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Showing 1–50 of 207 results
Advanced filters: Author: B. M. Hermes Clear advanced filters
  • Hermes is a member of the eukaryotic hAT DNA transposon superfamily. Its transposase forms a ring-shaped tetramer of dimers to provide sufficient number of DNA binding BED domains to locate its transposon left-end in genomic DNA and facilitate the subsequent interaction with the right-end.

    • Laurie Lannes
    • Christopher M. Furman
    • Fred Dyda
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-18
  • Afshar, Dammer et al. identify plasma proteins associated with Alzheimer’s disease brain pathologies and find that many plasma proteins related to cognitive function are not associated with these pathologies.

    • Shiva Afshar
    • Eric B. Dammer
    • Erik C. B. Johnson
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Aging
    Volume: 5, P: 2104-2124
  • V(D)J recombination is mediated by the products of the recombination activation genes, RAG1 and RAG2. DNA binding and cleavage are targeted by recombination sequences that flank each gene segment and are composed of well-conserved heptamer and nonamer sequences separated either by 12 or 23 base pairs. Schatz and co-workers report the crystal structure of the RAG1 nonamer binding domain (NBD) bound to its cognate sequence. The NBD adopts an intertwined dimer that mediates the synapsis of two DNA molecules. Biochemical and FRET experiments support the structural findings and have implications for the regulation of DNA binding and cleavage by RAG1/2.

    • Fang Fang Yin
    • Scott Bailey
    • David G Schatz
    Research
    Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
    Volume: 16, P: 499-508
  • For satellite data, noisy observations can often be ignored in favour of smooth trends and signals. Here, the authors developed a method to quantify the complexity of chlorophyll-α time series on a global scale, which led to the discovery of greater differences among regions than previously recognized.

    • Vitul Agarwal
    • Jonathan Chávez-Casillas
    • Colleen B. Mouw
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-8
  • Enhanced star formation rates in our galaxy during the past 2–4 Gyr is known from survey data, and this is likely linked to Sagittarius dwarf galaxy’s passage. Here, authors show an increase in oxygen (O) abundance during this period, suggesting satellite accretion contribution to the observed O abundances.

    • Tiancheng Sun
    • Shaolan Bi
    • Lifei Ye
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-12
  • A preinfusion circulatory inflammation biomarker-based signature predicts the likelihood of treatment failure in patients with non-Hodgkin lymphoma who were treated with CAR-T cell therapy, with an inflammatory cluster assignment being prognostic of clinical response and survival outcomes.

    • Sandeep S. Raj
    • Teng Fei
    • Roni Shouval
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 31, P: 1183-1194
  • Heart failure is a major cause of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Here, the authors report results of a genome-wide association study meta-analysis, characterizing the role of common genetic variants in heart failure, finding overlap with common cardiovascular risk factors and imaging measures of cardiac structure/function.

    • Michael G. Levin
    • Noah L. Tsao
    • Scott M. Damrauer
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-15
  • A new form of momentum-selective electron energy-loss spectroscopy enables the element-resolved imaging of frequency- and symmetry-dependent vibrational anisotropies with atomic resolution.

    • Xingxu Yan
    • Paul M. Zeiger
    • Xiaoqing Pan
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 645, P: 893-899
  • Heart failure is a complex syndrome that is associated with many different underlying risk factors. Here, to increase power, the authors jointly analyse cases of heart failure of different aetiologies in a genome-wide association study and identify 11 loci of which ten had not been previously reported.

    • Sonia Shah
    • Albert Henry
    • R. Thomas Lumbers
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-12
  • The 20-million-year-old, solar-type star V1298 Tau hosts a multiplanet system. The two outermost planets, gas giants with masses of 0.64 and 1.16 Jupiter masses, respectively, defy current formation models as their mass–radius relationship should be reached much later in the stages of planetary evolution.

    • A. Suárez Mascareño
    • M. Damasso
    • M. Mallonn
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 6, P: 232-240
  • Atmospheric short-wave absorption due to wildfire smoke is caused predominantly by dark brown carbon particles, according to observations from smoke plumes in the United States.

    • Rajan K. Chakrabarty
    • Nishit J. Shetty
    • Rohan Mishra
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Geoscience
    Volume: 16, P: 683-688
  • Mechanically interlocked monolayer and bilayer two-dimensional polymers (2DPs) are synthesized on the water surface by embedding macrocyclic molecules with one and two cavities into the backbones. The resulting bilayer 2DP displays a high effective Young’s modulus, exceeding other reported multilayer 2DPs.

    • Ye Yang
    • André Knapp
    • Xinliang Feng
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Synthesis
    P: 1-10
  • A method combining scanning transmission electron microscopy with high-resolution electron energy-loss spectroscopy enables the observation of magnons and their dispersion, and provides a way to examine magnetic inhomogeneities with nanometre spatial resolution.

    • Demie Kepaptsoglou
    • José Ángel Castellanos-Reyes
    • Quentin M. Ramasse
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 644, P: 83-88
  • The authors present μeV electron spectromicroscopy, a technique that combines free-space light and electron beams to achieve unmatched spatial and spectral resolution. This approach enables detailed investigation of photonic structures, promising advancements in microscopy and quantum optics.

    • Yves Auad
    • Eduardo J. C. Dias
    • Mathieu Kociak
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-6
  • Combining human proteome and transcriptome analyses and Mendelian randomization on a large genetic dataset of HFpEF and HFrEF cases, Rasooly et al. identified 58 potential therapeutic targets specific for either HEpEF or HFrEF and created their therapeutic target profiles.

