Table of contents
Volume 432 Number 7015 pp257-419
(this content only available online) indicates content that is available online only
Editorials
Clean, green conferencing p257
Big conferences are good for science. But because many researchers fly in, these events are also bad for the environment. What can be done to redress the balance?
doi:10.1038/432257a
A chance for growth p257
With the right safeguards, a national institute could give a much-needed boost to agricultural research in the United States.
doi:10.1038/432257b
News
Campaign to fight malaria hit by surge in demand for medicine p259
Drug shortfall undermining efforts to reduce death toll.
David Cyranoski
doi:10.1038/432259a
Europe's stem-cell workers pull together p260
Policy changes help to push collaborative network.
Federica Castellani
doi:10.1038/432260a
Grade expectations for German research institutes p260
Rating system set to score all science centres.
Quirin Schiermeier
doi:10.1038/432260b
WHO calls for vaccine boost to prepare for flu pandemic p261
Officials stress need for urgent action.
Erika Check
doi:10.1038/432261a
Grant-transfer plan paves the way for European mobility p261
Agreement allows scientists to take funding abroad
Barbara Simm
doi:10.1038/432261b
Molecular biology enjoys double celebration p262
Anniversaries mark European success stories.
Markus Wagner
doi:10.1038/432262a
Stalemate over fusion project threatens to provoke split p262
Europe considers going it alone with plans to build ITER.
Jim Giles
doi:10.1038/432262b
Unanimous vote approves tweak to smallpox genome p263
Virus may soon be made to glow green to ease research.
Erika Check
doi:10.1038/432263a
Britain to combat conflicts of interest in drug regulators p263
Tough measures to protect patient interests proposed by UK government.
Jim Giles
doi:10.1038/432263b
News in brief p264
doi:10.1038/432264a
Correction p264
doi:10.1038/432264b
News Features
Benoit Mandelbrot: Father of fractals p266
Benoit Mandelbrot is one of the twentieth century's best known mathematicians. So why, in the twilight of an extraordinary academic career, is he still angry with many of his colleagues? Jim Giles investigates.
doi:10.1038/432266a
Emissions trading: The carbon game p268
Companies are already swapping money for the right to emit more pollution, and cashing in on projects designed to suck up greenhouse gases. As this market booms, will it actually help to cut down on emissions? Michael Hopkin reports.
doi:10.1038/432268a
Correspondence
Let's be sensible about public participation p271
We must face the fact that science — like art — is not a democratic activity.
Dick Taverne
doi:10.1038/432271a
Public participation: let the people pick projects p271
Rupert Sheldrake
doi:10.1038/432271b
Bible study led Newton to scientific discoveries p271
Erwin Heberle-Bors
doi:10.1038/432271c
Commentary
Time for 'enlightened moderation' p273
A call for Islamic nations to renew and reaffirm their commitment to science.
doi:10.1038/432273a
Books and Arts
Immune to the facts p275
A flawed paper on autism compromised MMR vaccination and public health.
Michael B. A. Oldstone reviews MMR Science & Fiction: Exploring A Vaccine Crisis by Richard Horton and MMR and Autism: What Parents Need to Know by Michael Fitzpatrick
doi:10.1038/432275a
Across the border p276
David M. Lodge reviews Alien Species and Evolution: The Evolutionary Ecology of Exotic Plants, Animals, Microbes, and Interacting Native Species by George W. Cox
doi:10.1038/432276a
And all was light p277
Alan Packer reviews The Newtonian Moment: Science and the Making of Modern Culture Curated by Mordechai Feingold
doi:10.1038/432277a
A walk on the wild side p277
Frank Close reviews Out of this World: Colliding Universes, Branes, Strings, and Other Wild Ideas of Modern Physics by Stephen Webb
doi:10.1038/432277b
Essay
ConceptGoing against the flow p279
Ion transport: the division between active transporters and passive channels is beginning to blur
Louis J. DeFelice
doi:10.1038/432279a
News and Views
Neurobiology: At the root of brain cancer p281
A small subpopulation of cells, 'brain-cancer stem cells', has been identified in humans. They have the exclusive ability to drive tumour formation, and could prove an effective target for therapies.
Michael F. Clarke
doi:10.1038/432281a
Chemistry: Towards tomorrow's catalysts p282
The ability to predict and modify the rate-determining steps in chemical reactions would be a boon in designing better catalysts. Technical innovations in computer simulations bring that goal closer.
