colonies carry adaptive mutations. Nevertheless, we acknowledge the relevance of these studies and have now cited them in the appropriate sections in the text.

      It is therefore puzzling why the authors propose the opposite hypothesis in the paper (i.e antibiotic exposure should increase mutation rates) merely to tear it down later. This straw-man style is entirely unnecessary.  

      The phenomenon of stress-inducible mutagenesis in bacterial evolution remains a topic of heated debate. The emergence of genetically encoded resistance may stem from either microevolution or the dissemination of pre-existing variants from polyclonal infections under drug pressure. We believe that the Introduction presents both of these hypotheses in a balanced manner to elucidate the rationale behind our mutation accumulation investigations.  

      The results on the nucleotide pools are interesting, but the statistically significant data is difficult to identify as presented, and therefore the new biological insights are unclear.

      We now indicate statistical significance in the figure, in addition to the detailed statistical analysis of all dNTP measurements provided in Table S5.

      Finally, the authors show that a fluctuation assay generates mutations with higher frequencies that the genetic stability assays, confirming the well-known effect of phenotypic antibiotic resistance.

      What we show is that the fluctuation assay generated bacteria that tolerated the applied antibiotic without developing mutations. Conclusions about mutation rates are often drawn from fluctuation assays without confirming genetic-level changes, a discrepancy that persists despite these assays accounting for both phenotypic and genotypic alterations. By combining genome sequencing with fluctuation assays, our approach emphasizes the importance of distinguishing between these changes. While fluctuation assays remain valuable, inexpensive, and simple tools for evaluating the response of bacterial populations to various selective environments, they should not be considered definitive indicators of genetic changes.

      Recommendations For The Authors:

      The quality of the figures can be significantly improved. In Figure 1, cell lengths can be shown on separate histograms or better still as violin plots to enable better comparisons.

      Thank you for the suggestion. We have revised the data presentation accordingly.

      Details for statistical tests should be provided in the figure legend.  

      Statistical details are now added in the figure legend.

      In Figure 2, the number of data points is not mentioned.

      Statistical information is now added to the new Figure 2, which has been revised extensively based on suggestions from all Referees.

      The data in Figure 3 would be much easier to comprehend as a heatmap.  

      The figure we provided is a color gradient table representing different gene expression levels, along with numerical data and statistical significance indicated within the color boxes, expanding the information content of a traditional heatmap. In response to the Referee's suggestion, we also prepared a hierarchical clustering heatmap, demonstrating that the grouping of rows and columns based on functional information in the original figure is consistent with the clustering pattern observed in the heatmap (Figure S5). As the original figure is more informative and better structured, we have included the new figure in the supplementary materials.

      No statistical tests are provided for Figure 4.

      We now indicate statistical significance in the figure and describe the statistical analysis in the figure legend, as suggested. Additionally, Table S5 is dedicated to the statistical analysis of the dNTP data.  

      Reviewer #2 (Public Review):

      In this study, the authors assess whether selective pressure from drug chemotherapy influences the emergence of drug resistance through the acquisition of genetic mutations or phenotypic tolerance. I commend the authors on their approach of utilizing the mutation accumulation (MA) assay as a means to answer this and whole genome sequencing of clones from the assay convincingly demonstrates low mutation rates in Mycobacteria when exposed to sub-inhibitory concentrations of antibiotics. Also, quantitative PCR highlighted the upregulation of DNA repair genes in Mycobacteria following drug treatment, implying the preservation of genomic integrity via specific repair pathways.

      Even though the findings stem from M. smegmatis exposure to antibiotics under in vitro conditions, this is still relevant in the context of the development of drug resistance so I can see where the authors' train of thought was heading in exploring this. However, I think important experiments to perform to more fully support the conclusion that resistance is largely associated with phenotypic rather than genetic factors would have been to either sequence clones from the ciprofloxacin tolerance assay (to show absence/ minimal genetic mutations) or to have tested the MIC of clones from the MA assay (to show an increase in MIC).

      Thank you for acknowledging the values of the manuscript and for the insightful suggestions for improvement. We agree on the necessity to directly connect the mutation accumulation experiments with the tolerance assay, and we have performed both suggested additional experiments.  

      (1) We repeated the ciprofloxacin tolerance assay (Figure S6) using a large number of plates to gather enough cells for genomic DNA extraction and whole genome sequencing. The sequencing confirmed the absence of mutations in bacteria grown in both 0.3 and 0.5 ug/ml ciprofloxacin. We integrated this result in the revised manuscript text, while the sequencing data are available at the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) with PRJEB71590 project number.

      (2) We resuscitated three different clones from the MA assays stored at -80°C and tested the MIC of the respective drugs. The results are presented in Figure 2C. Except for EMB, we observed an increase in MIC values across the treatments.

      There seems to be a disconnect between making these conclusions from experiments conducted under different conditions, or perhaps the authors can clarify why this was done.  

      Molecular biology analysis methods are not easily compatible with long-term mutation accumulation experiments, or at least we could not establish the necessary conditions. When DNA or RNA extraction was required, we had to adjust the experimental scale for further analysis, which could be done in liquid culture. We believe that the suggested critical back-and-forth control experiments have significantly improved the comparability of the results.

      With regards to the sub-inhibitory drug concentration applied, there is significant variation in the viability as calculated by CFUs following the different treatments and there is evidence that cell death greatly affects the calculation of mutation rate (PMCID: PMC5966242). For instance, the COMBO treatment led to 6% viability whilst the INH treatment led to 80% cell viability. Are there any adjustments made to take this into account?

      We agree with and have been aware of the notion that cell death affects the calculation of the mutation rate. We included treatment optimization data on agar plates (Table 1 and Figure S2), which now demonstrate that the applied subinhibitory drug concentrations resulted in ≤10% viability across all treatments in the MA assay. This minimizes the potential discrepancy in the mutation rate calculation caused by variable cell death.  

      It would also be useful to the reader to include a supplementary table of the SNPs detected from the lineages of each treatment - to determine if at any point rifampicin treatment led to mutations in rpoB, isoniazid to katG mutations, etc.  

      Overall, while this study is tantalizingly suggestive of phenotypic tolerance playing a leading role in drug resistance (and perhaps genetic mutations a sub-ordinate role) a more substantial link is needed to clarify this.

      The SNPs identified from the lineages of each treatment are compiled in the 'unique_muts.xls' file within the Figshare document bundle that was originally enclosed with the manuscript. In response to your suggestion, we have now added a simplified version of this data set in Table S2, listing the detected SNPs. Notably, no confirmed adaptive mutation developed in our experiments; rifampicin treatment did not result in mutations in rpoB, nor did isoniazid lead to mutations in katG.

      Recommendations For The Authors:

      I would suggest moving Figure 1 to the supplementary - it shows that cell wall targeting drugs cause cell shortening and DNA replication targeting drugs cause cell elongation as would be expected and this is simply a secondary observation, not one that is central to the paper.  

      We agree that this is not a novel or unexpected observation. However, we used it as an indicator of drug effectiveness, particularly for bacteriostatic cell wall-targeting drugs in liquid culture that induced moderate cell death. Following Reviewer 1's suggestions, we extensively revised the figure to better convey our intended message. We believe the updated version now more clearly demonstrates the drugs' impact, and for this reason, we have opted to keep it in the main text.

      Figure 2 and Table 2 show the same data so this can be combined as a paneled figure or one moved to the supplementary. It would be useful to include a diagram of how the MA assay was conducted, similar to the CIP tolerance assay figure.

      Thank you for the suggestions. We have added a diagram to Figure 2 explaining the MA assay (Figure 2A), as well as the MIC experiment conducted on the MA cells (Figure 2C). To avoid redundancy, Table 2 has been removed.

      Reviewer #3 (Public Review):

      Summary:

      This manuscript describes how antibiotics influence genetic stability and survival in Mycobacterium smegmatis. Prolonged treatment with first-line antibiotics did not significantly impact mutation rates. Instead, adaptation to these drugs appears to be mediated by upregulation of DNA repair enzymes. While this study offers robust data, findings remain correlative and fall short of providing mechanistic insights.

      Strengths:

      The strength of this study is the use of genome-wide approaches to address the specific question of whether or not mycobacteria induce mutagenic potential upon antibiotic exposure.

      Weaknesses:

      The authors suggest that the upregulation of DNA repair enzymes ensures a low mutation rate under drug pressure. However, this suggestion is based on correlative data, and there is no mechanistic validation of their speculations in this study.

      Furthermore, as detailed below, some of the statements made by the authors are not substantiated by the data presented in the manuscript.

      Finally, some clarifications are needed for the methodologies employed in this study. Most importantly, reduced colony growth should be demonstrated on agar plates to indicate that the drug concentrations calculated from liquid culture growth can be applied to agar surface growth. Without such validations, the lack of induced mutation could simply be due to the fact that the drug concentrations used in this study were insufficient.

      Thank you for appreciating the manuscript's merits and for the instructive suggestions. We agree that demonstrating reduced colony growth on agar plates is important to validate the relevance of the drug concentrations used in the study. In response, we have added the treatment optimization data on agar plates in Figure S2 and reorganized Table 1 to show the decrease in CFU achieved with the applied subinhibitory drug concentrations.

      We acknowledge that the observed upregulation of DNA repair enzymes and the low mutation rates under drug pressure represent correlative data. We removed the reference to mechanism from the abstract and avoided presenting the qPCR results as a mechanistic explanation in the text. We have only raised the possibility that correlation could be a causal relationship: "The observed upregulation of the relevant DNA repair enzymes might account for the low mutation rate even under drug pressure." We recognize the necessity for a new series of targeted experiments to provide mechanistic explanations. We added the following text to the Discussion:

      “The observed activation of DNA repair processes likely mitigates mutation pressure, ensuring genome stability. However, to confirm this hypothesis, these investigations should be conducted using genetically modified DNA repair mutant strains.”

      In the current manuscript, we aim to convincingly demonstrate that long-term antibiotic pressure did not induce the occurrence of new adaptive mutations.

      Recommendations For The Authors:

      Additional specific comments are:

      Page 2. Do not italicize "Mycobacteria", which is not considered a scientific name.

      Corrected.

      Page 4. "Bacto pepcone" is a typo.

      Corrected.

      Page 6. "Quiagen" is a typo.

      Corrected.

      Page 9. In Table 1, RIF being described as a protein synthesis inhibitor is misleading.

      Corrected.

      Page 9. The statement "Specifically, following RIF, CIP, and MMC treatments, we observed cells elongating by more than twofold, whereas INH and EMB treatments led to a reduction in cell length." cannot be justified by Figure 1, as the cell length information is not conveyed in this figure.

      Thank you for pointing this out, the revised Figure 1 conveys the cell length information.

      Page 10. If the experiment shown in Figure S1 was done in an acidic growth condition, the figure legend should clearly indicate the fact. Additionally, the assay condition should be described in detail in the Methods section.

      Thank you, the required information is now included in both the figure legend and the Methods section.

      Page 10. If PZA does not work against M. smegmatis, it seems pointless to add it to the COMBO treatment. Please clarify why it was included in the drug combination experiment.

      We added the following text to clarify the use of PZA: “Regardless of its inefficacy as a monotherapy, we included PZA in the combination treatment, as we could not rule out the possibility that PZA interacts with the other three drugs or that PZA elimination mechanisms are equally active in M. smegmatis under this regimen.”

      Page 10. Generation times calculated from liquid culture cannot be applied to colony growth on an agar plate. The growth behaviors on a solid surface will be totally different from planktonic suspension growth. The numbers of generations indicated here will be inaccurate.

      You are absolutely right. We conducted an experiment to calculate the number of generations on plates under the same conditions as used in the MA assay. We found, indeed, a different (doubled) generation time from what was determined in liquid culture. We have adjusted the mutation rates accordingly.

      Page 12. Was the experiment shown in Figure 3 done in a liquid culture? If so, the transcriptional profile could be different from the experiment shown in Figure 2, which was done on an agar plate.

