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Showing 1–50 of 670 results
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  • The longevity of leaves determines the overall duration of photosynthesis for plants. This study suggests that climate change drives leaf longevity convergence toward intermediate ranges, which, by altering leaf traits and enhancing photosynthetic capacity, strengthens ecosystem stability and is closely linked to vegetation diversity.

    • Meimei Xue
    • Xueqin Yang
    • Chaoyang Wu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-13
  • Mouse models demonstrate that vagal sensory neurons transmit signals from lung adenocarcinoma to the brain, increasing sympathetic efferent activity in the tumour microenvironment and thereby creating a immunologically permissive environment for tumour growth.

    • Haohan K. Wei
    • Chuyue D. Yu
    • Chengcheng Jin
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-10
  • 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
  • The authors report superconducting topological surface states (TSS) on MBE-grown Fe(Te,Se) films by high-resolution laser-ARPES. Near the FeTe limit, the surface state disappears due to an electron-correlation-driven topological transition associated with decoherence of the dxy-orbital-derived bands.

    • Haoran Lin
    • Christopher L. Jacobs
    • Shuolong Yang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-8
  • Murphy et al. reveal a unifying pathogenetic mechanism according to which diverse mutations in the muscle-specific ribosomal protein RPL3L cause severe neonatal dilated cardiomyopathy, establishing a framework for interpreting the growing spectrum of RPL3L variants.

    • Michael R. Murphy
    • Mythily Ganapathi
    • Xuebing Wu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Cardiovascular Research
    Volume: 5, P: 51-66
  • ZIP8 loss decreases intracellular zinc uptake in macrophages in response to bacterial pneumonia and impairs phagolysosomal function and bacterial clearance. Despite ongoing zinc dyshomeostasis, prolonged butyrate supplementation corrects bacterial clearance and improves survival.

    • Deandra R. Smith
    • Sabah Haq
    • Daren L. Knoell
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Biology
    P: 1-17
  • Extreme heat events are increasing due to climate change, which may reduce insect abundance. This study suggests that insect pests can buffer the impacts of heat waves via fine-scale behavioural thermoregulation, markedly promoting pest population growth and aggravating crop yield losses globally.

    • Gang Ma
    • Sylvain Pincebourde
    • Chun-Sen Ma
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-14
  • Lipid nanoparticles can serve as carriers for RNA therapies, enabling efficient encapsulation, cellular uptake and controlled protein expression. This Review explores their design principles, key components, physicochemical properties and therapeutic potential, highlighting how formulation parameters influence delivery performance.

    • Mariah L. Arral
    • Kathryn A. Whitehead
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Bioengineering
    P: 1-18
  • Understanding how cells differentiate to their final fates is a fundamental biological problem. Here, authors introduce MultiVeloVAE, a probabilistic framework that models gene expression and chromatin accessibility mechanistically, integrates multiple samples, accounts for bifurcations, and enables statistical testing over time.

    • Chen Li
    • Yichen Gu
    • Joshua D. Welch
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-24
  • Synovial sarcoma (SS) is a difficult-to-treat cancer, driven by the fusion oncoprotein SS18::SSX. SS18::SSX alters the BAF (mammalian SWI/SNF) chromatin remodelling complex to create an oncogenic transcriptome. Here, the authors identify SS18::SSX-driven SMARCE1 SUMOylation as a therapeutic vulnerability in SS and show that SUMOylation inhibition stabilizes the cBAF complex, inducing cell death and sensitization of SS to chemotherapy.

    • Konstantinos V. Floros
    • Carter K. Fairchild Jr.
    • Anthony C. Faber
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-26
  • High-resolution ALMA observations reveal a gravitationally bound septuple protostar system in NGC 6334IN, formed through disk fragmentation. This discovery sheds light on the formation of extreme high-order multiplicity in massive stellar clusters.

    • Shanghuo Li
    • Henrik Beuther
    • Junhao Liu
    Research
    Nature Astronomy
    Volume: 9, P: 1833-1844
  • Slow bimolecular recombination in three-dimensional halide perovskites represents a fundamental limitation for electroluminescence efficiency. Using time-resolved spectroscopy Xinget al. demonstrate that this limitation can be overcome by employing van-der-Waals-coupled multiple quantum well structures.

    • Guichuan Xing
    • Bo Wu
    • Wei Huang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 8, P: 1-9
  • China’s restoration policies since 1980 turned its land sector from a carbon source to a sink of 175.9 (143.8–205.8) Tg C yr¹ (2001–2020), with over 70% of this due to land management, highlighting its role in carbon neutrality.

    • Chao Yue
    • Mengyang Xu
    • Shilong Piao
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-15
  • Experimental measurements of high-order out-of-time-order correlators on a superconducting quantum processor show that these correlators remain highly sensitive to the quantum many-body dynamics in quantum computers at long timescales.

    • Dmitry A. Abanin
    • Rajeev Acharya
    • Nicholas Zobrist
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 646, P: 825-830
  • The flagship paper of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes Consortium describes the generation of the integrative analyses of 2,658 cancer whole genomes and their matching normal tissues across 38 tumour types, the structures for international data sharing and standardized analyses, and the main scientific findings from across the consortium studies.

