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Showing 151–200 of 548 results
Advanced filters: Author: Michael Noble Clear advanced filters
  • While the two individual half-reactions involved in visible-light-driven water splitting are well studied, producing H2 and O2 simultaneously on a single particle remains challenging. Here, the authors achieve this by decorating CdS nanorods with both Pt nanoparticles and molecular Ru complexes to catalyse the evolution of H2 and O2, respectively.

    • Christian M. Wolff
    • Peter D. Frischmann
    • Jacek K. Stolarczyk
    Research
    Nature Energy
    Volume: 3, P: 862-869
  • Sequencing of haploid sugarcane, Saccharum spontaneum, allows assembly of a prototypical version of the sugarcane chromosome set. This new reference genome will serve as a resource to accelerate sugarcane improvement.

    • Jisen Zhang
    • Xingtan Zhang
    • Ray Ming
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 50, P: 1565-1573
  • Sulphur isotopes track recycling of subducted crustal material, yet few igneous rocks preserve these signals over Earth history. Here, the authors investigate a billion-year-old alkaline province in Greenland and are able to reconstruct a recycled mantle source, thus alkaline rocks can be used to reveal crustal recycling through geological time.

    • William Hutchison
    • Rainer J. Babiel
    • Nicola J. Horsburgh
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 10, P: 1-12
  • Mirrors that demonstrate 98% reflectivity and withstand 10 kilowatts of focused continuous-wave laser light are created by nanoscale fabrication of single-crystal diamond. The work finds applications in medicine, defence, industry, and communications.

    • Haig A. Atikian
    • Neil Sinclair
    • Marko Lončar
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-8
  • Genome-wide association studies have identified regions which confer risk of high-grade serous epithelial ovarian cancer. Here the authors use expression quantitative train locus analysis to identify candidate genes and functionally characterise them, identifying a role for HOXD9 in ovarian cancer.

    • Kate Lawrenson
    • Qiyuan Li
    • Matthew L. Freedman
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 6, P: 1-14
  • Simon Gayther and colleagues report 3 new risk variants for mucinous ovarian carcinoma (MOC) on the basis of an analysis of 1,644 MOC cases and 21,693 controls. They confirm an eQTL association between the HOXD9 promoter and risk SNPs at 2q31.1 using chromosome conformation capture analysis and show that HOXD9 overexpression associates with neoplastic transformation.

    • Linda E Kelemen
    • Kate Lawrenson
    • Andrew Berchuck
    Research
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 47, P: 888-897
  • The Cancer Genome Atlas reports on molecular evaluation of 295 primary gastric adenocarcinomas and proposes a new classification of gastric cancers into 4 subtypes, which should help with clinical assessment and trials of targeted therapies.

    • Adam J. Bass
    • Vesteinn Thorsson
    • Jia Liu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 513, P: 202-209
  • Abdellaoui et al. synthesize genomic evidence on the link between socio-economic status and heredity. They show how social stratification may create selection pressures, meaning that individuals are clustered in distinct environments. This may have consequences for genetic architectures and social inequality.

    • Abdel Abdellaoui
    • Hilary C. Martin
    • Peter M. Visscher
    Reviews
    Nature Human Behaviour
    Volume: 9, P: 864-876
  • The generation of hydrogen fuel from water and visible light requires photoelectrodes that are inexpensive, stable and highly active. Now, Luo, Grätzel and co-workers report Cu2O photocathodes that reach these goals. Incorporation into an unassisted solar water splitting device gives ~3% solar-to-hydrogen conversion efficiency.

    • Linfeng Pan
    • Jin Hyun Kim
    • Michael Grätzel
    Research
    Nature Catalysis
    Volume: 1, P: 412-420
  • The highly conserved influenza virus hemagglutinin (HA) stalk represents a potential target for a broadly protective vaccine. Here, the authors show that immunization with nucleoside-modified mRNA encoding full-length HA formulated in lipid nanoparticles elicits HA stalk-specific antibodies and protects from heterosubtypic virus infection.

    • Norbert Pardi
    • Kaela Parkhouse
    • Drew Weissman
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 9, P: 1-12
  • Magic number cluster with closed shells and increased stability often result from potential energy minimization between attractive atoms or particles. Here, Wang et al. show that such magic number clusters can also result from entropy maximization in colloidal systems with negligible interactions.

