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Showing 101–150 of 1698 results
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  • 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
  • While the conversion of CO2 to high-value products provides a promising means to remove and utilize atmospheric carbon, few materials can do so without wasteful, sacrificial reagents. Here, authors prepare single-atom Co on Bi3O4Br nanosheets as CO2 reduction catalysts using water and light.

    • Jun Di
    • Chao Chen
    • Zheng Liu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 10, P: 1-7
  • Using spin-5/2 nuclei of 173Yb atoms trapped in an optical lattice, a Schrödinger-cat state persists for a coherence time of 1.4 × 103 s. In measuring external magnetic fields, the cat state exhibits a sensitivity approaching the Heisenberg limit.

    • Y. A. Yang
    • W.-T. Luo
    • Z.-T. Lu
    Research
    Nature Photonics
    Volume: 19, P: 89-94
  • The neural circuits that transmit cool signals remain not fully understood. Here, authors identify a spinal circuit in mice that transmits cool sensations from the skin to the brain, revealing a dedicated neural pathway for detecting innocuous cool temperatures.

    • Hankyu Lee
    • Chia Chun Hor
    • Bo Duan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-18
  • Light can provide ultrafast ways of spin manipulation in magnetic materials, but existing methods are limited by long thermal recovery or low temperature. Here, the authors demonstrate ultrafast spin precession via optical charge-transfer processes in exchange-coupled Fe/CoO at room temperature.

    • X. Ma
    • F. Fang
    • G. Lüpke
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 6, P: 1-6
    • X. Z. Zhang
    • C. H. Wan
    • X. Y. Tan
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 501, P: E1-E2
  • The transcription factor CREM is a pivotal regulator of NK cell function, making CREM a valuable target to increase the efficacy of anticancer immunotherapies based on this cell population and chimeric antigen receptors.

    • Hind Rafei
    • Rafet Basar
    • Katayoun Rezvani
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 643, P: 1076-1086
  • Together with a companion paper, the generation of a transcriptomic atlas for the mouse lemur and analyses of example cell types establish this animal as a molecularly tractable primate model organism.

    • Antoine de Morree
    • Iwijn De Vlaminck
    • Mark A. Krasnow
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 644, P: 173-184
  • Wastewater treatment plants are important reservoirs of antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs). Here, the authors analyze ARGs in a global collection of samples from wastewater treatment plants across six continents, providing insights into biotic and abiotic mechanisms that appear to control ARG diversity and distribution.

    • Congmin Zhu
    • Linwei Wu
    • Jizhong Zhou
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-14
  • Alzheimer’s disease is heterogeneous in its neuroimaging and clinical phenotypes. Here the authors present a semi-supervised deep learning method, Smile-GAN, to show four neurodegenerative patterns and two progression pathways providing prognostic and clinical information.

    • Zhijian Yang
    • Ilya M. Nasrallah
    • Balebail Ashok Raj
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 12, P: 1-15
  • Using spin-entangled baryon–antibaryon pairs, the BESIII Collaboration reports on high-precision measurements of potential charge conjugation and parity (CP)-symmetry-violating effects in hadrons.

    • M. Ablikim
    • M. N. Achasov
    • J. H. Zou
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 606, P: 64-69
  • Time delays in the responses of species to one another are expected to occur widely in nature. Using a new theoretical framework, the authors show that these delays can fundamentally shift how different communities respond to perturbations.

    • Yuguang Yang
    • Kevin R. Foster
    • Aming Li
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    Volume: 7, P: 1610-1619
  • Organic materials potentially offer a low-cost, flexible and environment-friendly route to spintronics. Here, the authors demonstrate an organic spin-valve device in which an electric field can control both the magnitude and the sign of magnetoresistance.

    • Dali Sun
    • Mei Fang
    • Jian Shen
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 5, P: 1-6
  • The realization of high-performance flexible perovskite/crystalline-silicon tandem solar cells requires efficient photocarrier transport and mitigation of residual stress. Here, authors reveal the critical role of perovskite phase homogeneity, achieving flexible devices with efficiency of 29.88%.

    • Yinqing Sun
    • Faming Li
    • Mingzhen Liu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-9
  • The joint analysis of datasets from NOvA and T2K, the two currently operating long-baseline neutrino oscillation experiments, provides new constraints related to neutrino masses and fundamental symmetries.

    • S. Abubakar
    • M. A. Acero
    • S. Zsoldos
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 646, P: 818-824
  • Managing power exhaust in fusion reactors is a key challenge, especially in compact designs for cost-effective commercial energy. This study shows how alternative divertor configurations improve exhaust control, enhance stability, absorb transients and enable independent plasma regulation.

    • B. Kool
    • K. Verhaegh
    • V. Zamkovska
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Energy
    Volume: 10, P: 1116-1131
  • Ergodicity can be strongly broken by integrable or many-body localized systems. A new form of weak ergodicity breaking is shown to arise from the presence of special eigenstates in the many-body spectrum akin to quantum scars in chaotic systems.

    • C. J. Turner
    • A. A. Michailidis
    • Z. Papić
    Research
    Nature Physics
    Volume: 14, P: 745-749
  • An ultra-low-loss integrated photonic chip fabricated on a customized multilayer silicon nitride 300-mm wafer platform, coupled over fibre with high-efficiency photon number resolving detectors, is used to generate Gottesman–Kitaev–Preskill qubit states.

    • M. V. Larsen
    • J. E. Bourassa
    • D. H. Mahler
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 642, P: 587-591
  • A genome-wide association study of critically ill patients with COVID-19 identifies genetic signals that relate to important host antiviral defence mechanisms and mediators of inflammatory organ damage that may be targeted by repurposing drug treatments.