      Yes, the experiment shown in Figure 3 was conducted in liquid culture. We acknowledge that the transcriptional profile could differ from the experiment shown in Figure 2, which was performed on an agar plate. However, technical limitations required us to use liquid cultures for these experiments.

      Page 14. Regarding the statement "INH and EMB coincided with a decreased concentration of these [dCTP and dTTP] nucleotides", by examining Table S5, I do not see any statistical reductions in dCTP and dTTP levels.

      Thank you for bringing this to our attention. We have made the necessary corrections to ensure that the text and data are now aligned.

      Page 14. Similarly to the comment above, the statement "RIF, CIP and MMC treatments promoted an increase in the dCTP and dTTP pools" is misleading as each drug seems to increase either dCTP or dTTP, not both.

      Same as above.

      Page 14. The authors state, "a larger overall dNTP pool size coincides with a larger cell size and vice versa (Figure 4H)". Please indicate the unit of the pool size for the graph shown in Figure 4H. According to the legend, I assume that it refers to the concentration. The term "pool size" may be misleading as it implies quantity rather than concentration.

      Page 15. Figure 4H is impossible to understand. The left y-axis label looks as if it is a ratio of cell length to volume. There is no point in having these three data on a single graph. Please separate them into individual graphs. Also, what is the spacing between the tick marks? The data also seem inconsistent with the values given in Table S1. For example, the mean volume of COMBO is larger than the control (according to Table S1), and yet the graph in Figure 4H indicates that COMBO's relative length is less than 1.

      Thank you for your feedback. We have corrected these and created what we hope is a clearer figure.

      Figure S1. Clarify what the gray shade in the graph represents.

      The gray shade was unnecessary, so we removed it when recoloring the figure to ensure a more coherent color scheme across the different treatments.

      Figure S1. Relative viability cannot be determined by OD600. CFU needs to be determined to assess cell viability.

      Thank you. We changed the incorrect term viability to growth inhibition.

    1. Number of those sickened in outbreak expected to grow

      This is an example of speculation because it is inferencing what is expected to happen.

    2. The person who died was a resident of Mesa County, Colorado, in the western part of the state, according to the county health department.

      This is another example of an attribution.

    3. So far, one person has died and a total of 49 people from 10 states have fallen ill with a strain known as E. coli O157:H7,

      This fact is important to include because it shows the impact this outbreak is actually having on specific regions. Since one person has died because of it, this makes the case a bigger deal.

    4. McDonald's uses multiple suppliers for the slivered onions in the area where the outbreak cluster occurred

      Being that they have multiple suppliers for their sliver onions, it is hard to determine who exactly is causing this E. coli outbreak. This statement also appears to be a fact since they have yet to draw a conclusion.

    5. according to the CDC investigation.

      This is an example of an attribution. The writer is clearly stating where they got this information from, so it does not imply opinion.

    6. McDonald's says onions or beef patties may be to blame for deadly e-coli outbreak

      I want to highlight on the word, "may," this implies they have yet to reach a distinct conclusion.

    1. Restoration to 18th Century Notes Restoration and the Glorious Revolution Death of Cromwell: Leads to political instability. Charles II's Return: Parliament invites him to rule, marking the start of the Restoration. Initial Anarchy: Political turmoil follows; Charles II serves as a "figurehead." James II's Absolute Rule: Attempts to restore Catholicism create insecurity in Parliament. William of Orange's Intervention: Invited to intervene, leading to the Glorious Revolution (bloodless). The Bill of Rights: Establishes Parliament as the de facto ruler, with the king as titular head, ending conflict between king and Parliament. Jonathan Swift (1667-1745) Background: Irish author, clergyman, and master of satire. Faced hardships: father died, raised in poverty by an uncle. Moved to England during the Glorious Revolution. Career Highlights: Became an Anglican priest. Wrote political tracts, poems, and notable satirical works. Notable Works: A Modest Proposal: Satirical essay addressing poverty in Ireland. Gulliver’s Travels: Most popular work, blending adventure with social critique. A Tale of a Tub: Another significant satire. Themes: Ranges from love/beauty to death/revenge; darker tones reflect personal struggles. A Modest Proposal (1729) Overview: Addresses poverty and overpopulation in Ireland through an absurd proposal. Key Elements: Humor: Uses absurdity to draw attention. Criticism: Critiques societal neglect of the poor. Moral Voice: Presents a moral argument ironically. Irony and Sarcasm: Highlights the ridiculousness of the proposal. Taboo Topics: Engages with sensitive issues to provoke discussion. Five Elements of Satire Ridicule: Makes subjects seem absurd, inviting scorn and amusement. Seriousness: Addresses significant societal issues humorously. Problem Identification: Aims to highlight and correct flaws in society. Mock-Heroic Tone: The speaker may be oblivious to their own absurdity. Modern Satire Examples The Onion: Satirical news outlet that parodies journalism. Comments on real and fictional events humorously. The Colbert Report: Satirical TV show featuring Stephen Colbert as a conservative pundit. Uses satire to critique political and media landscapes.

    1. Restoration Reading & Supplementary Materials The Restoration in England (1660) The Restoration period marks the reinstatement of the monarchy in England with Charles II, following the Commonwealth under Oliver Cromwell. This era saw the revival of the Church of England and the arts, which had been stifled during Cromwell’s Puritan rule. Charles II's reign (1660-1685) allowed for flourishing sports, science, and cultural pursuits.

      In-depth Overview: YouTube Video on the Restoration Puritanism Humor: Horrible Histories Clip Culinary Insights: Supersizer’s Go...Restoration The Georgian Period in England (1714-1830) This period, named for the four Hanoverian kings named George, features influential writers and thinkers:

      Samuel Pepys (d. 1703)

      Known for his Diary, which offers a personal account of life from 1660-1669. Read an excerpt: Pepys Diary Great Plague Context: Diary of Samuel Pepys & Covid-19 Alexander Pope (d. 1744)

      Renowned poet and satirist, famous for works like "An Essay on Man." Read Epistles I and VIII: Essay on Man Samuel Johnson (d. 1784)

      Noted lexicographer known for A Dictionary of the English Language (1755). Explore Johnson's Dictionary: Johnson's Dictionary Online Jonathan Swift (d. 1745)

      Famous for Gulliver's Travels and A Modest Proposal, a satirical commentary on poverty in Ireland. Read A Modest Proposal: A Modest Proposal Read Chapters 1 and 2 of Gulliver's Travels: Gulliver's Travels Key Themes and Concepts Satire: Understanding Swift’s use of satire is crucial. His extreme proposals highlight societal indifference to poverty, using irony to provoke thought and action. Cultural Revival: The Restoration and Georgian periods marked a significant cultural revival, influencing literature, arts, and social thought.

    1. Since 1950, he is just the fourth quarterback to record a 140-plus passer rating in three consecutive contests, while his 83.5 completion percentage over his last four games is the highest in a four-game span (min. 90 pass attempts).

      Another fact/statistic in the article

    2. so you won't see such simple analysis here

      The writer is backing up his opinion as not a simple analysis

    3. at least we hope so. Start 'Em, Sit 'Em is here to help fantasy managers make difficult roster decisions.

      A start'em sit'em article will most likely be all opinion based because it is the writer giving you his opinion on who to start in fantasy football and who to sit

    1. eLife Assessment

      Yamamoto and Matano provide convincing evidence that a G63E CD8+ T-cell escape mutation in the accessory viral protein Nef facilitates the induction of neutralizing antibody (nAb) responses in rhesus macaques infected with SIVmac239. Functional analyses support that this mutation specifically impairs Nef`s ability to stimulate PI3K/Akt/mTORC2 signalling. This important study suggests that the accessory viral Nef protein impairs B cell function and effective humoral immune responses and is of interest for researchers and physicians interested in HIV/AIDS and vaccine development.

    2. Reviewer #1 (Public review):

      Human and simian immunodeficiency viruses (HIV and SIV, respectively) evolved numerous mechanisms to compromise effective immune responses but the underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Here, Yamamoto and Matano examined the humoral immune response in a large number of rhesus macaques infected with the difficult-to-neutralize SIVmac239 strain and identified a subgroup of animals showing significant neutralizing Ab responses. Sequence analyses revealed that in most of these animals (7/9) but only a minority in the control group (2/19) SIVmac variants containing a CD8+ T-cell escape mutation of G63E/R in the viral Nef gene emerged. Functional analyses revealed that this change attenuates the ability of Nef to stimulate PI3K/Akt/mTORC2 signalling. The authors propose that this improved induction of SIVmac239 nAb is reciprocal to antibody dysregulation caused by a previously identified human PI3K gain-of-function mutation associated with impaired anti-viral B-cell responses. Altogether, the results suggest that PI3K signalling plays a role in B-cell maturation and generation of effective nAb responses. Preliminary data indicate that Nef might be transferred from infected T cells to B cells by direct contact. However, the exact mechanism and the relevance for vaccine development requires further studies

      Strengths of the study are that the authors analyzed a large number of SIVmac-infected macaques to unravel the biological significance of the known effect of the interaction of Nef with PI3K/Akt/mTORC2 signaling. This is interesting and may provide a novel means to improve humoral immune responses to HIV. In the revised version the authors made an effort to address previous concerns. Especially, they provide data supporting that Nef might be transferred to B cells by direct cell-cell contact. In addition, the provide some evidence that G63R that also emerged in most animals does not share the disruptive effect of G63G although experimental examination and discussion why G63R might emerge remains poor. Another weakness that remains is that some effects of the G63E mutation are modest and effects were not compared to SIVmac constructs lacking Nef entirely. The evidence for a role of Nef G63E mutation on PI3K and the association with improved nAb responses was largely convincing and it is appreciated that the authors provide additional evidence for a potential impact of "soluble" Nef on neighboring B cells. However, the experimental set-up and the results are difficult to comprehend. It seems that direct cell-cell contact is required and membranes are exchanged. Since Nef is associated with cellular membranes this might lead to some transfer of Nef to B cells. However, the immunological and functional consequences of this remain largely elusive. Alternatively, Nef-mediated manipulation of helper CD4 T cells might also impact B cell function and effective humoral immune responses. As previously noted, the presentation of the results and conclusions was in part very convoluted and difficult to comprehend. While the authors made attempts to improve the writing parts of the manuscript are still challenging to follow. This applies even more to the rebuttal (complex words combined with poor grammar), which made it difficult to assess which concerns have been satisfactory addressed.

    3. Author response:

      The following is the authors’ response to the original reviews.

      Reviewer #1 (Public Review):

      This work describes the induction of SIV-specific NAb responses in rhesus macaques infected with SIVmac239, a neutralization-resistant virus. Typically, host NAb responses are not detected in animals infected with SIVmac239. In this work, seventy SIVmac239-infected macaques were retrospectively screened for NAb responses and a subset of nine animals were identified as NAb-inducers. The viral genomes from 7/9 animals that induced NAb responses were found to encode nonsynonymous mutation in the Nef gene (amino acid G63E). In contrast, Nef G63E mutation was found only in 2/19 NAb non-inducers - implicating that the Nef G63E mutation is selected in NAb inducers. Measurement of Nef G63E frequencies in plasma viruses suggested that Nef G63E selection preceded NAb induction. Nef G63E mutation was found to mediate escape from Nef-specific CD8+ T-cell responses. To examine the functional phenotype of Nef G63E mutant, its effect on downmodulation of Nef-interacting host proteins was examined. Infection of rhesus and cynomolgus macaque CD4+ T cell lines with WT or Nef G63E mutant SIV suggested that Nef mutant reduces S473 phosphorylation of AKT. Using flow cytometry-based proximity ligation assay, it was shown that Nef G63E mutation reduced binding of Nef to PI3K p85/p110 and mTORC2 GβL/mLST8 and MTOR components - kinase complex responsible AKT-S473 phosphorylation. In vitro B-cell Nef invasion and in vivo imaging/flow cytometry-based assays were employed to suggest that Nef from infected cells can target Env-specific B cells. Lastly, it was determined that NAb inducers have significantly higher Env-specific B-cells responses after Nef G63E selection when compared to NAb non-inducers. Finally, a corollary was drawn between the Nef G63E-associated B-cell/NAb induction phenotype and activated PI3K delta syndrome (APDS), which is caused by activating GOF mutations in PI3K, to suggest that Nef G63E-meidated induction of NAb response is reciprocal to APDS.

