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Showing 1–50 of 7399 results
Advanced filters: Author: Andrew J. Black Clear advanced filters
  • The authors report that an AS03-adjuvanted chimeric hemagglutinin-based influenza vaccine induces persistent stalk-specific serum antibody and bone marrow plasma cell responses in nonhuman primates, offering promise for broader and durable flu protection.

    • Akil Akhtar
    • Tiffany M. Styles
    • Rama R. Amara
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Immunology
    P: 1-14
  • Anisotropic hybridization between conduction and unpaired f electrons is rarely observed. Now, a lanthanide-based two-dimensional compound exhibits nodal hybridization, giving rise to heavy-fermion behaviour.

    • Simon Turkel
    • Victoria A. Posey
    • Abhay N. Pasupathy
    Research
    Nature Physics
    P: 1-8
  • The long-term natural history of long-COVID is not well understood. In this population-based cohort study from Scotland, the authors describe symptom prevalence and health-related quality of life up to 18 months after a positive SARS-CoV-2 test and compare with matched test-negative controls.

    • Claire E. Hastie
    • David J. Lowe
    • Jill P. Pell
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-10
  • The authors conducted prospective multimodal monitoring of simultaneous brain and heart function to define physiological changes during the human dying process leading to circulatory arrest.

    • Jordan D. Bird
    • Laura Hornby
    • Mypinder S. Sekhon
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 31, P: 3542-3552
  • Military personnel face increased exposure to pandemic-related stressors, yet their mental health impacts remain underexplored. Here, the authors analyze data from the STARRS Longitudinal Study, revealing significant increases in mental health issues among soldiers during COVID-19, particularly among vulnerable groups, underscoring the need for targeted support during pandemics.

    • Ronald C. Kessler
    • Amy M. Millikan-Bell
    • Robert J. Ursano
    Research
    Nature Mental Health
    Volume: 3, P: 1191-1201
  • Stabilization of continental crust requires temperatures of over 900 °C, establishing a link between ultrahigh-temperature metamorphism and craton formation, according to a study of U and Th concentrations in metasedimentary and metaigneous rocks.

    • Andrew J. Smye
    • Peter B. Kelemen
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Geoscience
    P: 1-7
  • Typical quantum error correcting codes assign fixed roles to the underlying physical qubits. Now the performance benefits of alternative, dynamic error correction schemes have been demonstrated on a superconducting quantum processor.

    • Alec Eickbusch
    • Matt McEwen
    • Alexis Morvan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Physics
    P: 1-8
  • Treatment-seeking for fever is widely used to estimate treatment of childhood infections, but cross-country comparisons are problematic. Here, the authors estimate the probability of seeking treatment for fever at public facilities across 29 countries by quantifying person-level latent variables.

    • Victor A. Alegana
    • Joseph Maina
    • Andrew J. Tatem
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 9, P: 1-7
  • The antibiotic polymyxin B requires bacterial metabolic activity to cause sufficient damage to the outer membrane to access the inner membrane, which it permeabilizes via an energy-independent mechanism to kill the cell.

    • Carolina Borrelli
    • Edward J. A. Douglas
    • Bart W. Hoogenboom
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Microbiology
    P: 1-15
  • Here, the authors use detailed temporal nutrition intake data captured through real-time food logging via a smartphone app and gut microbiota profiles from ~1,000 participants of a digital cohort on personalized nutrition to associate dietary regularity and quality with gut microbiome diversity.

    • Rohan Singh
    • Daniel McDonald
    • Marcel Salathé
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-13
  • Polygenic risk scores can help identify individuals at higher risk of type 2 diabetes. Here, the authors characterise a multi-ancestry score across nearly 900,000 people, showing that its predictive value depends on demographic and clinical context and extends to related traits and complications.

    • Boya Guo
    • Yanwei Cai
    • Burcu F. Darst
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-16
  • Synthetic microbial consortia are collections of strains which can segregate metabolic tasks for efficient use in biomaterials, biomanufacturing, and biotherapeutics. Here, the authors present a method to maintain and tune the ratio of two co-cultured bacterial strains via growth medium manipulation.

    • Nicolas E. Grandel
    • Amanda M. Alexander
    • Matthew R. Bennett
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-9
  • In an integrated analysis of transcriptomic data from the SUBSPACE consortium and public datasets of patients with sepsis, acute respiratory distress syndrome, trauma and burns, dysregulation within four consensus molecular clusters related to myeloid and lymphoid cells is associated with mortality and illness severity.

    • Andrew R. Moore
    • Hong Zheng
    • Purvesh Khatri
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    P: 1-13
  • Using SCN2A haploinsufficiency as a proof-of-concept, upregulation of the existing functional gene copy through CRISPR activation was able to rescue neurological-associated phenotypes in Scn2a haploinsufficient mice and human neurons.

    • Serena Tamura
    • Andrew D. Nelson
    • Kevin J. Bender
    Research
    Nature
    P: 1-9
  • Neural mechanisms underlying flexible learning and decision-making are not fully understood. Using single-cell calcium imaging, authors here found that neurons in orbitofrontal and secondary motor cortex exhibit complementary roles in reward learning, with neurons in the former exerting a sustained role in conditions of uncertainty.