    • Erola Pairo-Castineira
    • Sara Clohisey
    • J. Kenneth Baillie
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 591, P: 92-98
  • Symmetry plays a crucial role in defining the band topology. Here, the authors experimentally demonstrate that spacetime inversion symmetry can lead to Stiefel-Whitney topological charges and protect hinge states in an acoustic nodal-line semimetal.

    • Haoran Xue
    • Z. Y. Chen
    • Baile Zhang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-8
  • MRI data from more than 100 studies have been aggregated to yield new insights about brain development and ageing, and create an interactive open resource for comparison of brain structures throughout the human lifespan, including those associated with neurological and psychiatric disorders.

    • R. A. I. Bethlehem
    • J. Seidlitz
    • A. F. Alexander-Bloch
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 604, P: 525-533
  • The authors study CsV3Sb5 by nuclear quadrupole resonance. At ambient pressure, there are two superconducting gaps with line nodes in the smaller one. For pressures above Pc ~ 1.85 GPa, where the charge-density wave phase is completely suppressed, they observe fully-gapped superconductivity with broken rotational symmetry.

    • X. Y. Feng
    • Z. Zhao
    • Guo-qing Zheng
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-8
  • The collective-flow-assisted nuclear shape-imaging method images the nuclear global shape by colliding them at ultrarelativistic speeds and analysing the collective response of outgoing debris.

    • M. I. Abdulhamid
    • B. E. Aboona
    • M. Zyzak
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 635, P: 67-72
  • Projective representations of crystal symmetries are indispensable for understanding artificial crystals. Here, authors establish a unified theory of projective crystal symmetries with time-reversal invariance, and construct models for all 458 projective symmetry algebras for the 17 two-dimensional wallpaper groups.

    • Z. Y. Chen
    • Zheng Zhang
    • Y. X. Zhao
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-9
  • Ecosystems must be able to bounce back from perturbations to persist without species extinctions. This study uses theoretical modelling to show the importance of reactivity—how species respond in the short term to perturbations—for assessing the health of complex ecosystems, revealing that it can be a better predictor of extinction risk than stability.

    • Yuguang Yang
    • Katharine Z. Coyte
    • Aming Li
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-13
  • Single-photon sources with a single-photon efficiency of 0.60, a single-photon purity of 0.975 and an indistinguishability of 0.975 are demonstrated. This is achieved by fabricating elliptical resonators around site-registered quantum dots.

    • Hui Wang
    • Yu-Ming He
    • Jian-Wei Pan
    Research
    Nature Photonics
    Volume: 13, P: 770-775
  • Platinum-group metals widely used in thermal catalysis frequently face deactivation issues. Here, the authors develop an industrial-scale monolithic Pt single-atom catalyst featuring a dynamically low-coordinated, ordered macroporous structure designed to overcome challenges such as Pt sintering, overoxidation, and loss under high-temperature oxidation conditions.

    • Baojian Zhang
    • Rui Liu
    • Yanbing Guo
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-14
  • A quantum two-level system can be coherently excited by a phase-locked dichromatic electromagnetic field. This technique can make single-photon generation more efficient as the pump light does not overlap in frequency with the emitted single photons.

    • Yu-Ming He
    • Hui Wang
    • Jian-Wei Pan
    Research
    Nature Physics
    Volume: 15, P: 941-946
  • This study explores the dynamics of adolescent depression through the lens of network temperature, a novel concept in psychological symptom networks. Researchers observed a decrease in network temperature across adolescence, indicating increased stability and decreased variability of depressive symptoms as adolescents age and with distinct patterns between sexes. This work emphasizes the importance of understanding network dynamics over static measures, offering new insights into the stability and variability of depression symptoms.

    • Poppy Z. Grimes
    • Aja L. Murray
    • Alex S. F. Kwong
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Mental Health
    Volume: 3, P: 548-557
  • The CMS Collaboration reports the study of three simultaneous hard interactions between quarks and gluons in proton–proton collisions. This manifests through the concurrent production of three J/ψ mesons, which consist of a charm-quark–antiquark pair.

    • A. Tumasyan
    • W. Adam
    • W. Vetens
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Physics
    Volume: 19, P: 338-350
  • Analysis of mitochondrial genomes (mtDNA) by using whole-genome sequencing data from 2,658 cancer samples across 38 cancer types identifies hypermutated mtDNA cases, frequent somatic nuclear transfer of mtDNA and high variability of mtDNA copy number in many cancers.

    • Yuan Yuan
    • Young Seok Ju
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 52, P: 342-352
  • 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
  • Neurons receive their input in three dimensions via their dendrites, but how electrical activity in dendrites is organized is unknown. Here, the authors work out the distinct rules that govern activity across this 3D structure in different brain states.

    • Zhenrui Liao
    • Kevin C. Gonzalez
    • Adrian Negrean
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-16
  • Drinking well water with unsafe levels of arsenic is a considerable public health concern, and conventional point-of-use (POU) treatment often falls short in real-world household utilizations. Integrating a solid oxidant into the POU system has proven to be a successful strategy through long-term field deployment, ensuring drinking-water safety.

    • Yanhua Duan
    • Yuqin Sun
    • Yan Zheng
    Research
    Nature Water
    Volume: 2, P: 674-683
  • The third trimester of human gestation is characterised by rapid increases in cortical surface area. Here, authors show that increased rates of cortical expansion are associated with differences in the timing of neurogenesis.

    • G. Ball
    • S. Oldham
    • J. Seidlitz
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-19