      Strengths:

      This study aims to understand the viral-host interaction that governs NAb induction in SIVmac239-infected macaques - this could enable identification of determinants important for induction of NAb responses against hard-to-neutralize tier-2/3 HIV variants. The finding that SIV-specific B-cell responses are induced following Nef G63E CD8+ T-cell escape mutant selection argue for an evolutionary trade-off between CTL escape and NAb induction. Exploitation of such a cellular-humoral immune axis could be important for HIV/AIDS vaccine efforts.

      Although more validation and mechanistic basis are needed, the corollary between PI3K hyperactive signaling during autoimmune disorders and Nef-mediated abrogated PI3K signaling could help identify novel targets and modalities for targeting immune disorders and viral infections.

      We are grateful for the supportive and insightful comments. The work did seem to unintendedly highlight a conceptual link between extrinsic and intrinsic immune perturbations. We will keep working on both wings, aiming to evoke synergisms.

      Weaknesses:

      Although the paper does have strengths in principle, the weaknesses of the paper are that the mechanistic basis of Nef-mediated induction of NAb responses are not directly examined. For example, it remains unclear whether SIVmac239 with engineered G63E mutation in Nef would induce faster and potent NAb responses. A macaque challenge study is needed to address this point.

      We appreciate the point. We do have certain difficulties in availability of macaques for de novo experiments. As partially discussed in ver1, the identified Nef phenotype selected post-acute infection confers an enhanced CD4+ T cell-killing effect (revised Fig 4F), and it is likely that de novo infection with the mutant would redirect the trajectory of infection to rapid disease/AIDS progression accompanying generalized immune failure by boosting acute-phase CD4 destruction. In other words, mutant de novo infection may not necessarily be directly discussable as an attempt for reconstitution. It appears equally critical to understand the mutant in vitro on an immunosignaling basis, and in the current work we have focused on depicting this as the first step. We will work on reconstitution experiments with emphasis on pharmacology in our future study.

      As presented, the central premise of the paper involves infected cell-generated Nef (WT or G63E mutant) being targeted to adjacent Env-specific B cells. However, it remains unclear how this is transfer takes place. A direct evidence demonstrating CD4+ T cell-associated and/or cell-free Nef being transferred to B-cell is needed to address this concern.

      We appreciate the point, also pointed out by Reviewers 2 and 3. We have performed three sets of in vitro reconstitution experiments graphically/functionally addressing how Nef transfer from CD4+ T cells to B cells can be modulated (new Fig 6) and edited text accordingly.

      The interaction between Nef and PI3K signaling components (p85, p110, GβL/mLST8, and MTOR) has been explored using PLA assay, however, this requires validation using additional biochemical and/or immunoprecipitation-based approaches. For example, is Nef (WT or mutant form) sufficient to affect PI3K-induced phosphorylation of Akt in an in vitro kinase assay? Moreover, the details regarding the binding events of WT vs mutant Nef with PI3K signaling components is lacking in this study. Lastly, it is unclear whether the interaction of Nef with PI3K signaling components is a conserved function of all primate lentiviruses or is this SIV-specific phenotype.

      We appreciate the point. Co-immunoprecipitation analysis via pulldown with the mTORC2-intrinsic cofactor Sin1 (revised Fig 4E), showing decreased G63E-Nef binding, should confer robustness to the statement combined with initial manipulation results (Fig 4C). As Sin1 is mTORC2- and not mTORC1-intrinsic, results should be strengthened. Phosflow may be a standard readout nowadays for pAkt itself. Related with sequence variation, conservation will be addressed in studies ahead. We concisely mentioned on this in the revision (Lines 390-391).

      It has been previously reported that the region of Nef encoding glycine at position 63 is not conserved in HIV-1 (Schindler et al, Journal of Virology 2004). Thus, does HIV-1 Nef also function in induction of NAb responses in humans? or the observed phenotype specific to SIV?

      We appreciate the point, and do not have an answer at the moment. We will explore in our HIV-1-infected patient cohort (Hau et al, AIDS 2022) and other occasions whether corresponding phenotypes may exist. We have mentioned on this point in the revised manuscript (Line 392-393).

      Reviewer #2 (Public Review):

      It is well known that human and simian immunodeficiency viruses (HIV and SIV, respectively) evolved numerous mechanisms to compromise effective immune responses but the underlying mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Here, Yamamoto and Matano examined the humoral immune response in a large number of rhesus macaques infected with the difficult-to-neutralize SIVmac239 strain. They identified a subgroup of animals that showed significant neutralizing Ab responses. Sequence analyses revealed that in most of these animals (7/9) but only a minority in the control group (2/19) SIVmac variants containing a CD8+ T-cell escape mutation of G63E/R in the viral Nef gene emerged. They further show that this change attenuates the ability of Nef to stimulate PI3K/Akt/mTORC2 signaling. The authors propose that this induction of SIVmac239 nAb induction is reciprocal to antibody dysregulation caused by a previously identified human PI3K gain-of-function (Ref). Altogether, the results suggest that PI3K signaling plays a key role in B-cell maturation and generation of effective nAb responses.

      Strengths of the study are that the authors analyzed a large number of SIVmac-infected macaques to unravel the biological significance of the known effect of the interaction of Nef with PI3K/Akt/mTORC2 signaling. This is interesting and may provide a novel means to improve humoral immune responses to HIV. Weaknesses are that only G63E and not G63R that also emerged in most animals was examined in most functional assays. Some effects of the G63E mutation seem modest and comparison to a grossly nef-defective SIVmac construct would be desirable to better assess to impact of the mutation of Nef-mediated stimulation of PI3K. While the impact of this Nef mutations on PI3K and the association with improved nAb responses is largely convincing, the results on the potential impact of soluble Nef on neighboring B cells is much less clear. SIVmac239 infects and manipulates helper CD4 T cells and these are essential for the activation and differentiation of B cells into antibody-producing plasma cells and effective humoral immune responses. Without additional functional evidence that Nef indeed specifically targets and manipulated B cells these results and conclusions should be made with much greater caution. Finally, the presentation of the results and conclusions is partly very convoluted and difficult to comprehend. Editing to improve clarity is highly recommended.

      We are very grateful for the supportive and visionary review and suggestions. Experiments have been performed to improve the points raised. This work inevitably involved interdisciplinary factors to even hit on the schematic (NAbs, B cells, CD4+T, CD8+T, viral escape, immunosignaling, IEI as extrapolation & microscopy implementations) and convoluted sections should have existed. We attempted streamlining of certain portions and edited writing throughout, and hope that it became more straightforward.

      Reviewer #2 (Recommendations For The Authors):

      As outlined in the public review, I found the results potentially very interesting but parts of the manuscript much more complex and confusing than necessary. In addition, the methods on the potential impact of soluble Nef on neighboring B cells in vivo was difficult to assess but altogether this part was not convincing. Have the following specific suggestions:

      We are very grateful for the scholarly review, and encouraging and suggestive comments on this orphan work. In the revision we designed experiments to address the properties of Nef transfer to append understanding on the in vivo B-cell data. Recommendations have been addressed as follows.

      (1) Title: "AIDS virus-neutralizing antibody induction reciprocal to a PI3K gain-of-function disease". Think this title hardly reflects the data; SIVmac cause simian AIDS and is not the "AIDS virus" the 2nd part is more appropriate for discussion than for the title (and the abstract).

      We appreciate the point. The original intent of the title was to conceptually bridge two differing fields of virus-host interaction and inborn errors of immunity/immunosignaling on an original article basis. Certain papers (Mudd et al, Nature 2012 etc) do utilize the term AIDS virus, and we similarly chose the term for simplification to non-virologists at initial submission.

      That being said, we understand the scholarly point raised, and feel that the initial aim can be well attained by retaining the key host effector PI3K in the title, as in the revised submission titled “SIV-specific neutralizing antibody induction following selection of a PI3K drive-attenuated nef variant”.

      (2) Abstract and throughout: As the authors show, SIVmac is not generally "neutralization resistant"; difficult to neutralize is more appropriate and should be used throughout. Also, the abstract and other parts are more complicated than necessary.

      We appreciate the point. HIV/SIV Env immunology work utilizes “neutralization-resistant” for SIVmac239 (e.g., Mason et al, PLoS Pathog 2016), and autologous titer positivity of ~10% at this size of examination does appear low amongst lentiviruses. Nevertheless, as recommended, “difficult-to-neutralize” better describes the nature, and we have switched the term accordingly.

      Linked with title modification, we reflected the comment on abstract structure and switched the main introductory sentence (Here we…) to a more data-based one instead of depicting extrapolation, and have modified phrasings in the latter half.

      (3) The intro seems a bit biased. Immune evasion due to mutations and proviral integration that play key roles in viral persistence are not mentioned. nAbs are not known to efficiently control HIV or SIV replication in vivo (not even in the present study). Thus, a more "balanced" presentation of the role of nAbs in vivo is desirable.

      We agree with the comment. Introduction in ver1 submission was compressed to just display humoral immune perturbation examples across persistence-prone viral infections, and indeed it should be much better to layout the multiscale strategies of lentiviruses in manifesting viral persistence. We have appended two sets of texts, one on the fundamental integrating retroviral life cycle and another on the wide spectrum of accessory protein-driven perturbation. As pointed out, the current endogenous induction is of course not early enough to exert suppressive impact on replication as like in exogenous Ab passive infusions. We have accordingly modulated text to improve the balance.

      (4) Lines 73-76: rephrase for clarity.

      We acknowledge the comment and have rephrased accordingly.

      (5) Line 92: "linked with sustained Env-specific B-cell responses after the mutant Nef selection". After or during in one case; the time frame varies enormously and this should be discussed.

      We appreciate the comment. The six Nef-G63E mutant-selecting NAb inducers subjected to B-cell analysis were the ones that showed precedence in Fig 2D (mutant before induction). That being said, we modified text as suggested (Line 104 in revised uploaded text). Text related to temporal deviation has been appended (Lines 378-383 in revised uploaded text).

      (6) The authors should discuss G63R and include it in the functional analyses.

      We appreciate the comment. Discussion on Nef-G63R in ver1 submission was kept minimal because statistical significance for selection was marginal. We generated a Nef-G63R mutant and results are appended in Fig 4-Figure Supplement 2.

      (7) Lines 124/5: conservation only applies to SIVsmm/mac Nefs and this region is also frequently deleted/length-variable in primary HIV-1 Nefs.

      We appreciate the comment. We modified description of the region accordingly (Lines 139-141 in revised text).

      (8) Lines 153-155: Statement doesn't seem to make sense. The triple mutant Nef SIVmac construct was not attenuated for replication but specifically disrupted in CD3 down-modulation.

      We acknowledge the comment. It had meant that the consequent plasma viral load showed a trend of decrease (as in the Graphical Abstract of the work) which should (in a simplistic view) influence antigenicity for humoral immune responses. Yet it is very true that virological replicative capacity was comparable with wild-type as in Fig.1. We have taken down the related text and rephrased it (Ref remains cited in introduction).

      (9) Lines 178/9: levels in PI3K gain-of-function mice "with full disease phenotype (Avery et al., 2018)". This needs more information, e.g. what disease exactly are they talking about?

      We are grateful for the correction, and have appended text and introduced the mentioned congenital disease in the Introduction section in advance. In-detail description is also appended in the Discussion section.

      (10) Lines 186/7: "Env-stimulating high-MOI infection also accelerated phenotype appearance, with enhanced 50% reduction (Figure 4C, right)". Modify text and corresponding figure for clarity.

      We acknowledge the comment. We revised as: “A high-MOI SIV infection, comprising higher initial concentration of extracellular Env stimuli, also accelerated phenotype appearance from day 3 to day 1 post-infection with stronger pAkt reduction”.

