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Showing 1–50 of 1518 results
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  • The diversity of ponerine ants varies widely across the globe. This study finds that the origin and early colonization in Gondwana’s tropical regions mainly shaped this distribution, while differences in diversification and dispersal have balanced regional diversity over time.

    • Maël Doré
    • Marek L. Borowiec
    • Bonnie B. Blaimer
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-17
  • A geological, petrographic and geochemical survey of distinctive mudstone and conglomerate outcrops of the Bright Angel formation on Mars reveals textures, chemical and mineral characteristics, and organic signatures that warrant consideration as potential biosignatures.

    • Joel A. Hurowitz
    • M. M. Tice
    • Z. U. Wolf
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 645, P: 332-340
  • Squeezed light field microscopy (SLIM) combines ideas from tomography and compressed sensing with light field microscopy to enable volumetric imaging at kilohertz rates, as demonstrated in blood flow imaging in zebrafish and voltage imaging in leeches and mice.

    • Zhaoqiang Wang
    • Ruixuan Zhao
    • Liang Gao
    Research
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 22, P: 2194-2204
  • Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are known to alleviate pain by reducing inflammation. To the contrary, here, the authors show that selective inhibition of the prostaglandin E2 receptor (EP2) in Schwann cells eliminates pain without disrupting the protective and healing functions of inflammation.

    • Romina Nassini
    • Lorenzo Landini
    • Pierangelo Geppetti
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-19
  • The protein corona formed on nanoparticles can impact bioactivity. Here the authors show that the protein corona on lipid nanoparticles alters their function and reduces transfection efficiency, showing the importance of considering the protein corona in designing lipid nanoparticle-based therapeutics.

    • Elizabeth Voke
    • Mariah L. Arral
    • Markita P. Landry
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-16
  • Unclear emissions and ice-sheet processes drive uncertainties in future sea-level rise. The authors show that the timing of emissions reductions drives the uncertainties during the twenty-first century, but geophysical uncertainties become more important with time, especially under optimistic scenarios.

    • Chloe Darnell
    • Lisa Rennels
    • Vivek Srikrishnan
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    P: 1-7
  • Spatial transcriptomic studies and lineage tracing reveal that, after brain injury, transient profibrotic fibroblasts develop from existing brain fibroblasts, infiltrate lesions, regulate the local immune response and lead to beneficial scar tissue formation.

    • Nathan A. Ewing-Crystal
    • Nicholas M. Mroz
    • Ari B. Molofsky
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-11
  • In this Stage 2 Registered Report, Buchanan et al. show evidence confirming the phenomenon of semantic priming across speakers of 19 diverse languages.

    • Erin M. Buchanan
    • Kelly Cuccolo
    • Savannah C. Lewis
    Research
    Nature Human Behaviour
    P: 1-20
  • Heat recharges enzyme-free DNA circuits, enabling complex logic operations and neural networks to perform multiple computations, offering a universal energy source for molecular machines and advancing autonomous behaviours in artificial chemical systems.

    • Tianqi Song
    • Lulu Qian
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 646, P: 315-322
  • The results from a state-of-the-art suite of hydrodynamical cosmological zoom-in simulations show how globular clusters naturally emerge in the Standard Cosmology and also reveal the existence of a new class of object called globular-cluster-like dwarfs.

    • Ethan D. Taylor
    • Justin I. Read
    • Robert M. Yates
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 645, P: 327-331
  • In a preregistered experiment, participants were randomly assigned to receive information about the endorsement of Joe Biden by the scientific journal Nature during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results suggest that this endorsement affected polarized trust in scientific expertise and caused large reductions in stated trust in Nature among Trump supporters.

    • Floyd Jiuyun Zhang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Human Behaviour
    Volume: 7, P: 696-706
  • The quark structure of the f0(980) hadron is still unknown after 50 years of its discovery. Here, the CMS Collaboration reports a measurement of the elliptic flow of the f0(980) state in proton-lead collisions at a nucleon-nucleon centre-of-mass energy of 8.16 TeV, providing strong evidence that the state is an ordinary meson.

