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Showing 1–50 of 544 results
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  • There is a challenge of overestimation in figures of merit for organic electrochemical transistors due to a kink in the transistor current. Here, the authors investigate the origin of the kink and identify the charge transport phenomena that is impacted.

    • Maryam Shahi
    • Vianna N. Le
    • Alexandra F. Paterson
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-9
  • An analysis of 24,202 critical cases of COVID-19 identifies potentially druggable targets in inflammatory signalling (JAK1), monocyte–macrophage activation and endothelial permeability (PDE4A), immunometabolism (SLC2A5 and AK5), and host factors required for viral entry and replication (TMPRSS2 and RAB2A).

    • Erola Pairo-Castineira
    • Konrad Rawlik
    • J. Kenneth Baillie
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 617, P: 764-768
  • Optimizations of X-ray nanotomography including the choice of resin allows high-resolution imaging of mouse brain tissue, approaching the resolution of volume electron microscopy. Since it does not require slicing the tissue, this technology may become an attractive alternative to current standard methods for connectomics.

    • Carles Bosch
    • Tomas Aidukas
    • Andreas T. Schaefer
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Methods
    Volume: 22, P: 2631-2638
  • A global network of researchers was formed to investigate the role of human genetics in SARS-CoV-2 infection and COVID-19 severity; this paper reports 13 genome-wide significant loci and potentially actionable mechanisms in response to infection.

    • Mari E. K. Niemi
    • Juha Karjalainen
    • Chloe Donohue
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 600, P: 472-477
  • The performance of inverted perovskite solar cells has been limited by non-radiative recombination at the perovskite surfaces. Here, authors employ phosphonic acids and piperazinium chloride for homogeneous passivation, achieving certified efficiency of 28.9% for 60 cm2 perovskite-silicon tandems.

    • Kerem Artuk
    • Aleksandra Oranskaia
    • Christian M. Wolff
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-13
  • Cell type labelling in single-cell datasets remains a major bottleneck. Here, the authors present AnnDictionary, an open-source toolkit that enables atlas-scale analysis and provides the first benchmark of LLMs for de novo cell type annotation from marker genes, showing high accuracy at low cost.

    • George Crowley
    • Robert C. Jones
    • Stephen R. Quake
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-14
  • The authors study gate-defined Josephson junctions in four-layer twisted graphene. Field-dependent measurements of the critical current show a Fraunhofer-like pattern with sudden shifts, which they attribute to vortices jumping into and out of the superconducting leads.

    • Marta Perego
    • Clara Galante Agero
    • Klaus Ensslin
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-8
  • Results from the randomized, noncomparative, phase 2 MATISSE trial show that ultra-short neoadjuvant therapy with ipilimumab and nivolumab can prevent surgery and radiotherapy in patients with resectable cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma, with an early decrease in total lesion glycolysis by [18F]FDG-PET/CT associated with response.

    • Sabine E. Breukers
    • Joleen J. H. Traets
    • Charlotte L. Zuur
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 31, P: 4055-4064
  • Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) onsets in COVID-19 patients with manifestations similar to Kawasaki disease (KD). Here the author probe the peripheral blood transcriptome of MIS-C patients to find signatures related to natural killer (NK) cell activation and CD8+ T cell exhaustion that are shared with KD patients.

    • Noam D. Beckmann
    • Phillip H. Comella
    • Alexander W. Charney
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 12, P: 1-15
  • The authors demonstrate non-invasive fluorescence imaging behind scattering layers beyond the optical memory effect. They achieve this by demixing speckle patterns emitted by a fluorescent object under variable unknown random illumination, using matrix factorization and a fingerprint-based reconstruction.

    • Lei Zhu
    • Fernando Soldevila
    • Sylvain Gigan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-6
  • Integrative analyses of transcriptome and whole-genome sequencing data for 1,188 tumours across 27 types of cancer are used to provide a comprehensive catalogue of RNA-level alterations in cancer.

    • Claudia Calabrese
    • Natalie R. Davidson
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 578, P: 129-136
  • Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) loss of heterozygosity, allele-specific mutation and measurement of expression and repression (MHC Hammer) detects disruption to human leukocyte antigens due to mutations, loss of heterogeneity, altered gene expression or alternative splicing. Applied to lung and breast cancer datasets, the tool shows that these aberrations are common across cancer and can have clinical implications.

