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Showing 101–150 of 7183 results
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  • Meningiomas are common brain tumors with variable behavior. This study reveals high STING expression across multiple cell types in the meningioma microenvironment. STING agonism triggers tumor cell death via programmed necrosis and pyroptosis, enhancing survival in preclinical models.

    • Mark W. Youngblood
    • Shashwat Tripathi
    • Amy B. Heimberger
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-19
  • Oligotrophic lakes had less anoxia than eutrophic lakes in the last decade (38% vs 96%), but the fraction of the stratified period with anoxia is projected to increase, reaching around 60% in eutrophic lakes by 2100, under a high-end climate scenario.

    • Lipa G. T. Nkwalale
    • Karsten Rinke
    • Robert Ladwig
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Sustainability
    Volume: 1, P: 1-14
  • Stereospecific coupling of boronic esters catalysed by a copper acetylide complex provides simplification of the synthesis of chiral building blocks for complex molecules.

    • Xieyang Zhang
    • Kyle T. Palka
    • James P. Morken
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 652, P: 359-364
  • 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
  • Many tumours exhibit hypoxia (low oxygen) and hypoxic tumours often respond poorly to therapy. Here, the authors quantify hypoxia in 1188 tumours from 27 cancer types, showing elevated hypoxia links to increased mutational load, directing evolutionary trajectories.

    • Vinayak Bhandari
    • Constance H. Li
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-10
  • The role of the cerebral cortex in cognitive and behavioral tasks is not fully understood.In this study, widefield imaging in freely moving mice navigating an 8-maze reveals global patterns of cortical activity. These cortical states represent multiple aspects of spatial decision making. Anterior and posterior state propagation is common and occurs throughout the maze, consistent with sensorimotor transformation and top-down control, respectively.

    • Samuel P. Haley
    • Daniel A. Surinach
    • Timothy J. Ebner
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-19
  • Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria Syndrome is characterized by premature aging with cardiovascular disease being the main cause of death. Here the authors show that inhibition of the NAT10 enzyme enhances cardiac function and fitness, and reduces age-related phenotypes in a mouse model of premature aging.

    • Gabriel Balmus
    • Delphine Larrieu
    • Stephen P. Jackson
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 9, P: 1-14
  • Understanding deregulation of biological pathways in cancer can provide insight into disease etiology and potential therapies. Here, as part of the PanCancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) consortium, the authors present pathway and network analysis of 2583 whole cancer genomes from 27 tumour types.

    • Matthew A. Reyna
    • David Haan
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-17
  • 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
  • Whole-genome sequencing, transcriptome-wide association and fine-mapping analyses in over 7,000 individuals with critical COVID-19 are used to identify 16 independent variants that are associated with severe illness in COVID-19.

    • Athanasios Kousathanas
    • Erola Pairo-Castineira
    • J. Kenneth Baillie
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 607, P: 97-103
  • Taxanes, such as docetaxel or cabazitaxel, are one of the few chemotherapy options for metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). Here, the authors discover that FOXJ1 modulation of microtubule dynamics regulates resistance to docetaxel in mCRPC.

    • Fang Xie
    • Ada Gjyrezi
    • Steven P. Balk
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-17
  • 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
  • Here the authors compare genetic testing strategies in rare movement disorders, improve diagnostic yield with genome analysis, and establish CD99L2 as an X-linked spastic ataxia gene, showing that CD99L2–CAPN1 signaling disruption likely drives neurodegeneration.

    • Benita Menden
    • Rana D. Incebacak Eltemur
    • Tobias B. Haack
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-21
  • Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis is a fatal human disease driven by the accumulation of apoptosis-resistant fibroblasts that impede homeostatic lung repair. Here, the authors show that elevated BCL-2 expression in fibroblasts drives their survival and senescence prolonging fibrosis in mice, while BCL-2 inhibition reverses persistent fibrosis.

    • Elizabeth F. Redente
    • Tengyao Song
    • David W. H. Riches
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-16
  • Climate change can alter when and how animals grow, breed, and migrate, but it is unclear whether this allows populations to persist. This global study shows that shifts in seasonal timing are key to helping vertebrate species maintain population growth under global warming.

    • Viktoriia Radchuk
    • Carys V. Jones
    • Martijn van de Pol
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-14
  • Reducing China’s CO2 emissions is crucial to achieving global carbon neutrality. This Perspective synthesizes bottom-up and top-down estimates to develop a regional CO2 budget for China and evaluate pathways and uncertainties towards net zero.

    • Zhu Liu
    • Piyu Ke
    • Guangqian Wang
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Earth & Environment
    P: 1-15
  • Khurana et al. share their perspective on healthcare system preparedness in sub-Saharan Africa in light of the recent increase in ischemic heart disease burden, highlighting areas that require intervention to improve the management of this noncommunicable condition in the region.

    • Mark P. Khurana
    • Johan S. Bundgaard
    • Robert N. Peck
    Reviews
    Nature Cardiovascular Research
    Volume: 5, P: 394-403
  • Multi-omics datasets pose major challenges to data interpretation and hypothesis generation owing to their high-dimensional molecular profiles. Here, the authors develop ActivePathways method, which uses data fusion techniques for integrative pathway analysis of multi-omics data and candidate gene discovery.