    • A. Hayrapetyan
    • A. Tumasyan
    • A. Zhokin
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-19
  • A strongly lensed galaxy at redshift z ≈ 6 is resolved into at least 15 star-forming clumps embedded in a rotating disk. Clump formation in this system, which is not predicted by cosmological zoom-in simulations, may be driven by disk instabilities with weak feedback, rather than past mergers.

    • S. Fujimoto
    • M. Ouchi
    • H. Yajima
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    P: 1-15
  • Federated learning (FL) algorithms have emerged as a promising solution to train models for healthcare imaging across institutions while preserving privacy. Here, the authors describe the Federated Tumor Segmentation (FeTS) challenge for the decentralised benchmarking of FL algorithms and evaluation of Healthcare AI algorithm generalizability in real-world cancer imaging datasets.

    • Maximilian Zenk
    • Ujjwal Baid
    • Spyridon Bakas
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-20
  • Adaptive wireless communication over an unprecedented frequency range spanning over 100 GHz can be achieved by a thin-film lithium niobate photonic wireless system, which can process a large flux of information at high speed.

    • Zihan Tao
    • Haoyu Wang
    • Xingjun Wang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 645, P: 80-87
  • Nature Biotechnology’s annual survey highlights academic start ups that are, among other things, correcting misfolded or disordered proteins, creating second-generation GPCR agonists, building a new gene delivery platform and mining cancer genomes for novel targets.

    • Michael Eisenstein
    • Charles Schmidt
    • Laura DeFrancesco
    News
    Nature Biotechnology
    Volume: 41, P: 1669-1678
  • Managing power exhaust in fusion reactors is a key challenge, especially in compact designs for cost-effective commercial energy. This study shows how alternative divertor configurations improve exhaust control, enhance stability, absorb transients and enable independent plasma regulation.

    • B. Kool
    • K. Verhaegh
    • V. Zamkovska
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Energy
    Volume: 10, P: 1116-1131
  • The Perseverance rover has made the most definitive identification of Fe-phosphate minerals on Mars to date. High-resolution chemical and textural PIXL analyses suggest they originally formed after vivianite in a potentially habitable environment.

    • T. V. Kizovski
    • M. E. Schmidt
    • A. C. Allwood
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-12
  • Bacterial Type I polyketide synthases are responsible for producing both lifesaving medicines and virulence factors, yet their stepwise mechanism remains elusive. Here, Burkart et al. characterize acyl carrier protein bound states of mycocerosic acid synthase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis through crosslinking and cryo-EM.

    • Ziran Jiang
    • Graham W. Heberlig
    • Michael D. Burkart
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-14
  • By emulating a 2D hard-core Bose–Hubbard lattice using a controllable 4 × 4 array of superconducting qubits, volume-law entanglement scaling as well as area-law scaling at different locations in the energy spectrum are observed.

    • Amir H. Karamlou
    • Ilan T. Rosen
    • William D. Oliver
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 629, P: 561-566
  • The role of autoantibodies in bullous pemphigoid (BP) and their impact on keratinocytes and the response to BP pathology remains underexplored. By leveraging transcriptomics analysis and large-scale protein assays, here the authors identify keratinocyte MyD88 as a regulator of the pro-inflammatory response in BP, uncovering the role of keratinocytes in this disease pathology.

    • Lei Bao
    • Christian F. Guerrero-Juarez
    • Kyle T. Amber
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-18
  • Alkynes found in natural products are typically assembled by metal-dependent enzymes. The enzyme BesB instead forms a terminal alkyne-containing amino acid using pyridoxal phosphate as a cofactor. Here, the authors use structural and mechanistic investigations to identify the key features of BesB that allow it to carry out its fascinating chemistry.

    • Jason B. Hedges
    • Jorge A. Marchand
    • Katherine S. Ryan
    Research
    Nature Chemical Biology
    P: 1-10
  • Graphics processing unit-accelerated MMseqs2 offers tremendous speedups for homology retrieval from metagenomic databases, query-centered multiple sequence alignment generation for structure prediction, and structural searches with Foldseek.

    • Felix Kallenborn
    • Alejandro Chacon
    • Martin Steinegger
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 22, P: 2024-2027
  • DNA molecules can be programmed to autonomously carry out supervised learning in vitro, with the system learning to perform pattern classification from molecular examples of inputs and desired responses.