    • Clare Puttick
    • Thomas P. Jones
    • Nicholas McGranahan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 56, P: 2121-2131
  • α/β-hydrolase domain-containing protein 11 (ABHD11) is a mitochondrial hydrolase, and its expression in CD4 + T-cells has been linked to remission status in rheumatoid arthritis. Here the authors report that pharmacological inhibition of ABHD11 modulates T-cell effector function via increased 24,25-epoxycholesterol biosynthesis and subsequent liver X receptor activation.

    • Benjamin J. Jenkins
    • Yasmin R. Jenkins
    • Nicholas Jones
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-18
  • A large-scale atom-array architecture enables coherent continuous operation of more than 3,000 physical qubits, where new qubits can be introduced without destroying existing quantum information encoded in the system.

    • Neng-Chun Chiu
    • Elias C. Trapp
    • Mikhail D. Lukin
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 646, P: 1075-1080
  • Immune lymphocyte estimation from nucleotide sequencing (ImmuneLENS) infers B cell and T cell fractions from whole-genome sequencing data. Applied to the 100,000 Genomes Project datasets, circulating T cell fraction provides sex-dependent and prognostic insights in patients.

    • Robert Bentham
    • Thomas P. Jones
    • Nicholas McGranahan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 57, P: 694-705
  • Mixed responses to targeted therapy within a patient are a clinical challenge. Here the authors show that TP53 loss-of-function cooperates with whole genome doubling which increases chromosomal instability. This leads to greater cellular diversity and multiple routes of resistance, which in turn promotes mixed responses to treatment.

    • Sebastijan Hobor
    • Maise Al Bakir
    • Charles Swanton
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-21
  • This study provides the longest annually resolved records of deoxygenation and productivity in the tropical Pacific and highlights the importance of North Atlantic climate oscillations on Pacific oxygen via its impact on the Pacific equatorial shallow overturning.

    • Laetitia E. Pichevin
    • Massimo Bollasina
    • Raja S. Ganeshram
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-11
  • With the generation of large pan-cancer whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing projects, a question remains about how comparable these datasets are. Here, using The Cancer Genome Atlas samples analysed as part of the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes project, the authors explore the concordance of mutations called by whole exome sequencing and whole genome sequencing techniques.

    • Matthew H. Bailey
    • William U. Meyerson
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-27
  • What is the state of trust in scientists around the world? To answer this question, the authors surveyed 71,922 respondents in 68 countries and found that trust in scientists is moderately high.

    • Viktoria Cologna
    • Niels G. Mede
    • Rolf A. Zwaan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Human Behaviour
    Volume: 9, P: 713-730
  • Genome-wide analyses identify 30 independent loci associated with obsessive–compulsive disorder, highlighting genetic overlap with other psychiatric disorders and implicating putative effector genes and cell types contributing to its etiology.

    • Nora I. Strom
    • Zachary F. Gerring
    • Manuel Mattheisen
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 57, P: 1389-1401
  • Nearly half of drifting fish aggregating devices in the Indian and Atlantic oceans becomes abandoned, lost or discarded. However, a substantial portion of this pollution passes near major ports, hence port-based recovery presents a promising strategy to reduce fishing-related marine pollution.

    • Taha Imzilen
    • Christophe Lett
    • David M. Kaplan
    Research
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 5, P: 593-602
  • Computational and machine-learning approaches that integrate genomic and transcriptomic variation from paired primary and metastatic non-small cell lung cancer samples from the TRACERx cohort reveal the role of transcriptional events in tumour evolution.

    • Carlos Martínez-Ruiz
    • James R. M. Black
    • Nicholas McGranahan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 616, P: 543-552
  • An initial draft of the human pangenome is presented and made publicly available by the Human Pangenome Reference Consortium; the draft contains 94 de novo haplotype assemblies from 47 ancestrally diverse individuals.

    • Wen-Wei Liao
    • Mobin Asri
    • Benedict Paten
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 617, P: 312-324
  • Analyses of multiregional tumour samples from 421 patients with non-small cell lung cancer prospectively enrolled to the TRACERx study reveal determinants of tumour evolution and relationships between intratumour heterogeneity and clinical outcome.