    • Lauri A. Aaltonen
    • Federico Abascal
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 578, P: 82-93
  • Typical quantum error correcting codes assign fixed roles to the underlying physical qubits. Now the performance benefits of alternative, dynamic error correction schemes have been demonstrated on a superconducting quantum processor.

    • Alec Eickbusch
    • Matt McEwen
    • Alexis Morvan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Physics
    Volume: 21, P: 1994-2001
  • The authors present SVclone, a computational method for inferring the cancer cell fraction of structural variants from whole-genome sequencing data.

    • Marek Cmero
    • Ke Yuan
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-15
  • In this work, researchers address a key question for maternal group B Streptococcus (GBS) vaccine assessment: What newborn antibody concentrations protect against invasive infant GBS disease? They present serologic thresholds by age at onset and serotype based on a large U.S. case-control study.

    • Julia C. Rhodes
    • Rebecca Kahn
    • Stephanie J. Schrag
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-16
  • The development of a desktop nanofabrication tool allowing high-resolution patterning and high-throughput synthesis is a long-standing goal in many nanoscience fields. Here, the authors report a system that can write arbitrary patterns composed of diffraction-unlimited features over square centimetre areas.

    • Xing Liao
    • Keith A. Brown
    • Chad A. Mirkin
    Research
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 4, P: 1-7
  • Analysis of cancer genome sequencing data has enabled the discovery of driver mutations. Here, as part of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium the authors present DriverPower, a software package that identifies coding and non-coding driver mutations within cancer whole genomes via consideration of mutational burden and functional impact evidence.

    • Shimin Shuai
    • Federico Abascal
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-12
  • It remains to be seen if high-Tc superconductors rely on similar Fermi-surface instabilities as their BCS counterparts. Miao et al. study the high-Tc compound LiFe1−xCoxAs with high-resolution ARPES and find a robust gap with Co doping that suggests the order parameter is not tied to such instabilities.

    • H. Miao
    • T. Qian
    • H. Ding
    Research
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 6, P: 1-6
  • Colour code on a superconducting qubit quantum processor is demonstrated, reporting above-breakeven performance and logical error scaling with increased code size by a factor of 1.56 moving from distance-3 to distance-5 code.

    • N. Lacroix
    • A. Bourassa
    • K. J. Satzinger
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 645, P: 614-619
  • 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
  • Analyses of 2,658 whole genomes across 38 types of cancer identify the contribution of non-coding point mutations and structural variants to driving cancer.

    • Esther Rheinbay
    • Morten Muhlig Nielsen
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 578, P: 102-111
  • 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
  • Precipitation is a key driver of plant growth. Here the authors integrate ground-based observations, remote sensing and process-based models to disentangle the relative contribution of preceding-year and current-year precipitation on plant productivity and identify its predictors across biomes.

    • Lei He
    • Jian Wang
    • Zhao-Liang Li
    Research
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    Volume: 9, P: 1800-1811
  • Whole-genome sequencing data for 2,778 cancer samples from 2,658 unique donors across 38 cancer types is used to reconstruct the evolutionary history of cancer, revealing that driver mutations can precede diagnosis by several years to decades.

    • Moritz Gerstung
    • Clemency Jolly
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 578, P: 122-128
  • Cancers evolve as they progress under differing selective pressures. Here, as part of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium, the authors present the method TrackSig the estimates evolutionary trajectories of somatic mutational processes from single bulk tumour data.

    • Yulia Rubanova
    • Ruian Shi
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-12
  • A large genome-wide association study of more than 5 million individuals reveals that 12,111 single-nucleotide polymorphisms account for nearly all the heritability of height attributable to common genetic variants.

    • Loïc Yengo
    • Sailaja Vedantam
    • Joel N. Hirschhorn
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 610, P: 704-712
  • The understanding of the reemergence of pressure induced superconductivity in alkali-metal intercalated FeSe is hampered by sample complexities. Here, Sun et al. report the electronic properties of (Li1–xFe x )OHFe1–ySe single crystal not only in the reemerged superconducting state but also in the normal state.

    • J. P. Sun
    • P. Shahi
    • J.-G. Cheng
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 9, P: 1-7
  • Vaccination provides protection from COVID-19, but optimization in design and route is an ever-ongoing process. Here the authors pursue an open-label, multi-arm phase I clinical trial to report the safety of a multi-valent, aerosol vaccine administered via inhalation, as well as superior mucosal immunity induced by ChAd over HuAd vectors.

    • Mangalakumari Jeyanathan
    • Sam Afkhami
    • Zhou Xing
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-21
  • Viral pathogen load in cancer genomes is estimated through analysis of sequencing data from 2,656 tumors across 35 cancer types using multiple pathogen-detection pipelines, identifying viruses in 382 genomic and 68 transcriptome datasets.

    • Marc Zapatka
    • Ivan Borozan
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 52, P: 320-330
  • In somatic cells the mechanisms maintaining the chromosome ends are normally inactivated; however, cancer cells can re-activate these pathways to support continuous growth. Here, the authors characterize the telomeric landscapes across tumour types and identify genomic alterations associated with different telomere maintenance mechanisms.

    • Lina Sieverling
    • Chen Hong
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-13
  • 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