    • Juan Luis Romero-Sosa
    • Alex Yeghikian
    • Alicia Izquierdo
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-14
  • Mulholland et al. identify progenitor exhausted T cells, expressing intermediate levels of PD-1 (PD-1int), as a prominent source of pro-inflammatory cytokines in the murine atherosclerotic aorta and potential cellular targets driving checkpoint inhibition-elicited pro-atherosclerotic immune responses. They further demonstrate elevated levels of circulating PD-1-expressing T cells in individuals with subclinical cardiovascular disease.

    • Megan Mulholland
    • Anthi Chalou
    • Daniel Engelbertsen
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Cardiovascular Research
    Volume: 4, P: 1311-1328
  • Analysis of exomes and transcriptomes from 100 African American patients with acute myeloid leukemia identifies ancestry-related variation in mutation profiles and survival. Refined risk classification suggests clinical relevance of these ancestry-associated differences.

    • Andrew Stiff
    • Maarten Fornerod
    • Ann-Kathrin Eisfeld
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 56, P: 2434-2446
  • Yamazoe et al. show that B cell-derived autoantibodies contribute to the development of atrial fibrillation, suggesting that targeting the humoral immune response may represent a viable therapeutic approach.

    • Masahiro Yamazoe
    • Kenneth K. Y. Ting
    • Matthias Nahrendorf
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Cardiovascular Research
    Volume: 4, P: 1381-1396
  • A new version of nanorate DNA sequencing, with an error rate lower than five errors per billion base pairs and compatible with whole-exome and targeted capture, enables epidemiological-scale studies of somatic mutation and selection and the generation of high-resolution selection maps across coding and non-coding sites for many genes.

    • Andrew R. J. Lawson
    • Federico Abascal
    • Iñigo Martincorena
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-10
  • A millihertz frequency X-ray quasi-periodic oscillation has been observed near the innermost orbit of an actively accreting supermassive black hole and its frequency has evolved significantly over 2 years, a phenomenon that is difficult to explain with existing models.

    • Megan Masterson
    • Erin Kara
    • Jingyi Wang
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 638, P: 370-375
  • GTPase-activating proteins (GAPs) often contain regulatory PH domains. In this work, Soubias et al, using an integrated structure-function approach, discovered a mechanism where a GAP PH domain binds directly to a GTPase to induce allosteric changes facilitating GTP hydrolysis.

    • Olivier Soubias
    • Samuel L. Foley
    • R. Andrew Byrd
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-19
  • Structural and functional characterization of the β-barrel assembly machinery complex in Bacteroidota reveals a distinct, seven-component complex with a large extracellular domain that may enable β-barrel–surface lipoprotein complex assembly.

    • Augustinas Silale
    • Mariusz Madej
    • Bert van den Berg
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Microbiology
    P: 1-15
  • Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) frequency and risk factors vary considerably across regions and ancestries. Here, the authors conduct a multi-ancestry genome-wide association study and fine mapping study of HNSCC subsites in cohorts from multiple continents, finding susceptibility and protective loci, gene-environment interactions, and gene variants related to immune response.

    • Elmira Ebrahimi
    • Apiwat Sangphukieo
    • Tom Dudding
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-18
  • Head motion is an artifact in structural and functional MRI signals, and some traits or groups are more strongly correlated with motion than others. Here the authors describe a method to attribute a motion impact score to specific trait-functional connectivity relationships.

    • Benjamin P. Kay
    • David F. Montez
    • Nico U. F. Dosenbach
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-15
  • Interactions between qubits and defect-related two-level systems in superconducting qubit devices are a major source of noise fluctuations that hinder error-mitigation performance. Here, the authors experimentally show that modulating this interaction can reduce noise fluctuation and improve error mitigation performance.

    • Youngseok Kim
    • Luke C. G. Govia
    • Abhinav Kandala
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-8
  • How genetic predisposition drives late-onset disease risk remains unclear. Here, the authors show that epigenetic predisposition via NR3C1-dependent early postnatal 3D gene regulation primes astrocytes for lifelong immune vulnerability.

    • Seongwan Park
    • Hyeonji Park
    • Inkyung Jung
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-16
  • An extensive analysis of the JWST-NIRSpec spectrum of GN-z11 shows a supermassive black hole of a few million solar masses in a galaxy 440 million years after the Big Bang.

    • Roberto Maiolino
    • Jan Scholtz
    • Fengwu Sun
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 627, P: 59-63
  • An operational satellite-based monitoring system using NASA/USGS and ESA imagery enables rapid tracking of global land change, with the area of conversion due to direct human action and fire equaling the size of California in 2023.

    • Amy H. Pickens
    • Matthew C. Hansen
    • André Lima
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-14
  • How age affect the immune response to malaria is not fully understood. Here, the authors characterise the transcriptome and serum inflammatory cytokines in children and adults in response to malaria, showing that there is an increase of inflammatory chemokine and cellular responses in adults compared to children.

    • Jessica R. Loughland
    • Nicholas L. Dooley
    • Michelle J. Boyle
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-17
  • The flagship paper of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes Consortium describes the generation of the integrative analyses of 2,658 cancer whole genomes and their matching normal tissues across 38 tumour types, the structures for international data sharing and standardized analyses, and the main scientific findings from across the consortium studies.

    • Lauri A. Aaltonen
    • Federico Abascal
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 578, P: 82-93