    • Alexander M. Frankell
    • Michelle Dietzen
    • Charles Swanton
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 616, P: 525-533
  • How the brain flexibly engages different networks of regions to perform different cognitive processes remains unknown. Here, the authors show changing the geometry of a neural representation to align with different subspaces within a brain region can engage different brainwide networks.

    • Camden J. MacDowell
    • Alexandra Libby
    • Timothy J. Buschman
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-21
  • The visual signals transmitted by the retina to the brain are affected by random drift in eye position, but the impact of this on visual capabilities is not clear. Here, the authors show that the decoding of images from evoked spike trains recorded in the macaque retina improves with fixational eye movements, even when the eye position is unknown.

    • Eric G. Wu
    • Nora Brackbill
    • E. J. Chichilnisky
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-15
  • Mutations in glucocerebrosidase (GCase) cause the lysosomal storage disorder Gaucher’s disease and are the most common risk factor for Parkinson’s disease. Using a fusion protein comprising GCase and a transferrin receptor antibody fragment, the authors show that the transferrin receptor pathway can be therapeutically exploited to both pass the blood-brain barrier and efficiently target lysosomal GCase deficiency.

    • Alexandra Gehrlein
    • Vinod Udayar
    • Ravi Jagasia
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-21
  • A connectome of the right optic lobe from a male fruitfly is presented together with an extensive collection of genetic drivers matched to a comprehensive neuron-type catalogue.

    • Aljoscha Nern
    • Frank Loesche
    • Michael B. Reiser
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 641, P: 1225-1237
  • In this study the authors consider the structural variants (SVs) present within cancer cases of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium. They report hundreds of genes, including known cancer-associated genes for which the nearby presence of a SV breakpoint is associated with altered expression.

    • Yiqun Zhang
    • Fengju Chen
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-14
  • The Mant-ATP assay is a simple and accessible means for rapid quantitative assessment of the ratio of super-relaxed myosin to disordered relaxed myosin. This protocol provides a standardized methodology to perform the assay across a range of systems.

    • Samuel T. M. Jones
    • Flair E. Paradine Cullup
    • Christopher N. Toepfer
    Protocols
    Nature Protocols
    P: 1-31
  • Combination of epidemiology, preclinical models and ultradeep DNA profiling of clinical cohorts unpicks the inflammatory mechanism by which air pollution promotes lung cancer

    • William Hill
    • Emilia L. Lim
    • Charles Swanton
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 616, P: 159-167
  • The GEMINI consortium sequenced 1,000 cases of idiopathic male infertility and identified a plausible Mendelian cause in 20% of cases. The infertility genes can be grouped by expression pattern, facilitating their interpretation and follow-up.

    • Liina Nagirnaja
    • Alexandra M. Lopes
    • Donald F. Conrad
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-18
  • How the cortex generates movement to achieve different tasks remains poorly understood. Here the authors show that the cortex serializes motor control by first performing task-specific computations in dorsal premotor cortex in order to then generate task-independent commands in primary motor cortex.

    • Simon Borgognon
    • Nicolò Macellari
    • Grégoire Courtine
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-18
  • The accretion geometry of X-ray binary Cygnus X-3 is determined here from IXPE observations. X-ray polarization reveals a narrow funnel with reflecting walls, which focuses emission, making Cyg X-3 appear as an ultraluminous X-ray source.

    • Alexandra Veledina
    • Fabio Muleri
    • Silvia Zane
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 8, P: 1031-1046
  • Results of the TRACERx study shed new light into the association between body composition and body weight with survival in individuals with non-small cell lung cancer, and delineate potential biological processes and mediators contributing to the development of cancer-associated cachexia.

    • Othman Al-Sawaf
    • Jakob Weiss
    • Charles Swanton
    Research
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 29, P: 846-858
  • Patient-derived xenografts are important tools for cancer drug development. Here, the authors develop models from 22 non-small cell lung cancer patients. They show genomic differences between models created from different spatial regions of tumours and a bottleneck on model establishment.

    • Robert E. Hynds
    • Ariana Huebner
    • Charles Swanton
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-21
  • Genotype and exome sequencing of 150,000 participants and whole-genome sequencing of 9,950 selected individuals recruited into the Mexico City Prospective Study constitute a valuable, publicly available resource of non-European sequencing data.

    • Andrey Ziyatdinov
    • Jason Torres
    • Roberto Tapia-Conyer
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 622, P: 784-793