News and Views Q&A in 2008

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  • Organisms often respond in complex and unpredictable ways to stimuli that cause disease or injury. By measuring and mathematically modelling changes in the levels of products of metabolism found in biological fluids and tissues, metabonomics offers fresh insight into the effects of diet, drugs and disease.

    • Jeremy K. Nicholson
    • John C. Lindon
    News and Views Q&A
  • Ten years after the term metagenomics was coined, the approach continues to gather momentum. This culture-independent, molecular way of analysing environmental samples of cohabiting microbial populations has opened up fresh perspectives on microbiology.

    • Philip Hugenholtz
    • Gene W. Tyson
    News and Views Q&A
  • Optical lattices have rapidly become a favoured tool of atomic and condensed-matter physicists. These crystals made of light can be used to trap atoms at very low temperatures, creating a workshop in which to pore over and tinker with fundamental properties of matter.

    • Markus Greiner
    • Simon Fölling
    News and Views Q&A
  • Most polymers consist of long molecular chains made up of many units connected by covalent bonds — but supramolecular polymers are different. The strikingly dynamic properties of these materials arise from the reversible bonds that hold their chains together, and open up the prospect of many new applications.

    • Tom F. A. de Greef
    • E. W. Meijer
    News and Views Q&A
  • A protein called small ubiquitin-related modifier (SUMO) can be coupled to other proteins to control their function. This SUMOylation has been implicated in the regulation of a host of cellular processes, and is essential for the health, and even the survival, of most organisms.

    • Erik Meulmeester
    • Frauke Melchior
    News and Views Q&A
  • Earth's magnetic field is unstable. Not only does it vary in intensity, but from time to time it flips, with the poles reversing sign. Much of this behaviour remains a mystery, but a combination of geomagnetic observations with theoretical studies has been providing enlightenment.

    • David Gubbins
    News and Views Q&A
  • Molecular cell biology has long been dominated by a protein-centric view. But the emergence of small, non-coding RNAs challenges this perception. These plentiful RNAs regulate gene expression at different levels, and have essential roles in health and disease.

    • Helge Großhans
    • Witold Filipowicz
    News and Views Q&A
  • Hundreds of planets are known to orbit stars other than the Sun, and unprecedented observations of their atmospheres and structures are being made. It's an invaluable opening for understanding the planets' diverse natures, the formation of our Solar System, and the possibility of habitable planets beyond our home.

    • Dimitar D. Sasselov
    News and Views Q&A