Charles T. Campbell
doi:10.1038/432282a
Evolutionary biology: Butterfly mimics of ants p283
Large blue butterflies are notable for their rarity and ability to dupe ants, and they are endangered. A genetic reconstruction of how social parasitism evolved among them will overturn conservation priorities.
Jeremy A. Thomas and Josef Settele
doi:10.1038/432283a
100 and 50 years ago p284
doi:10.1038/432284a
Nonlinear optics: Disorder is the new order p285
Pure, perfectly regular crystals were believed to be essential for the efficient operation of nonlinear optical devices. Surprisingly, it now seems that disordered materials might actually perform better.
Sergey E. Skipetrov
doi:10.1038/432285a
Structural biology: Ion pump in the movies p286
Insight into how membrane ion pumps work requires structural snapshots of various stages of their catalytic cycle. Now a fifth freeze-frame image of a calcium pump in action adds to a striking body of work on this protein.
C. Roy D. Lancaster
doi:10.1038/432286a
Brief Communications
Historical phenology: Grape ripening as a past climate indicator p289
Summer temperature variations are reconstructed from harvest dates since 1370.
Isabelle Chuine, Pascal Yiou, Nicolas Viovy, Bernard Seguin, Valérie Daux and Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie
doi:10.1038/432289a
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (233K) | Supplementary information
Climate: Large-scale warming is not urban p290
David E. Parker
doi:10.1038/432290a
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (195K)
Atmospheric science: Early peak in Antarctic oscillation index p290
Julie M. Jones and Martin Widmann
doi:10.1038/432290b
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (195K) | Supplementary information
Corrigendum p291
doi:10.1038/432291a
Top of page
Brief Communications Arising
Copper oxide superconductors: Sharp-mode coupling in high-Tc superconductors
T. Cuk, Z.-X. Shen, A. D. Gromko, Z. Sun and D. S. Dessau
doi:10.1038/nature03163
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (167K)
Copper oxide superconductors: Sharp-mode coupling in high-Tc superconductors (reply)
Jungseek Hwang, Thomas Timusk and Genda D. Gu
doi:10.1038/nature03164
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (258K)
Asteroseismology: Oscillations on the star Procyon
François Bouchy, André Maeder, Michel Mayor, Denis Mégevand, Francesco Pepe and Danuta Sosnowska
doi:10.1038/nature03165
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (151K)
Insight
IntroductionCell division and cancer p293
Barbara Marte
doi:10.1038/432293a
Review article
Targeted cancer therapy p294
Charles Sawyers
doi:10.1038/nature03095
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (1,230K)
G1 cell-cycle control and cancer p298
Joan Massagué
doi:10.1038/nature03094
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (784K)
Intrinsic tumour suppression p307
Scott W. Lowe, Enrique Cepero and Gerard Evan
doi:10.1038/nature03098
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (504K)
Cell-cycle checkpoints and cancer p316
Michael B. Kastan and Jiri Bartek
doi:10.1038/nature03097
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (702K)
Tissue repair and stem cell renewal in carcinogenesis p324
Philip A. Beachy, Sunil S. Karhadkar and David M. Berman
doi:10.1038/nature03100
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (2,159K)
Stromal fibroblasts in cancer initiation and progression p332
Neil A. Bhowmick, Eric G. Neilson and Harold L. Moses
doi:10.1038/nature03096
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (727K)
Progress
Aneuploidy and cancer p338
Harith Rajagopalan and Christoph Lengauer
doi:10.1038/nature03099
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (458K)
Review
Endurance running and the evolution of Homo p345
Dennis M. Bramble and Daniel E. Lieberman
doi:10.1038/nature03052
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (370K)
Articles
Regulation of p53 activity through lysine methylation p353
Sergei Chuikov, Julia K. Kurash, Jonathan R. Wilson, Bing Xiao, Neil Justin, Gleb S. Ivanov, Kristine McKinney, Paul Tempst, Carol Prives, Steven J. Gamblin, Nickolai A. Barlev and Danny Reinberg
doi:10.1038/nature03117
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (500K) | Supplementary information