    • Junwei Wang
    • Chrameh Fru Mbah
    • Nicolas Vogel
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 9, P: 1-10
  • The rational design of catalytic materials requires synthetic control over their reactive properties. Now, the activity of dealloyed Pt–Cu bimetallic nanoparticles, which catalyse the oxygen reduction reaction, can be tuned through control of the geometric strain at their surface.

    • Peter Strasser
    • Shirlaine Koh
    • Anders Nilsson
    Research
    Nature Chemistry
    Volume: 2, P: 454-460
  • Analysis of 97,691 high-coverage human blood DNA-derived whole-genome sequences enabled simultaneous identification of germline and somatic mutations that predispose individuals to clonal expansion of haematopoietic stem cells, indicating that both inherited and acquired mutations are linked to age-related cancers and coronary heart disease.

    • Alexander G. Bick
    • Joshua S. Weinstock
    • Pradeep Natarajan
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 586, P: 763-768
  • The Cancer Genome Atlas Research Network report integrated genomic and molecular analyses of 164 squamous cell carcinomas and adenocarcinomas of the oesophagus; they find genomic and molecular features that differentiate squamous and adenocarcinomas of the oesophagus, and strong similarities between oesophageal adenocarcinomas and the chromosomally unstable variant of gastric adenocarcinoma, suggesting that gastroesophageal adenocarcinoma is a single disease entity.

    • Jihun Kim
    • Reanne Bowlby
    • Jiashan Zhang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 541, P: 169-175
  • Evolution of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein is likely driven by many factors, including immune escape and receptor binding. Here, by measuring the binding affinity of more than 30,000 variants of the SARS-CoV-2 RBD to its receptor ACE2, Moulana et al. show that the evolution of the Omicron BA.1 variant was driven by interactions between mutations.

    • Alief Moulana
    • Thomas Dupic
    • Michael M. Desai
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-11
  • The authors observe X-ray coherent scattering speckles from substrate-supported planar patterns in grazing incidence reflection geometry, which constitutes hard X-ray holograms revealing three-dimensional high-resolution structural information in a single image.

    • Miaoqi Chu
    • Zhang Jiang
    • Jin Wang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-13
  • Juno’s microwave radiometer data could measure the water concentration in the deep atmosphere of Jupiter (0.7 to 30 bar) at the equator: \(2.7^{+2.4}_{-1.7}\) times the solar O/H abundance, with a thermal vertical structure compatible with a moist adiabat.

    • Cheng Li
    • Andrew Ingersoll
    • Zhimeng Zhang
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 4, P: 609-616
  • The instability of contact layers for perovskite solar cells under operating conditions limits the deployment of the technology. Now, Lin et al. develop a Cu–Ni electrode sandwiched between in situ-grown graphene protective layers, enabling solar cells with improved stability under light, humidity and high temperature.

    • Xuesong Lin
    • Hongzhen Su
    • Liyuan Han
    Research
    Nature Energy
    Volume: 7, P: 520-527
  • Segway, a method using dynamic Bayesian network techniques, segments a genome and produces functional labels defined by histone modifications, transcription-factor binding, locations of open chromatin and other genome-wide functional data.

    • Michael M Hoffman
    • Orion J Buske
    • William Stafford Noble
    Research
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 9, P: 473-476
  • An integrative genomic analysis of several hundred endometrial carcinomas shows that a minority of tumour samples carry copy number alterations or TP53 mutations and many contain key cancer-related gene mutations, such as those involved in canonical pathways and chromatin remodelling; a reclassification of endometrial tumours into four distinct types is proposed, which may have an effect on patient treatment regimes.

    • Douglas A. Levine
    • Gad Getz
    • Douglas A. Levine
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 497, P: 67-73
  • Obtaining a high-resolution contact map using current 3D genomics technologies can be challenging with small input cell numbers. Here, the authors develop ChromaFold, a deep learning model that predicts cell-type-specific 3D contact maps from single-cell chromatin accessibility data alone.

    • Vianne R. Gao
    • Rui Yang
    • Christina S. Leslie
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-15
  • A normative digital atlas of fetal brain maturation produced using 1,059 optimal quality, three-dimensional ultrasound brain volumes from 899 fetuses presents a unique spatiotemporal benchmark from a large cohort with normative postnatal growth and neurodevelopment at 2 years of age.

