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Showing 1–50 of 22316 results
Advanced filters: Author: K. J. Black Clear advanced filters
  • Top-down projections from the orbitofrontal cortex carry predictive signals that grow with sound experience and suppress the auditory cortex via inhibitory circuits, revealing a predictive mechanism for sensory habituation.

    • Hiroaki Tsukano
    • Michellee M. Garcia
    • Hiroyuki K. Kato
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Neuroscience
    P: 1-13
  • The highest-quality JWST spectra reveal that little red dots are young supermassive black holes shrouded in dense cocoons of ionized gas, where electron scattering, not Doppler motions, broadens their spectral lines.

    • V. Rusakov
    • D. Watson
    • J. Witstok
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 649, P: 574-579
  • General-relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations coupled with general-relativistic radiation transfer of a wide class of black hole spacetimes forecast the ability of future VLBI projects to distinguish between black hole images.

    • Akhil Uniyal
    • Indu K. Dihingia
    • Luciano Rezzolla
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 10, P: 165-172
  • Coordinated X-ray and radio observations reveal that disk winds and jets occur mutually exclusively in 4U 1630–472, providing new observational constraints on the interplay between different modes of outflow in X-ray binaries.

    • Zuobin Zhang
    • Jiachen Jiang
    • Andrew K. Hughes
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 10, P: 281-289
  • In this work, the authors propose and experimentally test a framework to analyse the fundamental limits of quantum detector tomography, i.e., the limits to extractable information from probing unknown quantum measurements. They introduce the detector quantum Fisher information, which physically connects measurement structure to quantum advantage, complementing previously known state and channel metrics.

    • Aritra Das
    • Simon K. Yung
    • Jie Zhao
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-12
  • The vacuum process is scalable and solvent free, yet all-vacuum-deposited perovskite solar cells still trail solution-processed counterparts. Facet-directed co-evaporation yields (100)-oriented mixed-halide wide-bandgap films for efficient, stable single-junction cells and perovskite–silicon tandem cells.

    • Xinyi Shen
    • Wing Tung Hui
    • Henry J. Snaith
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Materials
    P: 1-12
  • Robust protein synthesis by the ribosome is required for rapid cancer growth. Here authors present interdictors, small molecule inhibitors of protein synthesis with context-dependent activity that inhibit MYC-driven cancer cell growth in a mouse model.

    • Paige D. Diamond
    • Paul V. Sauer
    • Anthony P. Schuller
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-18
  • Cue–reward learning rate scales proportionally with the time between rewards. Consequently, learning over a fixed duration is independent of the number of trials. This challenges trial-based dopamine learning models but supports retrospective learning.

    • Dennis A. Burke
    • Annie Taylor
    • Vijay Mohan K Namboodiri
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Neuroscience
    P: 1-15
  • 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
  • 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
  • An extreme flare has been seen from a supermassive black hole at redshift z = 2.6. First detected in 2018, it is 30 times brighter than similar events. The most likely cause is the shredding of a star of 30 solar masses or more.

    • Matthew J. Graham
    • Barry McKernan
    • Ashish Mahabal
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 10, P: 154-164
  • Conventional slurry electrodes limit high-energy lithium batteries. This work shows that dry-processed electrodes with molecularly coupled carbon–binder networks enable high mass and active material loading, supporting stable high-voltage operation and enhancing battery energy density.

    • Minghao Zhang
    • Boyan K. Stoychev
    • Ying Shirley Meng
    Research
    Nature Energy
    P: 1-13
  • 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
  • This study shows how the bacterial retron Eco2 defends against viruses. Phage nucleases trigger activation of Eco2, which cuts RNAs, shuts down protein production and stops phage replication.

    • M. Jasnauskaitė
    • J. Juozapaitis
    • P. Pausch
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
    Volume: 33, P: 330-340
  • Mucosal administration of a multivalent, adjuvanted vaccine against Clostridioides difficile promoted bacterial clearance and protected against morbidity, mortality, tissue damage and recurrence in mice.

    • Audrey K. Thomas
    • F. Christopher Peritore-Galve
    • D. Borden Lacy
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-9
  • Floquet engineering is often limited by weak light–matter coupling and heating. Now it is shown that exciton-driven fields in monolayer semiconductors produce stronger, longer-lived Floquet effects and reveal hybridization linked to excitonic phases.

    • Vivek Pareek
    • David R. Bacon
    • Keshav M. Dani
    Research
    Nature Physics
    Volume: 22, P: 209-217
  • Geometrical frustration in confined systems can lead to the emergence of topological defects, which significantly influence the physical properties of materials. This study demonstrates that grain boundary scars in dense assemblies of active spinners can decouple edge flows from the bulk, resulting in spontaneous self-shearing and a chiral activity-mediated reentrant melting transition.

