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Showing 101–150 of 201607 results
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  • Earth’s core dynamo, which produces the magnetic field, may have been influenced by spatial variations in heat flux across the core–mantle boundary, according to combined palaeomagnetic datasets and geodynamo simulations.

    • A. J. Biggin
    • C. J. Davies
    • R. K. Bono
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Geoscience
    P: 1-8
  • At single-cell resolution, Tarkhov et al. delineate stochastic and co-regulated components of epigenetic aging, revealing a simultaneous loss of regulation at the epigenetic and transcriptional levels in aging.

    • Andrei E. Tarkhov
    • Thomas Lindstrom-Vautrin
    • Vadim N. Gladyshev
    Research
    Nature Aging
    Volume: 4, P: 854-870
  • Negative regulator of thermotolerance 1 (NAT1) is identified as a negative regulator of thermotolerance in rice through the NAT1–bHLH110–CER1/CER1L module. Modifying NAT1 by targeted gene editing increases wax deposition and enhances thermotolerance in rice.

    • Hai-Ping Lu
    • Xue-Huan Liu
    • Jian-Xiang Liu
    Research
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 57, P: 427-440
  • In one-shot perceptual learning, what we see can be dramatically altered by a single past experience. Using psychophysics, fMRI, iEEG, and DNNs, the authors identify neural and computational mechanisms underlying this remarkable ability in humans.

    • Ayaka Hachisuka
    • Jonathan D. Shor
    • Biyu J. He
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-21
  • Estimating respiratory infection rates in the community is challenging as testing is usually limited to people with more severe infections. Here, the authors develop a statistical method to estimate infection rates using data from a community survey that performed lateral flow testing in England and Scotland in 2023-24.

    • Martyn Fyles
    • Jonathon Mellor
    • Thomas Ward
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-15
  • The study used snMultiome-seq to map gene expression and chromatin accessibility in human central amygdala cells from people with and without AUD. Here, the authors show that inhibitory neurons are most affected, with KLF16-driven regulatory changes and AUD-risk variants disrupting gene activity.

    • Che Yu Lee
    • Ahyeon Hwang
    • Matthew J. Girgenti
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-17
  • Terahertz microspectroscopic imaging at subgap millielectronvolt energies of a two-dimensional superfluid plasmon in few-layer Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x is demonstrated, allowing the spatial resolution of its deeply subdiffractive terahertz electrodynamics.

    • A. von Hoegen
    • T. Tai
    • N. Gedik
    Research
    Nature
    P: 1-6
  • Pseudaminic acids (Pse) are a family of carbohydrates found within bacterial lipopolysaccharides, capsular polysaccharides and glycoproteins. Now, monoclonal antibodies have been developed that recognize diverse Pse across several bacterial species, enabling mapping of the Pse glycoproteome and demonstrating therapeutic potential against multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumanii in in vitro and in vivo infection models.

    • Arthur H. Tang
    • Niccolay Madiedo Soler
    • Richard J. Payne
    Research
    Nature Chemical Biology
    P: 1-12
  • The Ocean Equity Index provides a systematic, twelve-criteria framework to assess and improve equity in ocean initiatives, projects and policies, producing structured data that guide evidence-based decisions and support more equitable outcomes for coastal communities and ecosystems.

    • Jessica L. Blythe
    • Joachim Claudet
    • Noelia Zafra-Calvo
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 650, P: 123-128
  • The phase 2/3 DEVOTE trial demonstrated that high-dose nusinersen significantly improved motor function and was safe in patients with spinal muscular atrophy, compared with a matched sham control.

    • Richard S. Finkel
    • Thomas O. Crawford
    • Stephanie Fradette
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    P: 1-10
  • Authors report drug repurposing screens against O-GlcNAc cycling enzymes, finding kinase inhibitors that act as splicing modulators to disrupt O-GlcNAc homeostasis and downregulate OGT and OGA. These findings reveal splicing modulator chemotypes and approaches to disrupt O-GlcNAc homeostasis.

    • Steven S. Cheng
    • Alison C. Mody
    • Christina M. Woo
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-17
  • The life expectancy of people living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy is close to that of the general population but wider impacts of living with HIV are not well described. Here, the authors investigate the causal effect of receiving an HIV diagnosis on labour market outcomes using data from the Netherlands.

    • Andrei Tuiu
    • Esmée Zwiers
    • Marc van der Valk
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-13
  • Seed size plays an important role in determining soybean yield. Here, the authors report GmSW17, encoding a homolog of Arabidopsis UBP22 that plays a role in deubiquitination, as a positive regulator of soybean seed width and seed weight through inhibition of the G1-to-S transition by interacting with GmSGF11 and GmENY2.

    • Shan Liang
    • Zongbiao Duan
    • Zhixi Tian
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-14
  • Excessive antimicrobial use can increase the threat of antimicrobial resistance; however, how such use is embedded in global trade is still unclear. Authors here estimate global livestock antimicrobial footprints through global supply chains to better understand and manage antimicrobial use.

    • Junya Zhang
    • Baiwen Ma
    • Heran Zheng
    Research
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 9, P: 65-76
  • The STAR experiment at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory demonstrates evidence of spin correlations in \(\Lambda \bar{\Lambda }\) hyperon pairs inherited from virtual spin-correlated strange quark–antiquark pairs during QCD confinement.

    • B. E. Aboona
    • J. Adam
    • M. Zyzak
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 650, P: 65-71
  • Polyamides (PAs) or nylons are types of plastics with wide applications, but due to their accumulation in the environment, strategies for their deconstruction are of interest. Here, the authors screen 40 potential nylon-hydrolyzing enzymes (nylonases) using a mass spectrometry-based approach and identify a thermostabilized N-terminal nucleophile hydrolase as the most promising for further development, as well as crucial targets for progressing PA6 enzymatic depolymerization.