      (11) The validity of the results described in the section "Targeting of lymph node Env-specific B cells by Nef in vivo" was difficult to assess. Altogether, however, I didn't find them convincing, especially since a negative control (e.g. macaques infected with nef-deleted SIVmac) are missing.

      We acknowledge the comment. As a pure experimental control, whole-Nef deletion may assist for subtracted baselines. Within this work, the staining per se at least should be highly specific (mAb multiply verified in other applications and cytometry panel also designed for minimal spillover into AF488 channel). On in vivo basis, direct comparison may be somewhat frustrated by the fact that reduction in other pleiotropic effects of Nef seem to more dominate upon Nef deletion, as a set of reduced viremia, robust CD8 responses, killer CD4 responses and increased binding Ab titers (Johnson et al, J Virol 1997, Gauduin et al, J Exp Med 2006, Fukazawa et al, Nat Med 2012, Adnan et al, PLoS Pathog 2016 etc) leading to altered trajectory. We promise that we will work on refinement of the methodology in studies ahead.

      (12) Lines 309-319: This paragraph made little sense to me (as did lines 328-331).

      We acknowledge the comment and have edited both sections.

      Reviewer #3 (Additional Reviewer):

      In this manuscript, Hiroyuki Yamamoto et al examined virus-specific antibody responses and identified a subgroup of nine individuals, out of seventy SIVmac239 rhesus macaques of Burmese origin infected with SIVmac239, that develop neutralizing antibodies (NAb). The authors propose the emergence of a nef mutant (Nef-G63E) that impacts on B cell maturation resulting in PI3K gain-of-function.

      My major concerns are:

      The authors by different aspect addressed the role of the emergence of Nef-G63E mutant in individuals developing NAb. The manuscript is confused and the rational not always clearly stated. This reflects the two aspects of the manuscript (i) NAb identification in a subgroup of macaque and (2) the identification this nef mutation.

      We are grateful for the comprehensive and scholarly comments. As pointed out, the work did need to confront potential bifurcation of the influence of the obtained viral immunosignaling phenotype for CD4-intrinsic (which might be your specialty) and B-cell-intrinsic impact. Based on your suggestions we have acquired additional data and revised the manuscript as attached.

      The authors used both males (n=57) and females (n=13). However, there is no indication related to the sex regarding NAb inducers versus non-NAb Inducers. The notion of "highly pathogenic" is certainly not correct (see the introduction). Pathogenicity is also depending on monkey origin. Thus, cynomolgus are less sensitive to SIVmac239 or SIVmac251 compared to rhesus macaques (Ling B Aids 2002; Reimann KA, J Virol 2005; Cumont MC, J Virol 2008), or to pigtails used in US. Indeed, the authors used Burmese macaques, and therefore the dynamics of pathogenicity is different to rhesus macaque (Indian origin) housed in US. How many animals have been sacrificed out of the 61 animals? Herein, the animals are surviving longer (more than one year), and therefore the notion of "highly pathogenic" merits to be modulated.

      We appreciate the comment. We have accordingly appended sex information (M/F: 8/1 versus 49/12 in NAb inducers vs non-inducers, p > 0.99 by Fisher’s exact test) in the methods section. As pointed out there are differences in the frequency and rate of AIDS progression among macaques of differing origin, whereas we have also previously reported reproducible AIDS progression dependent on MHC-I genotypes in the Burmese rhesus macaques utilized (Nomura, Yamamoto et al., J Virol 2012). Adhering to advice, we have attenuated the term to “pathogenic” in the revised manuscript and appended one reference showing pathogenesis gradation from a cell-death perspective (Cumont 2008).

      Furthermore, no indication is provided regarding CD4 T cell dynamics, or CD8 T cells. In particular, the extent of T cell immunodeficiency may compromise humoral response. Therefore, this data needs to be shown. Indeed, previous reports have indicated that early CD4 T cell depletion is associated with defective humoral response. Furthermore, Tfh cell depletion was reported in several immune tissues, which are essential for B cell immune response like the spleen. Thus, this should be discussed as an alternative mechanism to the absence of NAb. Indeed, the authors found higher and persistent env-specific plasmablast cells in NAb inducers than that observed in non-NAb inducers figure 6. Why to have selected twelve individuals out of 61 individuals for assessing anti-env response (Supplemental S3 for figure 1, panel 1), and only eleven for western blots. The explanation in the text is absent. This requires to be clearly stated. See lines 108-110.

      We appreciate the comment. As in other sections, this study utilized available cryopreserved samples from a retrospective cohort, also having heterogeneity in data acquisition along the way. We acknowledge that some supplemental data are particularly limited in information, which is also a reason they are presented in SI. We felt that one important core was to secure samples for Nef-G63E-selecting NAb inducers versus viremic non-inducers, for which we acquired six versus twelve in the B-cell analysis.

      We (Nakane et al, PLoS ONE 2013) and others (Hirsch et al, J Virol 2004) have already reported on western blotting-basis that SIV-infected rapid progressors tend to manifest serological failure (impaired binding Ab-WB bands). Therefore, to compare quantitative traits at this basal stage (Fig 1), we judged that NAb inducer comparison with more non-rapid-progressing (>60 wk survival) non-inducers would be a criterion. We have mentioned on this in the revised manuscript (results/methods). Additionally, we have replaced the immunoblotting result with one more non-inducer (n = 12) to enhance results. Please note that there are lot deviations in strip-coated antigen (e.g., gp160) but the result is comparable (now covers 12/13 of animals with >60-wk survival).

      The authors indicated the frequencies of Nef-G63E mutant in figure 2 panel C. However. no information is indicated in the legend about the number of NAb non-inducers used to calculate this frequency. The authors indicated line 127, "only in two of the nineteen NAb non-inducers, including one rapid progressor". Thus, different numbers of individuals are used through the manuscript. For the readers, this is clearly a statement that needs to be clarify and to refer to what. This is not homogeneous along the text and the analyses performed.

      We appreciate the comment, and have appended the number in the revised Fig 2C. As aforementioned, heterogeneity of sample number in different sections is indeed a limitation of the work, and have mentioned this in the Discussion.

      The rational related to the sentence lines 140-142. Please clarify.. "NAb induction is not associated with these MHC-I genotypes (P = 0.25 by Fisher's exact test, data not shown) but with the Nef-G63E mutation itself".

      We appreciate the comment. We have rephrased it as:

      “Ten of nineteen NAb non-inducers also had either of these alleles (Figure 1-figure supplement 1). This did not significantly differ with the NAb inducer group (P = 0.25 by Fisher’s exact test, data not shown), indicating that NAb induction was not simply linked with possession of these MHC-I genotypes but instead required furthermore specific selection of the Nef-G63E mutation.” (Lines 159-162).

      In supplemental figure 3, only 7 individuals have been tested, while the authors indicated "Ten of nineteen NAb non-inducers also had either of these alleles". Why only seven? In NAb Burmese monkeys, the authors indicate specific T cells capable to recognize WT nef peptide, but not G63E peptide mutant. Thus, nef is immunogenic in vivo generating T cells despite to be mutated.

      In contrary, non-NAb-inducers demonstrate the absence of nef specific T cells (supplemental figure 3, excepted R01-011 panel A). Although, the authors propose an escape mutant for CD8 T cells, this is not associated with the absence of immunogenicity and not with a difference in viral load in comparison to NAb inducers (panel C). Therefore, the conclusions merit to be revised. Thus, this part of the manuscript is confusing. Please clarify the rational to link NAb and Nef specific CD8 T cells.

      We appreciate the comment. 7 out of 8 non-inducers positive for the allele and not selecting for the Nef-G63E mutant was available for analysis. The relative contribution of this single Nef62-70 epitope-specific CTL response is speculated not to be largely impacting viral control, among the many induced. This is basally discussed in a previous paper (Nomura, Yamamoto et al., J Virol 2012), more suggestive of an MHC-I haplotype-level correlation with plasma viral load. We assume that the CTL pressure-driven selection of Nef-G63E mutant was a rather pure immunosignaling trigger under persistent viremia. We appended this in the revised text (Line 172).

      In the next part of the manuscript, the authors assessed the function of this Nef-G63E mutant. The rational to introduce Ferritin in this part of the document is not clear for the reader. Furthermore, a subgroup for each (NAb+ versus NAb-) is shown: 4 for NAbneg versus 6 for NAbpos.

      We appreciate the point. As introduced, Swingler et al Cell Host Microbe 2008 reported HIV-infected macrophage-derived ferritin as a potentially B cell-disrupting factor. In that paper, viral load, ferritin and binding antibody titers positively correlated. Current data shows that SIVmac239-specific NAb induction is distinct from such kinetics already versus viral load (Fig 3-Supplement 1C), and ferritin levels were measured for some available samples more simply for confirmation. We appended three more available samples in the NAb- group. (The six NAb+/G63E animals correspond to the ones with B-cell data in Figure 7.) Statistical results appear unaffected and robust, as shown in this version. The revised manuscript incorporates appended explanation for the former.

      Similarly, whereas the authors observed a role of nef mutant on pAkt Ser473 (less induced) in comparison to WT, the authors suggest that this may have an impact on T cell survival.

      We appreciate the point. In the first submission we obtained peripheral memory Tfh decrease, whereas it is true that this is indirect. In the current revision we have addressed apoptotic cell death, shown to increase with Nef-G63E mutation (Figure 4F).

      The rational to analyze CXCR3-CXCR5+PD-1+ memory follicular Th (Tfh) is not clear. Moreover, the references used are not the adequately cited. Indeed, these papers show an expansion. See the literature for a depletion (Xu H, J Immunol. 2015; Moukambi F, PLoS Pathog. 2015; Yamamoto T, Sci Transl Med. 2015; Xu H, J Immunol. 2018 Moukambi F, Mucosal Immunol. 2019).

      We appreciate these points on in vivo CD4+ T cells.

      Peripheral memory Tfh was reported to correlate with Ab cross-reactivity in one human cohort (Locci et al, Immunity 2013) and we concisely examined the subset in the current NAb induction. We mentioned this in the revised manuscript.

      Moukambi F et al, PLoS Pathog 2015 & Mucosal Immunol 2019 are demonstrative work on acute-phase destruction. We have cited non-neonatal/vaccine-related ones suggested, including these two, in the revised manuscript. The biphasic dysregulation of Th (acute-phase destruction and chronic-phase adverse hyper-expansion) may indeed have a unique role with the current phenotype, which is beyond aim of the current analysis. We have concisely mentioned on this in the Discussion.

      Then, the authors assess the potential B-cell-intrinsic influence of the G63E-Nef phenotype. The rational here is clearly indicated, making sense with figure 1. Furthermore, this part is clearer. The dot-plots merit to be revised and the markers used better stated. The authors indicate that Nef invasion upregulates pAkt Ser473 assuming aberrant PI3K/mTORC2 signaling. What is the impact of Nef-G63E mutant on pAkt Ser473 using in vitro model of transfer. This is not addressed for comparison.

      We appreciate the remarks/suggestions, also pointed out by Reviewers 1 and 2. We have performed three sets of in vitro reconstitution experiments visually and functionally addressing how Nef transfer to B cells can be modulated (new Fig 6), and edited text accordingly.

      Minor points are:

      - the presence of references in the legend.

      -some Ab clones are in the table, however they are not used such CD38 and CD138, which are well known to be non-valid B cell markers for monkeys."

      We appreciate the suggestions.

      Mentioning on reference have been removed from the legend (Fig.1, Fig. 3) and moved to the corresponding Methods section (Fig. 1).

      We also understood this well in advance (CD38/CD138), and incorporated them in the memory B-cell panel just to check whether they ever behave in a specific pattern. As expected, no notable behavior was observed in these NAb inducers.

    1. What are your biggest concerns around privacy on social media?

      Platforms are vulnerable to cyber-attacks, users' information may leak. Also, while platforms collect users' preferences, users' info may be kind of transparent on the internet.

    2. What incentives to social media companies have to violate privacy?

      There is potential profit comes from violating users' privacy. For example, these information can be sell to ad companies to make targeting ads. Or sell these data to third parties. And it is hard for users to find out social media sell their information, the risks involve is low.