Lumenal gating mechanism revealed in calcium pump crystal structures with phosphate analogues p361
Chikashi Toyoshima, Hiromi Nomura and Takeo Tsuda
doi:10.1038/nature02981
Abstract | Full Text | PDF (702K) | Supplementary information
See also: News and Views by Lancaster
Letters to Nature
Molecular hydrogen beyond the optical edge of an isolated spiral galaxy p369
Jonathan Braine and Fabrice Herpin
doi:10.1038/nature03054
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (268K)
Electrical generation and absorption of phonons in carbon nanotubes p371
B. J. LeRoy, S. G. Lemay, J. Kong and C. Dekker
doi:10.1038/nature03046
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (283K)
See also: News and Views by Skipetrov
Random quasi-phase-matching in bulk polycrystalline isotropic nonlinear materials p374
M. Baudrier-Raybaut, R. Haïdar, Ph. Kupecek, Ph. Lemasson and E. Rosencher
doi:10.1038/nature03027
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (186K)
Metal wires for terahertz wave guiding p376
Kanglin Wang and Daniel M. Mittleman
doi:10.1038/nature03040
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (306K)
Constraints on the duration and freshwater release of Heinrich event 4 through isotope modelling p379
D. Roche, D. Paillard and E. Cortijo
doi:10.1038/nature03059
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (273K)
Triassic marine reptiles gave birth to live young p383
Yen-nien Cheng, Xiao-chun Wu and Qiang Ji
doi:10.1038/nature03050
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (609K)
The evolution of alternative parasitic life histories in large blue butterflies p386
Thomas D. Als, Roger Vila, Nikolai P. Kandul, David R. Nash, Shen-Horn Yen, Yu-Feng Hsu, André A. Mignault, Jacobus J. Boomsma and Naomi E. Pierce
doi:10.1038/nature03020
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (368K) | Supplementary information
See also: News and Views by Thomas & Settele
An obligate brood parasite trapped in the intraspecific arms race of its hosts p390
Bruce E. Lyon and John McA. Eadie
doi:10.1038/nature03036
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (216K)
Spatial patterns in species distributions reveal biodiversity change p393
Robert J. Wilson, Chris D. Thomas, Richard Fox, David B. Roy and William E. Kunin
doi:10.1038/nature03031
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (332K) | Supplementary information
Identification of human brain tumour initiating cells p396
Sheila K. Singh, Cynthia Hawkins, Ian D. Clarke, Jeremy A. Squire, Jane Bayani, Takuichiro Hide, R. Mark Henkelman, Michael D. Cusimano and Peter B. Dirks
doi:10.1038/nature03128
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (561K) | Supplementary information
See also: News and Views by Clarke
A FADD-dependent innate immune mechanism in mammalian cells p401
Siddharth Balachandran, Emmanuel Thomas and Glen N. Barber
doi:10.1038/nature03124
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (596K) | Supplementary information
Methylated lysine 79 of histone H3 targets 53BP1 to DNA double-strand breaks p406
Yentram Huyen, Omar Zgheib, Richard A. DiTullio Jr, Vassilis G. Gorgoulis, Panayotis Zacharatos, Tom J. Petty, Emily A. Sheston, Hestia S. Mellert, Elena S. Stavridi and Thanos D. Halazonetis
doi:10.1038/nature03114
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (548K) | Supplementary information
Structure of a natural guanine-responsive riboswitch complexed with the metabolite hypoxanthine p411
Robert T. Batey, Sunny D. Gilbert and Rebecca K. Montange
doi:10.1038/nature03037
First paragraph | Full Text | PDF (480K) | Supplementary information
Corrigendum: The genome of Cryptosporidium hominis p415
Ping Xu, Giovanni Widmer, Yingping Wang, Luiz S. Ozaki, Joao M. Alves, Myrna G. Serrano, Daniela Puiu, Patricio Manque, Donna Akiyoshi, Aaron J. Mackey, William R. Pearson, Paul H. Dear, Alan T. Bankier, Darrell L. Peterson, Mitchell S. Abrahamsen, Vivek Kapur, Saul Tzipori and Gregory A. Buck
doi:10.1038/nature03141
Naturejobs
ProspectsElection returns p417
Paul Smaglik
doi:10.1038/nj7015-417a
Special Report
Putting pen to paper p418
Careers in journalism can be rewarding for scientists who have a way with words. Virginia Gewin reveals what it takes to be a scribe.
Virginia Gewin
doi:10.1038/nj7015-418a