    • Ana I. L. Namburete
    • Bartłomiej W. Papież
    • Stephen H. Kennedy
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 623, P: 106-114
  • Characterization of nanoparticles is a complex and important problem for the vast number of applications that require them. Here, the authors present a method to uncover the two-dimensional distribution of length and diameter of anisotropic nanoparticles like gold nanorods with a single measurement by combining spectroscopic and sedimentation data.

    • Simon E. Wawra
    • Lukas Pflug
    • Wolfgang Peukert
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 9, P: 1-11
  • Modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA) virus is the vaccine deployed to curb mpox. Here the authors conduct a multiplexed proteomic analysis to quantify cellular and viral proteins throughout MVA virus infection of human fibroblasts and macrophages and see substantial remodelling of the host proteome.

    • Jonas D. Albarnaz
    • Joanne Kite
    • Michael P. Weekes
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-16
  • Effective RNase control is crucial in single-cell transcriptomics. Here, the authors introduce a synthetic, thermostable RNase inhibitor that enhances RNA stability and provides greater workflow flexibility in single-cell RNA-seq library preparation.

    • Joyce Carol Noble
    • Antonio Lentini
    • Björn Reinius
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-9
  • The unexpected phenomenon of rapid, long-distance transport of an ultrathin and uniform metal film on two-dimensional crystals is reported at temperatures well below the melting points of all of the materials involved. The effect is generalizable and may offer possibilities in confined space chemistry, as well as in two-dimensional crystal growth and devices.

    • Yanyu Jia
    • Fang Yuan
    • Sanfeng Wu
    Research
    Nature Synthesis
    Volume: 3, P: 386-393
  • Through-plane conductivity in anion-exchange membranes is beneficial for their use in fuel cells as it aids movement of ions from cathode to anode. Liu and colleagues use ferrocenium polymers and an applied magnetic field to orient ion channels appropriately and achieve improvements in stability by formation of magnetically induced mixed-valence states.

    • Xin Liu
    • Na Xie
    • Michael D. Guiver
    Research
    Nature Energy
    Volume: 7, P: 329-339
  • When a molecule interacts chemically with a metal, its orbitals hybridise with metal states to form the new eigenstates of the coupled system. Here, the authors show that in addition to overlap in real space and energy, hybridizing states must fulfil a momentum-matching condition.

    • Xiaosheng Yang
    • Matteo Jugovac
    • F. Stefan Tautz
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-9
  • In atomic solids, substitutional doping is a powerful approach to modulating materials properties. Now, three substitutional mixtures of {Co6Se8} and {Cr6Te8} clusters in a crystal lattice with C60 fullerenes have been prepared. At two Co:Cr mixing ratios, the solid solutions showed particularly high electrical conductivities and low activation barriers for electron transport, owing to their structural heterogeneity.

    • Jingjing Yang
    • Jake C. Russell
    • Colin Nuckolls
    Research
    Nature Chemistry
    Volume: 13, P: 607-613
  • The next step after sequencing a genome is to figure out how the cell actually uses it as an instruction manual. A large international consortium has examined 1% of the genome for what part is transcribed, where proteins are bound, what the chromatin structure looks like, and how the sequence compares to that of other organisms.

    • Ewan Birney
    • John A. Stamatoyannopoulos
    • Pieter J. de Jong
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 447, P: 799-816
  • The Cancer Genome Atlas Research Network reports an integrative analysis of more than 400 samples of clear cell renal cell carcinoma based on genomic, DNA methylation, RNA and proteomic characterisation; frequent mutations were identified in the PI(3)K/AKT pathway, suggesting this pathway might be a potential therapeutic target, among the findings is also a demonstration of metabolic remodelling which correlates with tumour stage and severity.

    • Chad J. Creighton
    • Margaret Morgan
    • Heidi J. Sofia.
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 499, P: 43-49
  • The RING finger protein TRIM37 is encoded by a gene that is amplified in certain breast cancers, but its function is unknown; here, it is shown to mono-ubiquitinate histone H2A and repress gene expression, and to function as a breast cancer oncoprotein.

    • Sanchita Bhatnagar
    • Claude Gazin
    • Michael R. Green
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 516, P: 116-120
  • An integrated transcriptome, genome, methylome and proteome analysis of over 200 lung adenocarcinomas reveals high rates of somatic mutations, 18 statistically significantly mutated genes including RIT1 and MGA, splicing changes, and alterations in MAPK and PI(3)K pathway activity.

    • Eric A. Collisson
    • Joshua D. Campbell
    • Ming-Sound Tsao
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 511, P: 543-550