    1. Deanonymizing Data:

      Because it shows how businesses might produce new information on users without their knowledge or agreement, the idea of inferred data—such as shadow profiles made by social media companies—is worrisome. This type of privacy violation frequently takes place in the background and is challenging for users to keep an eye on or manage. Furthermore, Facebook's collection of information on users without accounts demonstrates how widespread data tracking has become. The broad ramifications of contemporary data surveillance are demonstrated by the fact that even non-users' information can be collected without their agreement.Because it shows how businesses might produce new information on users without their knowledge or agreement, the idea of inferred data—such as shadow profiles made by social media companies—is worrisome.

    2. I think that all major social media companies should make there privacy laws clear when signing up for them. Unclear privacy rules can result in a misunderstanding between the user and the corporation and it can lead to the users privacy being violated.

    1. Only male crabs larger than a minimumsize can be harvested, and only during a defined fishing season.In Oregon, male crabs must have a carapace width of at least6.25 in (159 mm) when measured just anterior to the 10th lateralspine. The Oregon fishing season begins on December 1 andruns through August 14, avoiding the fall period, during whichmost males molt and are in poor market condition. Without anyregulations directly limiting the number of large males that canbe taken each year, there is the possibility that nearly all malecrabs of legal size could be harvested.

      Question 7) The season for Dungeness crab starts December 1st according to the 2012 article. Only male crab the size of 6.25(in) or 159(mm) minimum may be harvested during this season and the season ends August 14th. The fall months are avoided because this is when male molting season is. According to the ODFW website, the updated minimum size for harvest is 5.75(in) or 146.05(mm). The updated open season dates start December 1st and end October 15th. In order to go crabbing you must be 12 years or older and have a shellfish license. When catching the crab you must release any female crab immediately and any male crab must be measured. When measuring you want to use a crab gauge and you measure across their back horizontally, not including their spike on each side. When determining sex, on the underside of the male crab you will see a long skinny triangle and on female it will be more wide and round. over the past years, not much has changed regulation-wise, only a slight change in size and dates. For commercial crabbing the regulations have stayed the same since 2012, minimum size being 6.25(in) or 159(mm) and the season starting December 1st and ending August 14th. Although if you are commercial crabbing, you must have a commercial crabbing license and no more than 15 crab on each vessel.

      Question: If crabbing for females was aloud, only for recreational crabbing, and only at females maximum size, would this drop the population of Dungeness crab too much? or would it not affect the population significantly?

    1. It was the most prosperous invention the Devil ever set on foot for the promotion of idolatry. The Heathens paid divine honors to their deceased kings, and the Christian World hath improved on the plan by doing the same to their living ones.

      This is a telling sign that many in Paine's audience are Christian. It illustrates Paine's understanding of who his audience is, and takes advantage of that knowledge to drive home the points he's making to the part of his audience.

    2. no one by birth could have a right to set up his own family in perpetual preference to all others for ever, and tho’ himself might deserve some decent degree of honors of his contemporaries, yet his descendants might be far too unworthy to inherit them.

      This is a significant in that a system that had long been accepted by many is being challenged here. It shows a difference in belief many colonists have in contrast to their predecessors.

    3. The cause of America is in a great measure the cause of all mankind. Many circumstances hath, and will arise, which are not local, but universal, and through which the principles of all Lovers of Mankind are affected, and in the Event of which, their Affections are interested.

      Why is the cause of America great for the cause of mankind? What benefits does rebellion does it bring for everybody else in the world?

    4. In the following sheets, the author hath studiously avoided every thing which is personal among ourselves.

      Why does Paine avoid getting personal? Is there a downside to expressing something personal? What being personal weaken the argument Paine is trying to lay out?

    5. Perhaps the sentiments contained in the following pages, are not YET sufficiently fashionable to procure them general favor; a long habit of not thinking a thing WRONG, gives it a superficial appearance of being RIGHT, and raises at first a formidable outcry in defense of custom.

      This shows an understanding from Paine that many colonists are not fully for rebellion, even with it looming on the horizon. Thus Paine adds this part in to show understanding in the fact that he likely won't gain any favor for writing, at least not yet.

    6. Every spot of the old world is overrun with oppression. Freedom hath been hunted round the globe. Asia, and Africa, have long expelled her. — Europe regards her like a stranger, and England hath given her warning to depart. O! receive the fugitive, and prepare in time an asylum for mankind.

      This highlights the time Paine lived, where most continents were ruled by monarchies, or if not that something similar. This shows how much of a step the colonies are taking, which in effect was fighting a system of government that was in charge of almost every nation on Earth.

    7. Oppression

      Oppression is normally a situation in which people governed unfairly and cruelly, with rights and freedoms being suppressed. Paine is trying to get across that the colonists are being oppressed because of the amount of power Britain have over them.

    1. Research has repeatedly shown that investing in families and communities — especially in racially and economically isolated communities — can substantially improve the lives of people who live there and benefit the broader economy.

      It's important to highlight that the answers are in the people who live in the neighborhoods, they reflect the problems and the ways we can improve. These communities benefit economically and the redline system decides their future in an unfair way .

    1. Soviet sniper Roza Shanina in 1944. About 800,000 women served in the Soviet Armed Forces during the war.

      I wonder if the women from other nations (outside of America) had the same problem post WWII of not being properly compensated for their service

    2. Original 1939 “Keep Calm” UK government poster

      I never had historical context for the origin of this meme so this was cool to learn

    3. Japanese troops raped up to 100,000 women and girls

      The tragedy of these acts of sexual violence and their abuse of comfort women, including drug-induced compliance, continues to affect Chinese people (women in particular)

    4. Movement up the peninsula was slow and in some battles conditions returned to the trench-like warfare of World War I. Still, the Allies pushed up the peninsula

      Did they not see how useless trench warfare was?

    5. While Hitler marched across Europe, the Japanese continued their war in the Pacific.

      It's interesting how big this war was. There was so any different fronts, it feels bigger than WW1 definitely but just by far so large in comparison to the wars before this time.

    6. The Japanese army was a technologically advanced force consisting of 4,100,000 men and 900,000 Chinese collaborators, all armed with modern rifles, artillery, armor, and aircraft

      I was under the impression that America had a really strong military. Was it weak (in comparison) because of WW1? Or just because they weren't looking to get involved in the war? (Unlike Japan who was looking to prove strength)

    7. News of the “Rape of Nanjing” reached the West, but many were skeptical because the violence was so extreme.

      It's really crazy to me that they were being so drastically violent that it wasn't even believable.

    8. Hitler had betrayed Stalin and invaded the Soviet Union.

      Did he do this because he wanted to be the sole leading power? Or because they were communist? (Or both?)

    9. The new German strategy used tanks, planes, and motorized infantry to concentrate forces, smash front lines, and wreak havoc behind the enemy’s defenses. It was called Blitzkrieg, or lightning war.

      This new strategy completely changed how war was fought. The fact Germany completely destroyed every country they fought against with this strategy was shocking to me. Germany was a superpower but they did do things that would hurt them in the long run and they then were fighting some of the best superpowers which were Great Britain, U.S. and the USSR.

    10. And even if Americans had wanted to intervene, their military was lacking.

      Seeing this now really is shocking that we now have one of the highest military spending in the entire world.

    11. Japan invaded China itself in July 1937, two years before Germany invaded Poland. Chinese attention had been focused on a civil war between the Republic of China and the Chinese Communist Party since 1927 and the Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek had ignored the Japanese threat until it was too late

      Japan was the ready to go ally Germany needed and they had no threats to worry about in Asia or the Pacific. Both countries did as they please and they were simply gaining strength and not another country tried to limit them or stop them.

    12. Ideologically, the Japanese justified their conquests by claiming they were liberating Asia from European colonialism. Not all the Asian countries they invaded, however, were happy to become part of the Pan-Asian empire Japan wanted to rule over.

      This is a very important part because Japan started to threaten U.S islands in the Pacific and they ended up attacking Hawaii but this conquering turned Japan into a feared force in the Pacific Area and in Asia too.

    1. I sent him before me, took up myBurden of Wood, & came to the Indians and told them the whole Truth; and theycommended me:

      It is evident that the Indigenous did not wish to kill John, as they commended him for defending himself against the attack. Earlier in the text, we can also see that they aided him in minimizing the damage to his frostbitten leg, and provided him with snowshoes to use in the heavy snowfall. These all demonstrate that although he was a prisoner, John was still being taken care of to a reasonable extent.

    2. It was late in the Evening wearrived at the Place where the Moose lay: so that we had no time to provideMaterials for Fire or Shelter.

      This excerpt shows the non-sedentary lifestyle of the Indigenous. Rather than set up a settlement, they were setting up camp wherever they made a kill, as we can see here. In both articles, travel is a major theme, showing that Indigenous groups kept captives with them while traveling, as they did not possess dungeons or prisons in which to keep prisoners.

    3. now & then gave me apiece of Flesh half boil'd or roasted,

      It is interesting that the captors only let John eat once he has done certain tasks (supply them with wood and water), whereas Mary was given broth without conducting any tasks. This could be due to gender differences, as keeping John weak to prevent him from revolting would have been a possible strategy.

    1. , they marched on furiously, with their old and young: Some carried their olddecrepit mothers, some carried one, and some another. Four of them carried a great Indianupon a Bier; but going through a thick Wood with him, they were hindred, andcould make no hast; whereupon they took him upon their backs, and carried himone at a time

      This passage shows us the close knit nature of Indigenous societies, as no man or woman was left behind. When they were unable to carry the bier through the thick woods, they took turns carrying the man through the woods, rather than just leaving him.

    1. By the 9th century, the influence of Christianity had spread into Celtic lands, where it gradually blended with and supplanted older Celtic rites

      Religious syncretism

    1. The Menendez brothers have attracted enormous support on social media, where young people who were not born at the time of the murders have demanded their release.

      Even Kim Kardashian has come to defend the brothers, influencing her followers to advocate for them too. This case has also been in lots of young people's media, especially through TikTok.

    2. “If Lyle and Erik’s case were heard today, with the understanding we now have about abuse and PTSD there is no doubt in my mind that their sentencing would have been very different,”

      This signifies that the American mindset has developed greatly over the past couple of decades and is more understanding.

    3. “It’s important to recognize that both men and women can be victims of sexual abuse,”

      I think this has become very relevant today. Even recently with the Abercrombie CEO sex trafficking scandal, people often tend to believe only women are victims of sexual abuse which is just completely false.

    4. A spending spree by the brothers in the months between the murders and their arrest, in which they bought a Porsche car, a Rolex watch, and a restaurant in Princeton, N.J., was presented as evidence to support that theory.

      All this detail was explicitly shown in the Netflix series.

    5. Erik Menendez was 18, and his brother, Lyle, was 21, at the time of the murders.

      These brothers being young and conventionally attractive displayed a different side of America; a side that supports murderers because of their good looks and interesting background.

    6. The brothers’ initial trial in the early 1990s was one of the first to be televised to a national audience, a forerunner of the 1995 murder trial of O.J. Simpson, also in Los Angeles County.

      Both of these cases are engraved in the nations mind. Many people can look back at when these cases first began and describe in detail what happened. People love the drama, with case being wealthy, white men, and from Hollywood all eyes all over America were on a television screen. Furthermore, these cases being televised and becoming so popular signifies that the nation is obsessed with murder, drama, and sexual appeal.

    7. The case drew renewed attention this year after Netflix released a docudrama about it, and later a documentary in which the brothers discussed the case at length in prison interviews.

      Both of these shows that aired on Netflix got huge media attention, and caused an uproar on social media, often with people defending the two brothers. Many people even took to social media to call for a retrial to show their support and love to the brothers.

    8. At the time, their claims were met with widespread skepticism, but now they are seen by Mr. Gascón as credible enough to warrant reconsideration by the court.

      Times are very different now compared to how they were in the 1980s. Sex crimes and offenses were often overlooked and doubted highly in the courts. Now, with the rise of these cases the criminal justice system handles these cases very seriously due to how common these crimes have unfortunately become.