    • Danielle Rasooly
    • Claudia Giambartolomei
    • Jacob Joseph
    Research
    Nature Cardiovascular Research
    Volume: 4, P: 293-311
  • The largest harmonized proteomic dataset of plasma, serum and cerebrospinal fluid samples across major neurodegenerative diseases reveals both disease-specific and transdiagnostic proteomic signatures, including a robust plasma profile associated with the APOEε4 genotype.

    • Farhad Imam
    • Rowan Saloner
    • Simon Lovestone
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 31, P: 2556-2566
  • This large-scale cross-ancestry genome-wide association study reveals the genetic architecture of serum urate across ancestries and identifies urate-associated diseases and potential targets of urate-lowering drugs.

    • Chamlee Cho
    • Beomsu Kim
    • Hong-Hee Won
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-17
  • Current methods to measure extracellular pH are often limited in resolution and response times. Here the authors present a label-free nanoprobe, consisting of a zwitterionic nanomembrane at the tip of a nanopipette, which enables high spatiotemporal resolution pH measurements and topography-pH 3D mapping in live cancer cells.

    • Yanjun Zhang
    • Yasufumi Takahashi
    • Yuri Korchev
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 10, P: 1-9
  • The extragalactic background light at far-infrared wavelengths comes from optically faint, dusty, star-forming galaxies with star formation rates at the level of a few hundred solar masses per year. These faint submillimetre galaxies are challenging to study individually, but their average properties can be studied using statistics such as the angular power spectrum of the background intensity variations. This study reports excess clustering over the linear prediction at arcminute angular scales in the power spectrum of brightness fluctuations at 250, 350 and 500 micrometres. It is found that submillimetre galaxies are located in dark matter haloes with a minimum mass of log10[Mmin/solar mass]=11.5+0.7-0.2 at 350° micrometres.

    • Alexandre Amblard
    • Asantha Cooray
    • M. Zemcov
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 470, P: 510-512
  • Spectrographically obtained zirconium, niobium and technetium abundances in a sample of low-mass stars of type S are used to determine that, in these stars, heavy elements are synthesized by the slow-neutron-capture process at a temperature of less than about 250 million kelvin, and that the process began one million to three million years ago.

    • P. Neyskens
    • S. Van Eck
    • B. Plez
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 517, P: 174-176
  • Drivers of crop yield variability require quantification, and historical records can help in improving understanding. Here, Webber et al. report that drought stress will remain a key driver of yield losses in wheat and maize across Europe, and benefits from CO2 will be limited in low-yielding years.

    • Heidi Webber
    • Frank Ewert
    • Daniel Wallach
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 9, P: 1-10
  • A new study shows the total global SOC stock of 1 m in the world’s tidal marshes to be 1.44 Pg C. On average, SOC in tidal marshes’ 0–30 cm and 30–100 cm soil layers are estimated at 83.1 Mg C ha−1 and 185.3 Mg C ha−1, respectively.

    • Tania L. Maxwell
    • Mark D. Spalding
    • Thomas A. Worthington
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-16
  • A massive starburst galaxy with 100 billion solar masses of gas is identified at a redshift of 6.34; a ‘maximum starburst’ converts the gas into stars at a rate more than 2,000 times that of the Milky Way.

    • Dominik A. Riechers
    • C. M. Bradford
    • J. Zmuidzinas
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 496, P: 329-333
  • Some animal populations are able to shift their birth sex ratio from the expected unity. This study shows, using fluorescencein situhybridization, that in a captive population of pygmy hippopotamus the males appear to be able to adjust the ratio of X- and Y-chromosome-bearing spermatozoa in their ejaculates.

    • Joseph Saragusty
    • Robert Hermes
    • Thomas B. Hildebrandt
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 3, P: 1-5
  • Recent advances in electron microscopy are shown to allow vibrational spectroscopy at high spatial resolution in a scanning transmission electron microscope, and also to enable the direct detection of hydrogen.

    • Ondrej L. Krivanek
    • Tracy C. Lovejoy
    • Peter A. Crozier
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 514, P: 209-212
  • Analysis of individual-level patient records from Brazil reveals that the extensive shocks in COVID-19 mortality rates are associated with pre-pandemic geographic inequities as well as shortages in healthcare capacity during the pandemic.

    • Andrea Brizzi
    • Charles Whittaker
    • Oliver Ratmann
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 28, P: 1476-1485
  • Quark–antiquark annihilation measurements provide a precise determination of the ratio of down and up antiquarks within protons as a function of momentum, which confirms the asymmetry between the abundance of down and up antiquarks.

    • J. Dove
    • B. Kerns
    • Z. Ye
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 590, P: 561-565
  • Cryo-EM structures of nick forming complexes of the mouse RAG recombinase with DNA substrates demonstrate how the RAG active site is reconfigured for two consecutive DNA cleavage reactions.

    • Xuemin Chen
    • Yanxiang Cui
    • Martin Gellert
    Research
    Nature Structural & Molecular Biology
    Volume: 27, P: 119-126
  • A gB/MF59 vaccine candidate for human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) provided partial protection in organ transplant patients. Here, the authors identify antibody responses in trial participants that target virally infected cells to control cell-to-cell spread of HCMV, providing a potential mechanism for the observed protection.

    • A. C. Gomes
    • I. A. Baraniak
    • M. B. Reeves
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-12
  • Observations at submillimetre and X-ray wavelengths show that rapid star formation was common in the host galaxies of active galactic nuclei when the Universe was 2–6 Gyr old, but that the most vigorous star formation is not observed around powerful black holes, thereby confirming a key prediction of models in which an active galactic nucleus expels the interstellar medium of its host galaxy.

    • M. J. Page
    • M. Symeonidis
    • M. Zemcov
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 485, P: 213-216