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  • Although river protection is core to social and environmental well-being, the extent to which river conservation policies are effective is difficult to assess. This study reveals that, under all relevant protection mechanisms in the contiguous USA, only 12% of rivers are adequately protected.

    • Lise Comte
    • Julian D. Olden
    • David Moryc
    Research
    Nature Sustainability
    P: 1-12
  • Men and women differ in their lipid biology. Here, the authors identify NCOA1 as a female-specific regulator that promotes the conversion of white fat into energy-burning fat, protecting women from obesity and metabolic disease by enhancing thermogenic activity in subcutaneous fat.

    • Mounia Tannour-Louet
    • Didier F. Pisani
    • Jean-François Louet
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-18
  • Long-period radio transients emit periodic radio pulses of unknown origin. The longest-lived source, GPM J1839−10, has a 21-min spin and 9-h orbit, resembling the more rapid white dwarf pulsars that are powered by binary interaction, potentially linking the classes.

    • Csanád Horváth
    • Nanda Rea
    • Emil Lenc
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    P: 1-9
  • How white matter develops along the length of major tracts in humans remains unknown. Here, the authors identify fundamental patterns of human white matter development along distinct axes that reflect brain organization.

    • Audrey C. Luo
    • Steven L. Meisler
    • Theodore D. Satterthwaite
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-19
  • Microscopic imaging and biochemical studies show that sinuses in mouse and human form a highly dynamic surface that regulates fluid movement and immune cell surveillance via RAMP1-dependent regulation of smooth muscle contraction and RAMP2-dependent regulation of the sinus endothelial barrier.

    • Kelly L. Monaghan
    • Nagela G. Zanluqui
    • Dorian B. McGavern
    Research
    Nature
    P: 1-10
  • Leveraging electron-phonon coupling allows for modulating self-trapped exciton formation for broadband white-light emission. Using transient spectroscopy and DFT calculations, Zhang et al. correlate the structural distortion with self-trapped exciton formation in 2D halide perovskites.

    • Yutong Zhang
    • Yuanyuan Guo
    • Xinfeng Liu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-11
  • Here, the authors show that early-life high-fat/high-sugar diet induces sex-specific alterations in adult feeding behavior, hypothalamic transcriptome and blood metabolome, with Bifidobacterium longum and prebiotic FOS + GOS administration restoring these effects via distinct mechanisms, highlighting their therapeutic potential.

    • Cristina Cuesta-Marti
    • Eduardo Ponce-España
    • Harriët Schellekens
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-27
  • Women of reproductive age may have specific concerns relating to perceived impacts on fertility and menstrual cycles that make them hesitant to receive COVID-19 vaccination. In this study, the authors explore COVID-19 vaccine uptake rates in women of reproductive age using linked data for ~13 million women in England.

    • Laura A. Magee
    • Erika Molteni
    • Sara White
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-8
  • Certifying multipartite entanglement can benchmark quantum devices. Here, authors introduce versatile tests that can certify genuine multipartite entanglement and k-inseparability using only few-body measurements, enabling noise-robust benchmarking of large photonic and superconducting graph states.

    • Nicky Kai Hong Li
    • Xi Dai
    • Nicolai Friis
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-12
  • Here the authors compare genetic testing strategies in rare movement disorders, improve diagnostic yield with genome analysis, and establish CD99L2 as an X-linked spastic ataxia gene, showing that CD99L2–CAPN1 signaling disruption likely drives neurodegeneration.

    • Benita Menden
    • Rana D. Incebacak Eltemur
    • Tobias B. Haack
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-21
  • The combination of within-species variation in pathogen load, the shape of the relationship between pathogen load and infectiousness, and vector feeding preferences shape transmission of multi-host vector-borne pathogens. Here, the authors use experimental and wild bird infection data to characterize the role of 17 host bird species in avian malaria transmission in Hawaii.

    • Christa M. Seidl
    • Katy L. Parise
    • A. Marm Kilpatrick
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-12
  • A comparison of proteome-wide mutational scanning datasets from enterovirus A and B species reveals evolutionary constraints shared by these viral species that localize to core functional regions, as well as species- and type-specific constraints that map to distinct host interactions.

    • Beatriz Álvarez-Rodríguez
    • William Bakhache
    • Patrick T. Dolan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    P: 1-14
  • The study reports the discovery of a persistent bow shock around a diskless magnetic accreting white dwarf, revealing a powerful energy-loss mechanism that challenges current models of accretion and compact binary evolution.

    • Krystian Iłkiewicz
    • Simone Scaringi
    • Martina Veresvarska
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    P: 1-10
  • The authors released NSD-synthetic, a dataset of 7T fMRI responses from the same eight NSD participants for 284 out-of-distribution synthetic images, to facilitate the development of more robust models of visual processing.

    • Alessandro T. Gifford
    • Radoslaw M. Cichy
    • Kendrick Kay
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-20
  • Here they establish an NTR-based genetic ablation tool in axolotls to investigate the function of specific cells. They use this system to demonstrate the capacity of ependymoglial cells for central nervous system regeneration.

    • Sulei Fu
    • Yan-Yun Zeng
    • Ji-Feng Fei
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-19
  • Over the past 40 years, 42% of tropical and subtropical ecosystems have experienced an increase in plant reliance on past precipitation, consistent with greening during the late growing season in drylands and drying during the wet-to-dry period in non-drylands.

    • Hongying Zhang
    • Yao Zhang
    • Michael O’Sullivan
    Research
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    P: 1-11
  • Arginine addiction induced by argininosuccinate synthase (ASSN1) deficiency has been exploited to treat ASS1-deficient cancers. Here, the authors show an alternative therapeutic approach where ASS1 activity is increased by the pesticide spinosyn A and is shown to inhibit breast cancer cell proliferation.