    9. Lyle and Erik Menendez, who killed their parents in 1989

      It is important to note that this case has had an unprecedented amount of attention since it first came about. People feel very strongly about this case, and the brothers have thousands upon thousands of supporters.

    1. Crash course on typewriter maintenance and repair

      A list of resources and references for the budding typewriter repair person. There is a lot here that I've compiled and consumed over the last six months, so don't be overwhelmed. Half the battle is figuring out where to find all these things, so if nothing else, this should shave off a month of reading and researching.

      Basic Introductory Material

      Get a notebook and be ready to take some notes so you'll remember where you found the random information you're bound to pick up over time and are able to occasionally review it.

      Work your way through Sarah Everett's excellent Typewriter 101 videos (at least the first five): https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJtHauPh529XYHI5QNj5w9PUdi89pOXsS

      Read Richard Polt's book which is a great overview to the general space:<br /> Polt, Richard. The Typewriter Revolution: A Typist’s Companion for the 21st Century. 1st ed. Woodstock, VT: Countryman Press, 2015.

      Next watch the documentary California Typewriter. Documentary. Gravitas Pictures, 2016. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5966990/. It has some interesting subtle material hiding within it, but it will give you a good idea of where you're headed off to.

      Get a machine (or four) you can practice on. Get a flat head screwdriver and maybe a small adjustable wrench. Buy some mineral spirits and a small headed toothbrush and clean out your first machine. Buy some light sewing machine oil and try oiling it. Search YouTube for videos about how to repair anything that may be wrong with it.

      Basic restoration advice: https://site.xavier.edu/polt/typewriters/tw-restoration.html

      On colloquial advice for degreasing, cleaning, and oiling manual typewriters https://boffosocko.com/2024/08/09/on-colloquial-advice-for-degreasing-cleaning-and-oiling-manual-typewriters/

      Repair Manuals

      Create an account on typewriterdatabase.com which will give you some additional access to catalogs, manuals, and dealer catalogs.

      They also have some openly accessible material like:<br /> * https://typewriterdatabase.com/manuals.php

      Printed manuals: https://www.lulu.com/search?adult_audience_rating=00&contributor=Ted+Munk&page=1&pageSize=50 PDF manuals: https://sellfy.com/twdb

      Ted Munk's website also has a plethora of ephemera that is often useful * https://munk.org/typecast/

      Richard Polt's list of service manuals, which also includes some correspondence course typewriter repair classes: https://site.xavier.edu/polt/typewriters/tw-manuals.html#servicemanuals

      Tools

      In rough order of increasing complexity:

      Tools can be expensive, so start out small with just a few things and expand as you need them. You'll be amazed at what you can accomplish with a single thin bladed flathead screwdriver, an adjustable wrench, a rag, a bottle of Simple Green cleaning solution, and a bottle of isopropyl alcohol.

      Videos

      Subscribe to and become acquainted with YouTube channels like the following:

      While watching a variety of videos is great, as you're doing specific repairs search YouTube and you're likely to find full demos of the repairs you're doing yourself.

      I've compiled a playlist of videos for repair of an Olympia SM3 which, while specific to the SM3, is a an excellent outline/overview of how to disassemble a portable typewriter, where many of the adjustment points are as well as an outline of the order to do them in.

      If you're not a good typist or don't have experience in the area, try out some of the following short films which will also provide some useful historical perspective:

      Internships & Apprenticeships

      If you have the time and flexibility try arranging an internship or apprenticeship with a local typewriter repair shop. Meet your local repair people even if you can't spend the time on an internship. You'll learn a lot and create relationships with businesses who will more easily swap/supply you with machines they're parting out or access to tools which may otherwise be difficult to source.

      Podcasts

      Some useful Bibliography

      Good luck on your journey!


      reply to u/fontinalispluma at https://old.reddit.com/r/typewriters/comments/1gaza5x/learning_typewriter_maintenance_and_repair/

  2. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. In terms of average wages, a college degree was worth 50 percent more than a regular high school degree in 1980, but by 2008 the college degree was worth 95 percent more.73 In that sense, the edu-cational gains of kids from poor backgrounds have been doubly illusory. They've been struggling to catch up on a down escalator.

      More and more people are getting college degrees, which that high school degrees are less valuable or the college degree will worth more. Thinking about jobs such as "secretary" that we read about in Tuesday's reading. The job description and responsibilities can also change so that it requires a higher degree. Now, so many people are getting bachelor's degrees that further education or a lot of experience is needed to be competitive.

    2. Suppose that you were a bright, optimistic young teacher showing up each day to work in this war zone. Idealism might carry you through a year or two, but if you had an opportunity to move to a school with less mayhem and more students eager to learn, you'd jump at the chance. So faculty turnover would be higher, with more rookie teach-ers every year. Moreover, many of the teachers who remained would be timeservers: inured to turmoil, content to baby-sit, "paid to be there," cynical even about helping well-meaning students, dismissing them as "pathetic," lazily assuming that all Latinos speak Spanish.

      This is a sad reality for many schools such as Santa Ana. Constant faculty turnover would result in less experienced teachers and rookie teachers taking their place. Teachers can also be discouraged because they want to teach and help the students, but instead have to "baby-sit" or grow to have an apathetic attitude because nothing seems to work.

    3. Although school quality and resources are unequal between top and bottom socioeconomic schools, once we account for nonschool factors (such as family structure, economic insecurity, pa-rental engagement, and even TV watching), school quality and school resources themselves seem to contribute relatively little to class gaps in test scores and other measures of cognitive and socioemotional skills.

      This is interesting. There is definitely a difference in top and bottom socioeconomic schools, but what makes more of a difference in gaps are nonschool factors. We've been reading about this in previous readings. Where you live matters and overlaps with SES which also afffects where you go to school and the opportunities you are exposed to. Cognitive stimulation can be affected by family structure and how much support and attention a child recieves.

    1. 16:30 "But the only fatwa that has, in fact, said that no images of Mohammed are permitted, and that includes Islamic paintings, not just the cartoons, came out in 2013 in Saudi Arabia by a Salafi cleric whose name is Al-Munajid. And there are other fatwas like Asistani, the Shi'i cleric, who says these images are perfectly fine, as long as they're respectful."

      20:00 Fatwas can be issued (like the above) in a vacuum without any real conversation within the Islamic community. Few years back even building a snowman fatwa as haram. Animals are decapitated in Saudi textbooks. People in 20th century having 14th century book that depicts a head, decapitating it (al-ras).

    2. 15:30 The advent of media allowing for more images to be produced of the prophet. This in turn led to more anxiety under the Islamic community. See The Message (and the other movies) as examples of this increase of anxiety.

    3. 05:00 Gruber discusses how the canon should be decolonised (how eurocentrism should be replaced with different centres of interests) and how showing the prophet actually contributes to that purpose (including 14th century Iran that portrays these depictions of Muhammad).

    4. 07:30 Wow, interesting point: The people back then struggled with the question of how to depict prophetic and divine figures. How to do that? Certain anxieties underlying this.

      08:30 A week before the incident, Lopez showed art in India and of the Buddha and so on. A whole course on how the divine is presented, and struggled with, in different regions and cultures, other than the West (an Eurocentric view).

  3. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. McAllister family made do. Ms. McAllister rightfully saw her-self as a very capable mother. She was a strong, positive influence in the lives of the children she looked after. Still, the contrast with Ms. Williams is striking. Ms. McAllister did not seem to think that Harold's opinions needed to be cultivated and developed. She, like most parents in the working-class and poor families, drew strong and clear bound-aries between adults and children.

      This shows the effect of finances on a family dynamic because although both Mrs. McAllister and Ms. Williams are good mothers who provide for their kids, the difference shows in their parenting styles. Mrs. McAllister does not possess the time and money that allows Ms. Williams to think Alexander is more than just a child, his opinions need to be cultivated and developed.

    2. He and Ms. McAllister have never married. He visits regularly, sometimes weekly, stopping by af-ter work to watch television or nap.

      It's interesting to note the family dynamic differences between Harold McAllister's family and Alexander Williams'. One important note is the lack of a typical family structure, because Harold's father and mother never married. Therefore, the father figure is not a permanent fixture in Harold's life as his visits, though regular, are not the same as living in the same household.

    3. Sometimes Alexander complains that "my mother signs me up for everything!" Gener-ally, however, he likes his activities. He says they make him feel "special," and without them life would be "boring."

      Children born into wealthy or middle class families are not ever exposed to the harsh reality that children born into poverty are, which is that their families will not be able to afford basic necessities, much less extracurricular activities. This is why children born into wealthy or middle class families often have a sheltered "bubble" in which they even complain about the multiple opportunities offered to them that other children cannot even dream of.

  4. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. ttendance problems often indicate negative parent attitudes toward school. Parents who did poorly in school themselves may have a negative attitude about their children’s schools

      This goes to show that it tends to be a generational issue in terms of negative parent attitudes towards school. If a parent has negative experiences in school, his attitude may reflect on his child as they try to "protect" their child from the same things they had to go through. This can lead to their child not participating in school functions or activities, which can have a negative effect on their social behavior.

    1. Anarchy is the total absence of governance, where no governmentnor laws exists. In this scenario individuals can interact peer-to-peer, butsince no coordination exists, it is impossible to scale up communication andproductivity.

      Eh, what stops them to come to consensus regarding some topic?

      Swiss folks interact peer-to-peer, passing laws.

    2. This means that thecontroller might have to take measures, like revoking ij and kl.

      Why so? They're not in the KEL anymore.

      And those who learned them will accept superseeding recovery, so maliciously issued certificates out they go.

    Annotators

  5. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. These multilayered issues do not make an education or a successful life impossible, but they certainly provide more than a healthy dose of challenges for young people like Denise. This is why I stayed at my "failing" school, with poor students, for years. I could not change the larger circumstances of their lives, but I could do small things within my classroom to ameliorate their situations. All students are capable of learning.

      I understand this author's approach to her teaching students at a "failing" school with lower-income students. She not only attempts to understand her students living in poverty, she tries to change small things to assist their situations. No matter what, she believes in them as she notes "All students are capable of learning".

    2. But my 1ve ex . . . · . 1 • was a teenage mom, I have b1rac1al meces and a nephew a sister w 10 twice . . . . , h k d ler l·n my family my dad died of diabetes complications when I ave a crac ea ' dult and I was adopted as a baby because I was accidcntly ere-I was a young a , . . . . atcd by two curious high school semors.

      I appreciate how the author does recognize that she does fit a lot of the typical stereotypes that a white female would incur, and yet there's more beyond what the eye can see. When she goes into detail about her living experiences, I was shocked by the level of harsh reality she was thrust in. It allows her students to recognize that she is not just their white teacher, she is her own person who has also gone through difficulties in life.

    3. As much as I enjoy teaching, I might enjoy learning from the students even more. My students taught me during my career. They were the student teach-ers, and they gave me an education I could not have gotten anywhere else.

      I love this quote because it not only shows the author's willingness to be open to learning from his students, it conveys his gratefulness towards his pupils for giving him a priceless education. He even goes on to say they may not have "walked in with a learning objective that matched the common core standards", but he appreciates the beauty of students teaching the teacher, calling it "organic and spontaneous".

  6. docdrop.org docdrop.org
    1. The son of a single parent, my father suffered an abusive home life that made him suspicious and untrusting of authority. He rarely speaks of his time in school, and when he docs it is to recount the anger and embarrassment he felt about being treated by teachers and authority figures as though he was not good enough to warrant their attention. I don't think that my teachers ever questioned why my parents never came to the school; they just knew that they didn't, and this led to my being allowed to fade quietly into the background in the classroom.

      This quote recognizes the importance of a healthy family environment for a student to be able to thrive in a school setting. The author's father feels suspicious and untrusting of authority due to an unstable home life and thus this translates into his raising of his son, as he refuses to show up to school functions unless he has to be.

    1. Severe lack of context of the incident, and the historical context of portraying Mohammed, is very evident here. The imam says "that we Muslims don't show images of the prophet" which is partially true, some Muslims don't. An interesting parallel with the general outcry of support for the teacher.

