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Showing 1–50 of 99687 results
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  • Hepatitis C virus remains a health burden due to the lack of an effective vaccine, hindered by difficulties in replicating the native E1E2 antigen structure. Here, the authors engineer a stabilized E1E2 heterodimer using cryo-EM-guided modifications, enhancing immunogenicity and paving the way for future HCV vaccine development.

    • Linling He
    • Yi-Zong Lee
    • Jiang Zhu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-26
  • Here, the authors report that the protein language model ESM-2 is broadly useful for variant effect prediction, including unobserved changes, and can be applied to understand novel viral pathogens with the potential to be applied to any protein sequence, pathogen or otherwise.

    • Kieran D. Lamb
    • Joseph Hughes
    • David L. Robertson
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-16
  • Spectroscopic observations of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-189b reveal both volatile (H2O, CO, OH) and refractory (Fe, Mg, Si) gas in its atmosphere. Here, the authors show that the abundance ratio of refractory species reflects that of the host star.

    • Jorge A. Sanchez
    • Peter C. B. Smith
    • Joost P. Wardenier
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-9
  • Most studies assessing food self-sufficiency look at calories and neglect nutrient gaps. Comparing food demand and potential food production under land and water constraints, this study quantifies 9 key nutrient gaps for each of African’s 54 countries.

    • Harold L. Feukam Nzudie
    • Xu Zhao
    • Ning Zhang
    Research
    Nature Food
    Volume: 6, P: 930-935
  • The transformations for aragonite precursors in coral are not fully understood but have implications in bio, biogenic and geological mineralization. Here, the authors use high-resolution mapping and observe exponential decay from the edge of four precursors to coral aragonite skeleton in Stylophora pistillata.

    • Zoë Rechav
    • Eric Tambutté
    • Pupa U. P. A. Gilbert
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-12
  • DNA recognition and cleavage control in type II topoisomerases are poorly understood processes. Here, the authors determine cleaved and uncleaved structures of supercoiled DNA-bound topoisomerase VI that reveal how the enzyme activates its cleavage state and prefers to act at deformable substrates.

    • Daniel E. Richman
    • Timothy J. Wendorff
    • James M. Berger
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-15
  • Neuropathic pain is commonly treated with opioids due to limited alternatives. Here, authors determine cryo-EM structures of the neuronal glycine transporter GlyT2 and develop a reversible inhibitor that provides analgesia in vivo without side effects.

    • Ryan P. Cantwell Chater
    • Julian Peiser-Oliver
    • Azadeh Shahsavar
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-19
  • Plant diversity plays a key role in regulating ecosystem processes, yet its influence on global soil carbon release remains unclear. This study suggests that higher plant species richness is associated with greater soil respiration in low- to mid-productivity forests but has little effect in highly productive systems.

    • Benjamin Laffitte
    • Zhihan Yang
    • Xiaolu Tang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-12
  • High kinetic inductance materials are widely used in superconducting circuits, yet their loss mechanisms are not fully understood. Here the authors study quantum circuits incorporating nanowires made of quasi-2D disordered superconductor WSi and identify localized quasiparticles as the dominant source of loss.

    • Trevyn F. Q. Larson
    • Sarah Garcia Jones
    • András Gyenis
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-10
  • Precise and efficient CRISPR genome editing requires specialized delivery systems. Here, the authors develop Coomassie lipidoids that deliver purified adenine base editors into retinal tissues, making it possible to achieve robust genome editing with a defined, non-viral nanomedicine.

    • Jianye Zhang
    • Rafał Hołubowicz
    • Krzysztof Palczewski
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-18
  • Dynamos can generate magnetic fields, which are present across various scales in space plasmas. Here, the authors show evidence for a turbulent dynamo in the terrestrial magnetosheath, indicating that Earth’s magnetosheath may be used as a natural laboratory for testing dynamo theories and simulations.

    • Zoltán Vörös
    • Owen Wyn Roberts
    • Árpád Kis
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-9
  • 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
  • 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
  • In this study, the authors develop a stoichiometric-thermodynamic model linking seismic decarbonation to Mw 5.9–6.5 earthquakes. They demonstrate that seismic CO₂ pressurization can sustain dynamic slip and enhance the destructive potential of earthquakes.

    • Manuel Curzi
    • Andrea Billi
    • Eugenio Carminati
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-13
  • Therapy to allergy often targets a specific allergen without addressing cross-reactivity. Here the authors develop a consensus, cross-reactive allergen, use mRNA-lipid nanoparticle immunization to induce specific, neutralizing IgG responses, but find no therapeutic effects in mouse allergy models, hinting the need for further optimization prior to translation.

