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Volume 399 Issue 6735, 3 June 1999

Opinion

  • A decision to expose Germany's science to international scrutiny has yielded a constructive appraisal. Although such evaluation can have its pitfalls, other countries should follow suit.

    Opinion

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News

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News Profile

  • The Canadian Institute for Advanced Research promotes excellence in research. But as a funding agreement with the government is set to expire, it must secure a firm financial base if this success is to continue.

    • Colin Macilwain
    News Profile
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News in Brief

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News

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Correspondence

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News & Views

  • Theory predicts that socially dominant females should produce more sons than daughters. But when times are hard, the higher growth rate of males means that proportionately more will die during development. New evidence shows that, in red deer, both of these effects operate in concert.

    • Andrew Cockburn
    News & Views
  • The first organic light-emitting diodes appeared on the scene less than ten years ago. Since that time remarkable advances in device lifetime and performance means that flat-panel light-emitting displays are now commercially viable.

    • Karl Ziemelis
    News & Views
  • When cytochromec, which is normally localized in the mitochondria, escapes into the cytosol, it helps to activate the caspases (killer proteases) leading to cell death. New evidence indicates that the key to release of cytochrome c is the so-called voltage-dependent ion channel. Proteins that promote apoptosis seem to bind to this channel, causing it to change shape so that cytochrome ccan pass through.

    • Jean-Claude Martinou
    News & Views
  • Polar ice cores contain records of Earth's climate -- the deeper the core, the further back in time the records go. Early last year a drilling project at the Vostok station in Antarctica reached a depth of 3,623 m or around 420,000 years ago. That means that the ice-core climate record now extends back across four glacial-interglacial cycles.

    • Bernhard Stauffer
    News & Views
  • To insert their genetic material into a host's DNA, retroviruses use an enzyme called integrase. But integrase leaves a gap around the inserted sequence around the host's DNA -- a gap that must be repaired before DNA synthesis can proceed. New work indicates that, unexpectedly, one of the host's damage-sensing systems involving the DNA-dependent protein kinase may be required.

    • John M. Coffin
    • Naomi Rosenberg
    News & Views
  • Many viruses are transmitted between plants in the saliva of sap-sucking insects. But it's a risky business, and billions of virus particles never make it. To increase its chances of survival, one virus, the tomato yellow leaf curl virus, has been found to take advantage of a bacterium that is carried by its insect host.

    • Mark Gibbs
    News & Views
  • The discovery that the general magnetic field of the Sun has doubled since 1900 ties in with the well-known doubling of the number of sunspots this century, and reinforces the likelihood that the Sun's activity has influenced the general warming of our climate.

    • E. N. Parker
    News & Views
  • On the face of it, it seems surprising that thermophilic enzymes should lose or have reduced catalytic activity at the lower temperatures at which other enzymes function perfectly well. At least in one example, an explanation seems to lie in the reduced quantum-mechanical tunnelling behaviour that results from the thermophilic enzyme's lesser flexibility at these lower temperatures.

    • Dagmar Ringe
    • Gregory A. Petsko
    News & Views
  • The neocortex is a thick, laminated sheet of neurons found in the mammalian brain. The question of how it evolved is interesting because reptiles and other vertebrates have nothing quite like the neocortex, yet they evolved from the same early amniotes (stem reptiles) as mammals. Fresh ideas were brought to bear on the issue at a meeting on the evolutionary and developmental biology of the cerebral cortex.

    • Jon H. Kaas
    • Anton Reiner
    News & Views
  • Automatic electrical stimulation of the motor system could relieve the boredom of joggers and assembly-line workers, and highly selective stimulation could be used to train typists and pianists. The only downside, suggests Daedalus, might be an unwelcome anaesthesia.

    • David Jones
    News & Views
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Scientific Correspondence

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Book Review

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Correction

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Book Review

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Article

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Letter

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New on the Market

  • Two kits making it easier to see staining with mouse antibodies against a background of mouse tissue, and ELISA assays for insulin and FK506 in an immunologically inclined selection.

    New on the Market
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