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Showing 1–5 of 5 results
Advanced filters: Author: Kevin A Fenix Clear advanced filters
  • Acquiring biomarkers from blood or sweat is limited by invasiveness or biofouling. Skin gas emissions bypass these issues, offering rich biosignals. Authors present passive sensing strategies capturing water vapor (Sweat rate), CO2, and VOCs, enabling real-time tracking of physiological changes.

    • David Clausen
    • Max Farley
    • Philipp Gutruf
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-15
  • B cells and follicular helper T cells in B cell follicles can act as important reservoirs for chronic infection by viruses such as HIV or EBV. Yu and colleagues show that a specialized subpopulation of cytotoxic T cells can enter the B cell follicles to eliminate such virus-infected cells.

    • Yew Ann Leong
    • Yaping Chen
    • Di Yu
    Research
    Nature Immunology
    Volume: 17, P: 1187-1196
  • The credit assignment problem involves assigning credit to synapses in a neural network so that weights are updated appropriately and the circuit learns. Max et al. developed an efficient solution to the weight transport problem in networks of biophysical neurons. The method exploits noise as an information carrier and enables networks to learn to solve a task efficiently.

    • Kevin Max
    • Laura Kriener
    • Mihai A. Petrovici
    Research
    Nature Machine Intelligence
    Volume: 6, P: 619-630
  • Little is known regarding migration of Th17 cells that produce distinct cytokines implicated in protection and pathology. Kara et al. show that a switch from CCR6 to CCR2 by Th17 cells defines a signature (CCR6CCR2+) of GM-CSF+Th17 cells and drives pathology in a mouse model of autoimmunity.

    • Ervin E. Kara
    • Duncan R. McKenzie
    • Shaun R. McColl
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 6, P: 1-17
  • IL-17-producing γδ T (γδT17) cells position in barrier tissues but also home to inflammatory sites. How this trafficking is regulated is unclear. Here the authors show that the dynamic expression of chemokine receptors CCR2 and CCR6 differentiates γδT17 cell trafficking patterns at homeostasis and in inflammatory scenarios.

    • Duncan R. McKenzie
    • Ervin E. Kara
    • Shaun R. McColl
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 8, P: 1-13