    • Uttam Tiwari
    • Pragya Arora
    • Rajesh Ganapathy
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-8
  • ALMA observations have established the presence of warm, X-ray-heated gas near a supermassive black hole at redshift z = 6, demonstrating that highly excited CO lines are a powerful method for exploring heavily dust-obscured quasars in the early Universe.

    • K. Tadaki
    • F. Esposito
    • T. Michiyama
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 9, P: 720-728
  • Activators of KCa2.2 channels constitute potential novel treatments for neurologic disorders. Here, authors report cryo-EM structures of activator-bound channels, providing a framework for structure-based drug design targeting KCa2.2 channels.

    • Young-Woo Nam
    • Alena Ramanishka
    • Miao Zhang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-11
  • Induction of hypothermia during hibernation/torpor enables certain mammals to survive under extreme conditions. Here, the authors show that the natural product P57 induces hypothermia by targeting pyridoxal kinase and has a potential application in therapeutic hypothermia.

    • Ruina Wang
    • Lei Xiao
    • Yongjun Dang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-15
  • Two groups of ammonia-oxidizing archaea drive marine nitrification. Stuehrenberg et al. reveal that their distribution reflects substrate use, with one relying on urea and the other on ammonia to maintain nitrification in open-ocean waters.

    • Joerdis Stuehrenberg
    • Katharina Kitzinger
    • Marcel M. M. Kuypers
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-12
  • Electrified CO2 capture from air could lead to net-negative emissions, yet current methods face high energy costs and sensitivity to oxygen. Here the authors introduce an electrochemical approach using MnO2 as a stable, redox-active sorbent, achieving CO2 capture with promising energy consumption and minimal oxygen sensitivity.

    • Zeyan Liu
    • Huajie Ze
    • Edward H. Sargent
    Research
    Nature Energy
    P: 1-10
  • 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
  • While CDK4/6 inhibitors (CDK4/6i) are often initially successful in many breast cancer subtypes, often resistance develops and other subtypes like triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) fail to respond. Here, the authors demonstrate that the CDK2 inhibitor BLU-222, alone or with CDK4/6i, restores cell-cycle control via p21/p27 induction overcoming resistance in preclinical models of breast cancer, including TNBC.

    • Linjie Luo
    • Yan Wang
    • Khandan Keyomarsi
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-26
  • FACED 2.0 builds on and expands the capabilities of the free-space angular-chirp-enhanced delay microscopy approach. Its high speed, large field of view and volumetric coverage enable two-photon voltage imaging of hundreds of neurons or calcium imaging of thousands of neurons in the mouse or zebrafish brain.

    • Jian Zhong
    • Ryan G. Natan
    • Na Ji
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Methods
    P: 1-11
  • Genome-wide association meta-analysis identifies 58 independent risk loci for major anxiety disorders among individuals of European ancestry and implicates GABAergic signaling as a potential mechanism underlying genetic risk for these disorders.

    • Nora I. Strom
    • Brad Verhulst
    • John M. Hettema
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 58, P: 275-288
  • The transcription factor ATF4 and its effector lipocalin 2 (LCN2) have a key role in immune evasion and tumour progression, and targeting the ATF4–LCN2 axis might provide a way to treat several types of solid tumour by increasing anti-cancer immunity.

    • Jozef P. Bossowski
    • Ray Pillai
    • Thales Papagiannakopoulos
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-10
  • CFAP20 has a key role in rescuing RNA polymerase II complexes that have arrested during DNA transcription, limiting the accumulation of R-loops and preventing collisions between the transcription and replication machinery.

    • Sidrit Uruci
    • Daphne E. C. Boer
    • Martijn S. Luijsterburg
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 650, P: 1025-1034
  • CRISPR–Cas9 in Streptococcus pyogenes prevents self-cleavage through abasic CRISPR RNA oxidations that suppress off-target activity. Inspired by a natural mechanism, Gu and Kim et al. designed chemically modified abasic guide RNAs to enhance genome-editing specificity of SpCas9, suppressing off-target toxicity in in vivo applications.

    • Dowoon Gu
    • Geun-Woo D. Kim
    • Sung Wook Chi
    Research
    Nature Chemical Biology
    P: 1-12
  • Centennial-scale variations in methane carbon isotope ratios are attributed to changes in pyrogenic and biogenic sources that can be correlated with anthropogenic activities, such as varying levels of biomass burning during the period of the Roman empire and the Han dynasty, and changes in natural climate variability.

    • C. J. Sapart
    • G. Monteil
    • T. Röckmann
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 490, P: 85-88