    • Elizabeth L. Bell
    • Gloria Rosetto
    • Gregg T. Beckham
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-17
  • Many biological systems appear to organize their dynamics close to a critical point. Now it is shown that the protein array mediating Escherichia coli chemosensing is near-critical, enabling large signal amplification without compromising response speeds.

    • Johannes M. Keegstra
    • Fotios Avgidis
    • Thomas S. Shimizu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Physics
    P: 1-9
  • Irregular terrains challenge users of classic prosthetic feet. Here, the authors introduce an adaptive prosthetic foot that equalizes ground contact pressure and reduces compensatory strategies and gait asymmetries compared with a traditional carbon fibre foot.

    • Anna Pace
    • Hristo Dimitrov
    • Manuel G. Catalano
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-16
  • The authors report long-lived pump-induced conductivity suppression in metallic Ti3C2 MXenes using ultrafast terahertz and reflectance spectroscopy. The effect is attributed to strong photothermal heating and slow heat dissipation.

    • Wenhao Zheng
    • Hugh Ramsden
    • Hai I. Wang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-8
  • The authors report the experimental observation of room-temperature condensation of exciton polaritons in quasi-2D layered crystals of halide perovskite, integrated into an open optical microcavity. These materials combine van-der-Waals properties with dominant exciton physics at room temperature.

    • Marti Struve
    • Christoph Bennenhei
    • Martin Esmann
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-7
  • Muscularis macrophages, housekeepers of enteric nervous system integrity and intestinal homeostasis, modulate α-synuclein pathology and neurodegeneration in models of Parkinson’s disease, and understanding the accompanying mechanisms could pave the way for early-stage biomarkers.

    • Sebastiaan De Schepper
    • Viktoras Konstantellos
    • Tim Bartels
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-11
  • A large cross-population atlas of gene–environment interactions reveals how age, sex and lifestyle shape genetic effects, heritability, prediction accuracy and disease biology, with implications for personalized medicine and drug development.

    • Shinichi Namba
    • Kyuto Sonehara
    • Yukinori Okada
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-10
  • A spin-wave ladder architecture based on single-crystal yttrium iron garnet requiring only one external magnetic bias for manufacturing tunable compact filters using modern micromachining fabrication methods is described, demonstrating applications in future communications systems.

    • Connor Devitt
    • Sudhanshu Tiwari
    • Sunil A. Bhave
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-7
  • National parochialism is the tendency to cooperate more with people of the same nation. In a 42-nations study, the authors show that national parochialism is a pervasive phenomenon, present to a similar degree across all the studied nations, and occurs both when decisions are private or public.

    • Angelo Romano
    • Matthias Sutter
    • Daniel Balliet
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 12, P: 1-8
  • Floquet engineering is often limited by weak light–matter coupling and heating. Now it is shown that exciton-driven fields in monolayer semiconductors produce stronger, longer-lived Floquet effects and reveal hybridization linked to excitonic phases.

    • Vivek Pareek
    • David R. Bacon
    • Keshav M. Dani
    Research
    Nature Physics
    P: 1-9
  • Optical spin orientation of itinerant ferromagnets in twisted MoTe2 homobilayers is demonstrated, enabling control of topological Chern numbers with circularly polarized light.

    • O. Huber
    • K. Kuhlbrodt
    • T. Smoleński
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 649, P: 1153-1158
  • Sleep-active physiological processes enhance overnight glymphatic clearance of Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers into plasma in humans, supporting the critical role of glymphatic function in Alzheimer’s pathophysiology and its potential as a therapeutic target.

    • Paul Dagum
    • Donald L. Elbert
    • Jeffrey J. Iliff
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-17
  • Chronic inflammation hinders the repair of muscle injury, and macrophages are known to play roles in reparative processes. Here the authors show in an nlrc3l-mutant zebrafish model, chronic inflammation drives repression of a mannose-receptor-dependent reparative pathway in macrophages and results in the loss of discrete macrophage states.

    • Caroline G. Spencer
    • Matthew Hamilton
    • Celia E. Shiau
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-22
  • The rapid growth of urban lighting infrastructure has increased outdoor night light exposure and potential sentimental risks among residents. This study provides data-driven insights into how light wavelength affects expressed sentiment, informing urban lighting design to promote public health.

    • Chaoqun Zhang
    • Mei Meng
    • Qiao Wang
    Research
    Nature Cities
    P: 1-12
  • European regions with the highest life expectancy, located in central and northern Spain, northern Italy, and Switzerland, continue to push the boundaries of human longevity, suggesting that there is still room for further lifespan extension.

    • Florian Bonnet
    • Ina Alliger
    • Pavel Grigoriev
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-13
  • In this randomized phase 3 trial, patients with treatment-naive stage III–IV nonsmall cell lung cancer who received sintilimab or pembrolizumab in combination with chemotherapy early in the day (before 15:00 h) experienced longer progression-free survival compared with those receiving late time-of-day infusions.

    • Zhe Huang
    • Liang Zeng
    • Yongchang Zhang
    Research
    Nature Medicine
    P: 1-8
  • Human genetic loci that associate with composition of the oral microbiome are identified using saliva-derived DNA, where the same host genetics also shapes oral health and genetic variation in oral bacteria.

    • Nolan Kamitaki
    • Robert E. Handsaker
    • Po-Ru Loh
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-11