    • Mark Møiniche
    • Kristoffer H. Johansen
    • Esperanza Rivera-de-Torre
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-15
  • A measurement strategy is described that is able to read out the parity of minimal two-site Kitaev chains in real time, by coupling two Majoranas and resolving their quantum capacitance.

    • Nick van Loo
    • Francesco Zatelli
    • Leo P. Kouwenhoven
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 650, P: 334-339
  • Large biospecimen banks are limited by a lack of fast, flexible, database-like retrieval. Here, authors encode metadata as DNA barcodes on silica-encapsulated samples and demonstrate numerical range, categorical, and Boolean queries, enabling rapid, precise recall from pooled DNA/RNA archives.

    • Joseph D. Berleant
    • James L. Banal
    • Mark Bathe
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-15
  • Exhaustion is a functional state that hampers anti-cancer and antiviral CD8 T cell activity, and is preceded by a stem-like state, maintained by the transcription factor TCF1. Here authors develop mouse models that allow a precise understanding of the developmental trajectory between the stem-cell-like and exhausted states of CD8 T cells and find that while constitutive overexpression of TCF1 expands the stem-like T cell pool, TCF1 expression specifically in already exhausted cells is unable to promote dedifferentiation.

    • Maria N. de Menezes
    • Amanda X. Y. Chen
    • Ian A. Parish
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-15
  • Amundsen Sea records show warm Circumpolar Deep Water drove major West Antarctic Ice Sheet retreat from 18,000–10,000 years ago. Subsequent cooling stabilized the grounding line, indicating ocean heat—not atmospheric warming—controlled long-term WAIS change.

    • Elaine M. Mawbey
    • James A. Smith
    • Pierre Dutrieux
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-11
  • 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
  • KRAS is an oncogene that switches between a GDP-bound inactive state and a GTP-bound active state. Recently developed KRAS G12C inhibitors are specific to the GDP-bound inactive state. Here, the authors develop a class of covalent KRAS G12C inhibitors capable of targeting both states for the treatment of KRAS-driven cancer.

    • Matthew L. Condakes
    • Zhuo Zhang
    • Michelle L. Stewart
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-15
  • Multiple myeloma involves alterations to T cell function, but mechanisms underlying disease evolution remain unclear. Here the authors find that, unlike solid cancers, multiple myeloma lacks exhausted T cells and is instead characterized by antigen-driven terminal memory T cell differentiation, which may be driven by tumour-intrinsic features including tumour burden and antigen-presentation gene expression.

    • Kane A. Foster
    • Elise Rees
    • Kwee L. Yong
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-17
  • Continuously trapped atoms provide advantage for atom interferometry, yet current schemes are limited by dephasing. Here, the authors develop a Floquet-engineered atom interferometry platform for quantum force sensing purposes, unveiling regimes where the interferometric phase is insensitive to noise.

    • Xiao Chai
    • Eber Nolasco-Martinez
    • David M. Weld
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-8
  • Post-transcriptional regulation of mRNA translation was explored using Ribo-STAMP and single-cell RNA sequencing to reveal cell-type-specific and isoform-specific translation patterns across hippocampal neuronal and non-neuronal cell types, highlighting functional differences between CA1 and CA3.

    • Samantha L. Sison
    • Federico Zampa
    • Giordano Lippi
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-13
  • High spatial resolution is essential for resolving cellular and subcellular organization in tissues. Here, authors present Seq-Scope-X, which integrates tissue expansion with Seq-Scope to achieve an order-of-magnitude improvement in resolution of spatial transcriptomics and proteomics.

    • Angelo Anacleto
    • Weiqiu Cheng
    • Jun Hee Lee
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-20
  • Mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics is increasingly central to systems biology. Here, the authors present a high-throughput, multi-organ workflow that profiles 11,472 proteins in 507 mouse samples, enabling rapid, system-level evaluation of drug efficacy and toxicity.

    • Yun Xiong
    • Lin Tan
    • Philip L. Lorenzi
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-17
  • In this study, the authors designed potent Enterovirus D68 capsid inhibitors that block viral binding and show that the lead compounds reduce virus levels, prevent paralysis and improve survival in EV-D68-challenged mice, even when treatment starts days after infection.

    • Kan Li
    • Michael J. Rudy
    • Jun Wang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-14
  • 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
  • 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 authors find that distinct radial glia subtypes generate and support midbrain dopaminergic neurons, revealing specialized function and lineage relationships among the diverse cell types that shape dopamine neuron development.

    • Emilía Sif Ásgrímsdóttir
    • Luca Fusar Bassini
    • Ernest Arenas
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Neuroscience
    P: 1-15