      Jaylani Hussein says that most Muslims don't support portraying the prophet, whilst acknowledging that some do. (But portraying the prophet thus is not good). Even says it is Islamophobia at 2:00

      "The president of the Muslim student association" Aram Wedetella also in the class speaks up.

    2. JAN. 17,2023 "Based on all that we have learned, we have determined that our usage of the term 'Islamophobic' was therefore flawed." Ellen Watters, Chair, Hamline University Board of Trustees Fayneese Miller, President, Hamline University

    1. 04:30 Question of how these images are now marginalised in the Islamic community. Came from the Ottoman Empire? Safi blames the rise of Salafi and Wahhabi movements. These images seem to portray mainly the mi'raj, ie spiritual and mystical dimensions. And the prophet portrayed in companion with other prophets (ie the universality of Islam).

    2. "We believe in academic freedom, but it should not and cannot be used to excuse away behavior that harms others." (STATEMENT FROM HAMLINE UNIVERSITY) The above statements shows the struggle that Hamline faced when deciding to fire Erika Lopez Prater. A tension between academic freedom and insulting others.

      1:05 A good point by Safi is that the statements of the director was assuming that the freedom of speech was in direct opposition to the feelings of Muslims. This is not the case. A difference between iconical devotion within the Islamic tradition (both Sunni and Shia) and Charlie Hebdo examples.

      03:00 Both to respect students and expand their horizons. Not everyone needs to agree with it.

    1. Usually the keys on most typewriters are friction fit on and come off pretty easily. The tougher part is that the slugs are soldered onto the typebars, so you'll need to remove them and swap them with a soldering arm. Even if you have the soldering tools, the more trying part is aligning them properly when putting them back on. Many old school shops have/had custom jigs made for properly aligning slugs when soldering them on.

      If you don't have the tools, patience or facility, this is usually something best left to your favorite shop: https://site.xavier.edu/polt/typewriters/tw-repair.html


      reply to u/fontinalispluma at https://old.reddit.com/r/typewriters/comments/1gb3dwc/change_the_keys_and_type_slugs/

    1. God's commandment is never detached from his love

      God does mean for the commandments to be controlling... JPII thinks it is moral to follow the rules and sees the rules as a baseline and then challenges us to find other things to make life more flourishing

    2. which is becoming more and more incapable of distinguishing between good and evil, even when the fundamental right to life is at stake.

      morality is based on the upholding of human dignity

    3. As well as the mother, there are often other people too who decide upon the death of the child in the womb. In the first place, the father of the child may be to blame, not only when he di- rectly pressures the woman to have an abortion, but also when he indirectly encourages such a decision on her part by leaving her alone to face the problems of pregnancy

      JP II understands that abortion is more tempting given certain situations especially when the women is left alone and the father leaves.

    4. As I have already emphasized, this commandment is found in the Deca- logue, at the heart of the Covenant which the Lord makes with his chosen people; but it was already contained in the original covenant between God and humanity after the purifying punishment of the Flood, caused by the spread of sin and violence (cf. Gen 9:5-6).

      JP II is very set on the idea that rules will lead you to live a holy and fulfilling life

    1. The examination of Sarah Carrier, 1692

      The audience are judges who are caught up in the witchcraft time. Only believing what they hear not what is factual.

    2. hom now I have just grounds and good reason to believe they were innocent persons;

      Ann felt bad that she falsely accused others who now she believed in their innocence. Wondering if Sarah looked back on her life feeling any guilt in the death of her mother.

    3. providence

      Providence is God's guidance for the universe, destiny God's will.

    4. he afflicted Phelp’s child

      This shows that they knew nothing about disease. The Phelps child could've gotten sick from a number of things.

    5. How did your mother carry you when she was in prison?  A. She came like a black cat.

      This could be the child's imagination. There is no scientific proof that the mother was a cat. This testimony condemned her mother to death.

    6. e black man; th

      This sounds like the Grimm Reaper the man of death, Christianity was a big part of their culture. This is before the great awakening.

    7. 1692

      Sarah Carrier is 6 years old, being asked questions by the judge

    1. homologation

      A reaction that extends the carbon chain of a molecule

    2. axial C–H

      A carbon-hydrogen bond in a cyclohexane ring that is parallel to the ring axis, pointing straight up or down.

    3. carbamate

      An organic compound formed by the reaction of an alcohol with carbamic acid

    4. first-order process

      A chemical reaction in which the reaction rate is directly proportional to the concentration of a single reactant.

    5. inert solvent

      A solvent that does not react with any reactant or product and functions only as medium for the reaction to occur.

    6. positioned beta to the heteroatom

      Two positions away from the reference point

    7. functional groups

      specific group of atoms in an organic compound that are responsible for the compound's physical and chemical properties

    8. sterically hindered

      Hindrance to movement and/or chemical reaction of a molecule due to the position of bulky groups

    9. ω-position

      omega position refers to the terminal position, the farthest position from the reference point.

    10. electron-withdrawing group

      An atom or a functional group that withdraws electron density from the rest of the molecule.

    11. meta C–H bond

      A C-H bond located on the benzene ring, at a position that is two carbons away from a reference substituent.

    1. alienation

      welfare states: not saying people do or do not deserve dignity but also at the same time you can't show dignity to one person and not the other

    2. the possession of know-how, technology and skill.

      social mortgage: using these gifts but there is a responsibility to carry with it.

      Private property: intellectual abilities, technology and skill

    3. In this sense, it is right to speak of a struggle against an economic system

      trying to say that capitalism should not be way to turn away from socialism. he disagrees with state capitalism but he does agree with the right to voluntarily participate in whichever way they want to in the economic state.

    4. A striking example of artificial consumption contrary to the health and dignity of the human person

      violates the humanistic viewpoint bc seeing someone as a consumers sees them as a means to an end and just trying to sell their products. This defeats human dignity and lessens the inherent human dignity given by God

  7. academic.oup.com academic.oup.com
    1. 1797 presidio commanders began to send troops into the Central Valley of California to capture potential neophytes

      -trying to capture natives to colonize them

    1. n this age of “information overload” (Roetzel, 2019), attention itself has come to be viewed as a scarce resource that requires intentional management

      It's saying that there's so much information at our fingertips that we're being bombarded with. We need to be more careful with where we spend the time we have.

    1. &RQFOXVLRQ

      FINAL THOUGHTS: This paper discussed the Feminist Theory, talking about the ways in which women suffer due to their gender alone. They discussed the cultural norms associated with each gender, and how humans will decide what gender means. Also, they discussed peace post-war, and questioned if it could be labeled as "peace" when violence against women persists. Overall, I think we need to change our viewpoint, and instead recognize violence against women as a hard issue, as this is a fundamental human rights violation. If the UN does recognize the importance of addressing violence against women in conflict and post-conflict situations, then this issue should be actively being worked on, as its a critical issue. Questions I have after reading this paper are: what can we do as individuals to help encourage people in power to take this issue more seriously? If there was a resolution to help women in the UN that didn't work, shouldn't violence against women be seen as a critical issue that needs immediate attention? Additionally, how can we get more women in these roles when they deal with these stereotypes?

    2.  KLJKOLJKWLQJ ERWK LQHTXDOLW\ DQG UHODWLRQV RI SRZHU IHPLQLVP UHYHDOV JHQGHUHG SRZHU DQG ZKDW LWGRHVLQJOREDOSROLWLF

      This theory is not only about inequality, but it also studies the powers among genders in relation to global politics.

    3. SULRULWLVHG RYHU WKH ZHOIDUH RIWKHLQGLYLGXDO

      Military/International organization is always prioritized over an individual. However, it's crazy this is seen as an individualistic problem, when so many of the population is struggling from this violence.

    4.  7KHUH KDYH EHHQ QXPHURXV UHSRUWV RISHDFHNHHSHUV SHUSHWUDWLQJ VH[XDO YLROHQFH DJDLQVW ZRPHQ JLUOV DQG ER\V

      "Peacekeepers" not only allowing, but contributing to the sexual violence.

    5. H SROLWLFDO DQG VRFLDO JDLQV WKH\ FRXOG PDN

      Not only are they not benefiting from making decisions, they also aren't getting the political, economic, and social gains that come from being a person in power.

    6. RPHQVWLOOH[SHULHQFHKLJKUDWHVRIYLROHQFHSRVW

      Despite the resolution, women still face the same violence.

    7.  SHDFHNHHSLQJ

      How can we categorize a state as in peace when half of their population is being denied the rights they deserve.

    8. ,VVXHV OLNH JHQGHU HTXDOLW\ DQG GRPHVWLFYLROHQFH DQG KXPDQ ULJKWV  DUH FRQVLGHUHG ́VRIWμ LVVXHV DV RSSRVHG WR WKH ́KDUGμRUUHDOLVVXHVRIPLOLWDU\VHFXULW

      Despite them attempting to bring more peace postwar, they are heavily ignoring the violence that still persists throughout half of their population.

    9. HVHJHQGHULGHQWLWLHVDUHDOVRLPEXHGZLWKSRZHULQ SDUWLFXODU SDWULDUFKDO SRZHU ZKLFK VXERUGLQDWHV ZRPHQ DQG IHPLQLQHJHQGHULGHQWLWLHVWRPHQDQGPDVFXOLQHJHQGHULGHQWLWLH

      This reminds me of the example that was given in class, where female politicians would wear masculine suits to appear more serious and less feminine.

    10. ,I ZRPHQ DUH RXWVLGH WKHVH GRPDLQV RI SRZHU WKHQ WKHLU H[SHULHQFHV DQG FRQWULEXWLRQV DUH QRW UHOHYDQW

      Since women don't have access to be in the room while making decisions, their experiences are not heard.

    11. QH RI WKH FRUH DVVXPSWLRQV RI WUDGLWLRQDO SHUVSHFWLYHV WKDWIHPLQLVP KDV FKDOOHQJHG LV WKH H[FOXVLRQDU\ IRFXV RQ DUHDV WKDW DUHFRQVLGHUHG ́KLJKμ SROLWLF

      Women are left out of a lot of the decision making in "High Politics".

    12. IHPLQLVW WKHRU\ KDVVKRZQ WKDW WUDGLWLRQDO ,5 LV LQ IDFW JHQGHUEOLQG

      Doesn't acknowledge the struggles of women.

    13. IHPLQLVW WKHRU\ KDV FKDOOHQJHG ZRPHQμV QHDU FRPSOHWHDEVHQFHIURPWUDGLWLRQDO,5WKHRU\DQGSUDFWLFH

      Liberal and Realist IR theory are the mainstream theories, Others are critical theories.

    Annotators

    1. Download Your Free STEM Activities

      The current workflow (as outlined) in Jira should be followed. If any resources need to be changed, Himangi can handle it through Strapi. Arif, please confirm with Riza and let us know.

    2. Key Partners

      KIV: As discussed - Pls combine all partners into a single section titled “Key Partners”. There will be no separate categories, such as "School and Education Partners" or "Corporate Partners." This section will feature all key partners together in a slider like the testimonials section.

    1. Meet the Makers Behind the Magic

      Himangi to add the remaining team members.

    1. Her husband is not to approach her, till the infant born is weaned

      Observation: Pope Gregory is saying that a woman's husband may not approach her until after the child has been born Interpretation: During this time woman were seen as impure while they were menstruating and while they were with child. Context and Change over time: I connect it to connect because people would need to know how men and the church saw women while they were in "that time of the month", they were seen as "dirty", with this context they would clearly see why they would need to stay away. As for change over time we currently we are used to having husbands be there with their wives throughout their pregnancy and for the most part most religions allow them to be together during that time.

    2. Therefore some should be fined, others whipped; some should be punished with more severity, and some more mildly. And when the severity is more, it is to proceed from charity, not from passion; because this is done to him who is corrected, that he may not be delivered up to hell­fire. For it behooves us to maintain discipline among the faithful, as good parents do with their carnal children, whom they punish with stripes for their faults,

      Observation: Pope Gregory informs Augustine that they are to punish those who steal from the church Interpretation: They are to punish the person because they should behave like the parents that wish to teach them right from wrong in order to make them better people. Causality: If they steal from the church then they will get punsihed.