    • Kevin M. Cherry
    • Lulu Qian
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 645, P: 639-647
  • Aging is the risk factor for chronic pancreatitis and its acute attack. Here, the authors show that exocrine acinar cells received endocrine β-cell-derived miR-503-322 and caused pancreas autodigestion and anti-proliferation by repressing MKNK1 thereby promoting pancreatitis in the elderly

    • Kerong Liu
    • Tingting Lv
    • Yunxia Zhu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-16
  • Computational methods are used to predict which peptides or antigens are able to bind to MHC in order to activate T cell receptors in neoantigen-directed immunotherapies. Here the authors present an accurate transformer-based method to consider not only the peptide and MHC but also the source antigenic protein to predict peptides which bind to MHC molecules.

    • William John Thrift
    • Nicolas W. Lounsbury
    • Suchit Jhunjhunwala
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-16
  • Grayson et al. report the genomic discovery and biochemical characterization of a widely distributed gene cluster family for briarane diterpenoid biosynthesis in metazoans. This study expands our understanding of the metazoan specialized metabolism, revealing the use of biosynthetic gene clusters by octocorals.

    • Natalie E. Grayson
    • Paul D. Scesa
    • Bradley S. Moore
    Research
    Nature Chemical Biology
    Volume: 21, P: 1509-1518
  • Squeezed light enhances precision in quantum technologies. Here, authors demonstrate an all-fiber source achieving 7.5 dB squeezing in self-conjugated modes, enabling reconfigurable quantum light in arbitrary time-frequency modes using standard telecom components.

    • Han Liu
    • Meng Lon Iu
    • Amr S. Helmy
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-11
  • A genome-wide association meta-analysis study of blood lipid levels in roughly 1.6 million individuals demonstrates the gain of power attained when diverse ancestries are included to improve fine-mapping and polygenic score generation, with gains in locus discovery related to sample size.

    • Sarah E. Graham
    • Shoa L. Clarke
    • Cristen J. Willer
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 600, P: 675-679
  • Here the authors characterize a single-domain antibody that broadly neutralizes SARS-CoV-2 variants with high potency by targeting the heptad repeat 2 (HR2) coiled coil, conserved in sarbecoviruses. Binding to its quaternary epitope blocks membrane fusion, by locking HR2 in its prefusion conformation.

    • Sieglinde De Cae
    • Inge Van Molle
    • Bert Schepens
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-22
  • A large genome-wide association study of more than 5 million individuals reveals that 12,111 single-nucleotide polymorphisms account for nearly all the heritability of height attributable to common genetic variants.

    • Loïc Yengo
    • Sailaja Vedantam
    • Joel N. Hirschhorn
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 610, P: 704-712
  • Here the authors apply machine learning approaches to Alzheimer’s genetics, confirm known associations and suggest novel risk loci. These methods demonstrate predictive power comparable to traditional approaches, while also offering potential new insights beyond standard genetic analyses.

    • Matthew Bracher-Smith
    • Federico Melograna
    • Valentina Escott-Price
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-16
  • A new catalogue of slow-slip events on the Cascadia megathrust shows that a cubic moment–duration scaling law is likely, with scaling properties strikingly similar to regular earthquakes.

    • Sylvain Michel
    • Adriano Gualandi
    • Jean-Philippe Avouac
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 574, P: 522-526
  • Analysis of soundscape data from 139 globally distributed sites reveals that sounds of biological origin exhibit predictable rhythms depending on location and season, whereas sounds of anthropogenic origin are less predictable. Comparisons between paired urban–rural sites show that urban green spaces are noisier and dominated by sounds of technological origin.

    • Panu Somervuo
    • Tomas Roslin
    • Otso Ovaskainen
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    Volume: 9, P: 1585-1598
  • How extracellular calcium can trigger Nlrp3 inflammasome activation has been somewhat controversial and unclear. Here the authors show calciprotein particles are taken up by myeloid cells via calcium-sensing receptor-dependent macropinocytosis in response to high levels of extracellular Ca2+ and this pathway might be critical to inflammatory conditions.

    • Elisabeth Jäger
    • Supriya Murthy
    • Ulf Wagner
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-17