    • Marta Paczkowska
    • Jonathan Barenboim
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-16
  • As presented at the 2026 ASCO Genitourinary Cancers Symposium, in the phase 2 INDIBLADE trial, induction therapy with ipilimumab and nivolumab followed by consolidating chemoradiotherapy in stage II/III muscle-invasive bladder cancer led to encouraging bladder-intact event-free survival outcomes that were associated with ctDNA clearance.

    • Jan-Jaap J. Mellema
    • Chantal F. Stockem
    • Michiel S. van der Heijden
    Research
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 32, P: 1241-1248
  • 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
  • Affinity-proteomics platforms often yield poorly correlated measurements. Here, the authors show that protein-altering variants drive a portion of inter-platform inconsistency and that accounting for genetic variants can improve concordance of protein measures and phenotypic associations across ancestries.

    • Jayna C. Nicholas
    • Daniel H. Katz
    • Laura M. Raffield
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-21
  • A meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies of type 2 diabetes (T2D) identifies more than 600 T2D-associated loci; integrating physiological trait and single-cell chromatin accessibility data at these loci sheds light on heterogeneity within the T2D phenotype.

    • Ken Suzuki
    • Konstantinos Hatzikotoulas
    • Eleftheria Zeggini
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 627, P: 347-357
  • 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
  • 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
  • TAP-seq is a targeted single-cell RNA-sequencing method that enriches for specified genes of interest, enabling the sensitive and inexpensive detection of CRISPR perturbation effects.

    • Dewi P. I. Moonen
    • Daniel Schraivogel
    • Lars M. Steinmetz
    Protocols
    Nature Protocols
    P: 1-22
  • Target-directed microRNA degradation is driven by the atypical ZSWIM8–CUL3 E3 ubiquitin ligase that uses a two-RNA-factor authentication mechanism to specifically recognize AGO–miRNA–trigger RNA complexes and polyubiquitylate AGO.

    • Jakob Farnung
    • Elena Slobodyanyuk
    • David P. Bartel
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 652, P: 784-793
  • Insulin controls adipocyte metabolism through changes in protein localisation. Here, the authors use cell-wide subcellular proteomics to uncover extensive insulin-regulated protein redistribution and identify C3ORF18 as a regulator of adipocyte insulin sensitivity.

    • Olivia J. Conway
    • Josie A. Christopher
    • Daniel J. Fazakerley
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-17
  • Reconstructing microbial genomes from 820 reef-building corals collected at 99 reefs across 32 islands throughout the Pacific Ocean highlights the importance of conserving coral reefs as vital reservoirs of molecular diversity.

    • Fabienne Wiederkehr
    • Lucas Paoli
    • Shinichi Sunagawa
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 652, P: 686-693
  • The ribosomal decoding center monitors accurate translation of 3-base mRNA codons. Here, the authors use cryo-EM to show how one of the monitoring bases of the ribosome enables a frameshift-inducing tRNA to instead read a 2-base codon.

    • Shruthi Krishnaswamy
    • Shirin Akbar
    • Maria Selmer
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-6
  • There’s an emerging body of evidence to show how biological sex impacts cancer incidence, treatment and underlying biology. Here, using a large pan-cancer dataset, the authors further highlight how sex differences shape the cancer genome.

    • Constance H. Li
    • Stephenie D. Prokopec
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-24
  • Avian influenza jumped from wild birds into dairy cattle. Here, the authors report that two mutations in the viral polymerase helped the virus to quickly adapt to cattle. Mutations increased the polymerase activity and made the virus better at replicating in human cells.

    • Vidhi Dholakia
    • Jessica L. Quantrill
    • Daniel H. Goldhill
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-14
  • 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
  • As presented at the 2026 ASCO Genitourinary Cancers Symposium: results from a phase 1 trial of a first-in-class small-molecule inverse agonist of PPARγ in solid tumors show an acceptable safety profile and preliminary tumor activity in urothelial carcinoma.

    • Matthew D. Galsky
    • Charlene Mantia
    • Xin Gao
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 32, P: 1249-1256
  • Here, the authors show that bile salt hydrolase activity is common among human gut bacterial isolates spanning seven major phyla and identify strains capable of directly dehydrogenating conjugated bile acids via hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases to produce conjugated secondary bile acids, challenging the notion that deconjugation is a prerequisite for further bile acid modifications.

    • Lauren N. Lucas
    • Jillella Mallikarjun
    • Daniel Amador-Noguez
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-16
  • The gut microbiome-kidney crosstalk has been previously linked with metabolic and kidney diseases. Here, the authors show that microbial amino acid metabolism interacts with host kidney function to influence cardiorenal physiology in the early stages, with potential implications for long-term risk of cardiovascular disease in human populations.

    • Kanta Chechi
    • Rima Chakaroun
    • Marc-Emmanuel Dumas
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-21
  • Using active and passive genomic surveillance, researchers observed the rapid spread of high pathogenicity avian influenza H5N1 D1.1 viruses in wild birds during the 2024 migratory season, which coincided with detection in humans, but did not identify mammalian adaptive markers in viruses from wild birds.

    • Walter N. Harrington
    • Anthony Signore
    • Richard J. Webby
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 32, P: 1661-1665