    1. Although it took a backseat to space travel and nuclear weapons, the advent of modern computing was yet another major Cold War scientific innovation, the effects of which were only just beginning to be understood.

      new tech advancements

    1. IT would be difficult to describe the subtle brotherhood of men that was here established on the seas. No one said that it was so. No one mentioned it. But it dwelt in the boat, and each man felt it warm him.

      This is an aspect of the story that differs from typical naturalism. In naturalism, there is a big emphasis on Darwins idea of "survival of the fittest." It would be unlikely to see a bunch of men struggling to survive all befriend each other and form such a "subtle brotherhood."

    2. The birds sat comfortably in groups, and they were envied by some in the dingey, for the wrath of the sea was no more to them than it was to a covey of prairie chickens a thousand miles inland. Often they came very close and stared at the men with black bead-like eyes. At these times they were uncanny and sinister in their unblinking scrutiny, and the men hooted angrily at them, telling them to be gone

      This detailed description of the birds and how the men in the boat envied them as well as felt annoyed by them adds a pessimistic/cynical tone to the story.

    3. A singular disadvantage of the sea lies in the fact that after successfully surmounting one wave you discover that there is another behind it just as important and just as nervously anxious to do something effective in the way of swamping boats

      I believe this highlighted section follows the characteristic of naturalism that states, "settings in extremely harsh nature (deserts, the Yukon, the open ocean) or cities (the urban jungle); nature is either indifferent or hostile to the plight of humanity"

    4. gunwale

      "the upper edge of the side of a boat or ship"

    5. A TALE INTENDED TO BE AFTER THE FACT. BEING THE EXPERIENCE OF FOUR MEN SUNK FROM THE STEAMER COMMODORE

      While The Open Boat is a fictional work, it was based on Stephen Crane's real life experience being shipwrecked.

    1. ‘We shape our tools and thereafter they shape us’

      We utilize our media literacy skills to choose the proper media to learn from.

    2. I explore the idea of media as environments within which cultures can grow.

      People can share their ideas and beliefs through technology.

    3. ‘interdependent parts of knowledge into harmonious relationships through strategies such as relating part and whole or the particular and the general’

      Bringing together information to form an idea.

    4. t is easy to become so distracted by the constant presence of technology in our lives that we do not recognize how many of our actions are being mediated in some way by these technologies.

      As part of the younger generation, I can attest that technology is an instinct and we do not even notice how often we utilize it.

    5. Posthumanism stresses that the subject is constituted through its relations,

      A persons interactions form who they are as a person. The media that people interact with will inherently shape their life.

    6. ‘There is no microperception (sensory-bodily) without its location within a field of macroperception and no macroperception without its microperceptual foci’ (29). Both the microperceptual and macroperceptual views are entangled and necessary in order to comprehend overall the effects of media and to fully become media literate.

      Society is now entangled with technology and it is vital to implement media literacies.

    7. They focus on concepts such as de-centering the human and making sure marginalized groups are included in any definition of ‘human’.

      This would give people different perspectives and result in a more diverse and inclusive society.

    8. The approach of critical media literacy has increased the scope of media literacy by adding the critical study of how messages contain underlying stereotypes, marginalization, and exploitation.

      The main concern of media literacies should be teaching how to detect underlying messages. Underlying messages can be very impactful on their young impressionable audiences.

    9. ‘ability to access, analyze, evaluate and create messages across a variety of contexts’

      Since young people are utilizing technology for around 10hrs a day it is important that they are educated on the good usages and the negative effects.

    10. how we use, and are potentially used by, media

      I think this is a great quote and would be perfect to catch the readers attention in the beginning of the article.

    11. chnologies, others are questioning, pointing out the drawbacks and costs of such changes. The Center for Humane Technology warns, ‘The companies that created social media and mobile tech have benefited our lives enormously. But even with the best intentions, they are under intense pressure to compete for attention, creating invisible harms for society’ (Center for Humane Technology, n.d.). Th

      In order to keep the consumers attention, media companies may publish untrue and biased information. This is why we need to think about where we are getting our information.

    12. In this saturated media environment, the media tend to disappear into the background of our awareness.3 They become part of the environment in which we live. This immersion, as Figure 1.1 reflects, is especially visible with the number of smartphones in use and how often people are engaged with them.

      We as a society have become so immersed in society that we forget to critically think on our own and question the sources in which we are getting the information.

    13. n the European Union (EU), while television is still the most commonly used medium—84% watch it every day or almost every day and 94% watch it at least once per week—the number of people who use the internet is catching up, with 65% of EU citizens using it daily or almost daily and 77% using it at least once per week

      Younger generations prefer to get their information from the internet and social media rather than television news sources. This shift requires more media literacies to avoid the spread of false information.

    1. And when it ended, the United States found itself alone as the world’s greatest superpower. Armed with the world’s greatest economy, it looked forward to the fruits of a prosperous consumers’ economy

      Even with all the tragedy the U.S paved a way for the economy

    1. Government spending during World War II pushed the United States out of the Depression and into an economic boom that would be sustained after the war by continued government spending.

      this type of strategic spending benefited the nation and uplifted the economy

    1. not bring my laptop to most meetings and definitely not presentations. The act was to force me to pay attention and remove any unnecessary distractions.

      I feel like this is a great idea when trying to understand the information you are being presented with. By limiting distractions you are able understand the material better. This way you can understand what is being said and grasp the information better.

  8. pressbooks.library.torontomu.ca pressbooks.library.torontomu.ca
    1. three days after Bastille day

      Bastille day - marks the anniversary of the fall of the Bastille in Paris, France, on July 14, 1789.

      He then references how it is now 1959 at 12:20 pm. Bastille day is a very celebrated holiday, and a very important one too, so much that a New Yorker is referencing it. Three days after this day a tragic event happens, and Billie Holiday's death shakes the world, stopping everyone's breath and movement.

      This poem also signifies how he 'remembers where he was the day ___ happened'

    2. and for Mike I just stroll into the PARK LANE Liquor Store and ask for a bottle of Strega and then I go back

      Very little punctuation where there should be in this poem. The lack of punctuation highlights the urgency and the anxiety behind the writing of his actions, leading up to the moment where it all stops, "and I stopped breathing". New York is a busy place and he shows this through his many actions, portraying through his writing that it is a nonstop day of moving. The anxiousness behind the writing also implies that there is already some sort of buildup to this final moment

    3. for once in her life

      This is a subtle foreshadow that the day is different than usual - for once in her life the teller does not check his balance as she usually does

    1. North Korea's government has not commented on the alleged deployment of troops to Russia. Moscow has dismissed it as "another fabrication."

      I speculate that this is dismissive behavior. I do believe that North Korea has troops in Russia and they plan to use them. While this is not fact, it is my opinion. I don't trust either country and neither does the US, South Korea, Ukraine, or most other countries in the world for that matter.

    2. The U.S. and South Korea have been concerned for months that in return for Kim's cooperation and support, Russia could provide North Korea with nuclear and advanced ballistic missile technology.

      A very scary idea. These two form a diabolical duo.

    3. The pact saw the leaders pledge to defend the other if either country was to come under attack, but officials in the U.S. and other Western capitals believe Russia, above all, has been keen to ensure a steady supply of North Korean weapons for its Ukraine war.

      More fact. Would Russia call in this pledge even if they have the upper hand? this also feels like a one sided deal in which Russia is getting more out of the relationship. Russia is receiving weapons and allegedly, troops. While North Korea isn't really under any threat to my knowledge. Is North Korea planning on needing Russian assistance in the near future?

    4. World U.S. "seeing evidence" of North Korean troops in Russia as Ukraine war rages, Defense chief Lloyd Austin says By Charlie D'Agata Updated on: October 23, 2024 / 8:23 PM EDT / CBS News North Korea sends troops to Russia, U.S. says North Korea sends troops to Russia, U.S. says 02:52 Washington — Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said Tuesday that the U.S. was "seeing evidence that there are North Korean troops in Russia," offering the first comments by a senior U.S. official on the seemingly expanding ties between two major U.S. adversaries.  South Korean officials first raised the alarm about the North Korean deployments to Russia last week, saying Seoul's intelligence agencies had evidence that North Korean commandos were sent to Russia on their way to join Moscow's ongoing invasion of Ukraine."Exactly what they're doing is left to be seen," Austin said of the North Korean troops in Russia. He made the remarks to reporters during a visit to Rome.close dialogAdvertisementclose dialog/* effects for .bx-campaign-1322182 *//* custom css .bx-campaign-1322182 */@-webkit-keyframes bx-anim-1322182-spin { from { -webkit-transform: rotate(0deg); } to { -webkit-transform: rotate(360deg); }}@keyframes bx-anim-1322182-spin { from { transform: rotate(0deg); } to { transform: rotate(360deg); }}/* rendered styles .bx-campaign-1322182 */.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182.bx-active-step-1 .bx-creative> *:first-child {padding: 0;width: 100%;}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182.bx-active-step-1 .bx-creative:before {min-height: 0;}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182.bx-active-step-1 .bx-creative {background-color: transparent;border-style: none;max-width: 728px;}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182.bx-active-step-1 .bx-close {stroke: white;background-color: black;border-style: solid;border-color: white;border-width: 1px;box-shadow: 0px 0px 0px 3px black;top: -10px;z-index: 2;left: 10px;}@media all {.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182.bx-active-step-1 .bx-close {width: 22px;height: 22px;}}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182 .bx-group-1322182-rYv8Qti {width: 40px;position: absolute;left: 50%;top: 50%;transform: translate(-50%, -50%);}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182 .bx-element-1322182-hZIlQjG> *:first-child {animation-name: bx-anim-1322182-spin;animation-duration: 800ms;animation-iteration-count: infinite;animation-timing-function: linear;margin-top: -25px;}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182 .bx-element-1322182-hZIlQjG {width: auto;}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182 .bx-group-1322182-YpzzupB {position: relative;z-index: 1;width: 728px;height: 90px;padding: 0px;}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182 .bx-group-1322182-zyI9Vvr {padding: 10px;width: 100%;}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182 .bx-element-1322182-r4PLUT7 {width: auto;}.bxc.bx-campaign-1322182 .bx-element-1322182-r4PLUT7> *:first-child {padding: 2px 4px;font-size: 10px;color: rgb(255, 255, 255);text-transform: uppercase;background-color: rgb(0, 0, 0);background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.34);}He said if the North Korean troops were about to become active participants in Russia's war in Ukraine, it would be an indication that Putin — whose forces have been making territorial gains in recent months — could be in more trouble than many people realize. Some officials believe the gains along the front line in Ukraine have come at the cost of many thousands of Russian troops. South Korean officials suspect the Northern troops are being trained in Russia to fight on that front line. South Korean intelligence estimates suggest there are now about 3,000 Northern troops in Russia, but Ukrainian officials have been following the matter closely, too, and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and officials in South Korea have said the North could deploy more than 10,000 troops to Russia by the end of the year. What to know about the BRICS Summit being hosted by Putin 02:41 Ukrainian officials say they have not seen North Koreans fighting in the country yet

      Unless the Northern troops are just training, there still isn't really any evidence that this is happening. Just suspicion.

    5. South Korean officials suspect the Northern troops are being trained in Russia to fight on that front line. South Korean intelligence estimates suggest there are now about 3,000 Northern troops in Russia, but Ukrainian officials have been following the matter closely, too, and President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and officials in South Korea have said the North could deploy more than 10,000 troops to Russia by the end of the year.

      This is a big difference in numbers. I don't know how they have come to that estimation. The end of the year is in just 2 months.

    6. He said if the North Korean troops were about to become active participants in Russia's war in Ukraine, it would be an indication that Putin — whose forces have been making territorial gains in recent months — could be in more trouble than many people realize. Some officials believe the gains along the front line in Ukraine have come at the cost of many thousands of Russian troops.

      So far this is all speculation. No facts have really been stated. If Putin is using North Korean troops, I feel like it could mean many things. Maybe instead of being in trouble, they're tryin to solidify their upper hand position by pulling in more troops.

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