    • Zizheng Zou
    • Xiyuan Hu
    • Zhiyong Luo
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 12, P: 1-15
  • How the brain supports speaking and listening during conversation of its natural form remains poorly understood. Here, by combining intracranial EEG recordings with Natural Language Processing, the authors show broadly distributed frontotemporal neural signals that encode context-dependent linguistic information during both speaking and listening..

    • Jing Cai
    • Alex E. Hadjinicolaou
    • Sydney S. Cash
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-13
  • Authors study links between amyloid secondary nucleation and growth defects, demonstrating these sites on Aβ40/Aβ42 fibrils are rare compared to the number of protein molecules. Re-analysis of published data suggests that defects may also drive secondary nucleation generally.

    • Jing Hu
    • Tom Scheidt
    • Alexander J. Dear
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-14
  • Self-DNA has been implicated in the activation of cGAS/STING/IFN-I responses in autoimmunity and inflammatory diseases. Here the authors show that macrophage uses a process termed ‘nucleocytosis’ to extract nuclear DNA from lysosome-impaired, dying target cells, thereby activating downstream cGAS-STING signaling and IFN-I production.

    • Hideo Negishi
    • Yusuke Wada
    • Ken J. Ishii
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-19
  • While the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has been extensively studied, the predominant focus has traditionally been on gray matter alterations. Here, authors use single-nucleus and spatial transcriptomic profiling of the human brain’s temporal cortex and white matter to uncover cell type specific changes and their associations with Alzheimer’s pathology.

    • Pallavi Gaur
    • Julien Bryois
    • Vilas Menon
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-17
  • The APOE-ε4 allele is the strongest genetic risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer’s disease, but it is not deterministic. Here, the authors show that common genetic variation changes how APOE-ε4 influences cognition.

    • Alex G. Contreras
    • Skylar Walters
    • Timothy J. Hohman
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-17
  • METALoci, a new three-dimensional genome computational tool, reveals a major rewiring of regulatory interactions during sex determination. By combining this method with transgenic models, the authors identify a noncoding regulatory region at the Fgf9 locus and reveal that Meis genes are key regulators of sexual differentiation.

    • Irene Mota-Gómez
    • Juan Antonio Rodríguez
    • Darío G. Lupiáñez
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
    P: 1-13
  • Mouse models demonstrate that vagal sensory neurons transmit signals from lung adenocarcinoma to the brain, increasing sympathetic efferent activity in the tumour microenvironment and thereby creating a immunologically permissive environment for tumour growth.

    • Haohan K. Wei
    • Chuyue D. Yu
    • Chengcheng Jin
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-10
  • Population-level analyses and in vitro experiments show that a specific genetic variant of cyclin D3 inhibits the growth of the malaria-causing parasite Plasmodium falciparum in erythrocytes, and suggest that its high frequency in Sardinia was driven by past endemic malaria.

    • Maria Giuseppina Marini
    • Maura Mingoia
    • Francesco Cucca
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-9
  • The hepatitis B virus surface protein recognizes host entry receptor via its intrinsically disordered peptide. The authors reveal the dynamic process of the viral surface protein that involves a stepwise binding maturation for establishing high affinity and specific virus-receptor entry complex.

    • Chisa Kobayashi
    • Toru Ekimoto
    • Koichi Watashi
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-16
  • Chlorine electrosynthesis from seawater is limited by poor selectivity and stability under industrial-scale conditions. Here atomic-step-enriched ultrafine high-entropy alloy nanowires enable highly efficient chlorine evolution at 10 kA m−2 for over 5,500 h through dynamic Pt–O active sites, reducing electricity consumption and feedstock costs for next-generation chlor-alkali processes.

    • Yongchao Yang
    • Yuwei Yang
    • Shenlong Zhao
    Research
    Nature Synthesis
    P: 1-11
  • Hepatic glycogenolysis is essential for protein glycosylation and rhythmic secretion by the liver. Disruptions to hepatic glycogenolysis, caused by congenital diseases or physiological factors such as obesity, caloric restriction and changes to meal timing, alter hepatic protein secretion.

    • Meltem Weger
    • Daniel Mauvoisin
    • Frédéric Gachon
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Metabolism
    P: 1-23
  • Non-equilibrium two-dimensional melting is less understood than its equilibrium counterpart. Now it is shown that topologically driven melting in a two-dimensional crystal of charged colloids is the same irrespective of the mechanisms that generate the defects

    • Ankit D. Vyas
    • Philipp W. A. Schönhöfer
    • Paul Chaikin
    Research
    Nature Physics
    Volume: 22, P: 287-293
  • From 2014–2017, marine heatwaves caused global mass coral bleaching, where the corals lose their symbiotic algae. The authors find, this event exceeded the severity of all prior global bleaching events in recorded history, with approximately half the world’s reefs bleaching and 15% experiencing substantial mortality.

    • C. Mark Eakin
    • Scott F. Heron
    • Derek P. Manzello
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-14
  • In one-shot perceptual learning, what we see can be dramatically altered by a single past experience. Using psychophysics, fMRI, iEEG, and DNNs, the authors identify neural and computational mechanisms underlying this remarkable ability in humans.

    • Ayaka Hachisuka
    • Jonathan D. Shor
    • Biyu J. He
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-21
  • Using two newly developed immunoassays tested in three clinical cohorts, this study highlights CSF DOPA decarboxylase as a promising biomarker for differentiating dementia with Lewy bodies and Parkinson’s disease from Alzheimer’s disease and controls.

    • Katharina Bolsewig
    • Giovanni Bellomo
    • Charlotte E. Teunissen
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    P: 1-12