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Volume 446 Issue 7139, 26 April 2007

Editorial

  • The traditional model of the US research university — based on the pre-eminence of the single-discipline department — needs to be stretched and challenged.

    Editorial

    Advertisement

  • China will join efforts to cut carbon emissions, but should not be expected to lead them.

    Editorial
  • Government agencies should act to ensure the neutrality of research contractors.

    Editorial
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Research Highlights

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News

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News in Brief

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Correction

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Business

  • A licensing dispute over fuel additives could spell trouble for one of Britain's nanotechnology stars, as Katharine Sanderson reports.

    Business
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News Feature

  • Antibody therapies have had more than their fair share of crashes. But designers are at work on faster, fancier new models, finds Erika Check.

    • Erika Check
    News Feature
  • A shift in population, money and political influence to America's 'sunbelt states' is helping to reshape its research universities. The first of two features looks at the far-reaching ambitions of Arizona State University. The second asks whether a rush to create extra medical schools could spread the region's resources too thinly.

    • Colin Macilwain
    News Feature
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Correspondence

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Commentary

  • How can we best reduce the risk of severe adverse reactions to marketed drugs? An international group of scientists argues that a global research network is needed to identify genetically at-risk populations.

    • Kathleen M. Giacomini
    • Ronald M. Krauss
    • Yusuke Nakamura
    Commentary
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Books & Arts

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Connections

  • The bizarre absence of certain gene classes in eukaryotes is key to understanding their evolution and complex links with prokaryotes.

    • James A. Lake
    Connections
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News & Views

  • Plant species that colonize new environments tend to favour habitats with ample water and nutrients. But invasive plants can be more efficient in their use of resources than that observation might imply.

    • Tim Seastedt
    News & Views
  • A source of astoundingly energetic γ-rays associated with a star cluster might provide a clue to a century-old question: where do the cosmic rays that constantly bombard Earth come from?

    • Yousaf M. Butt
    News & Views
  • Microglial cells, the immune elements of the brain, are activated in disease or following injury. New findings indicate how these cells are switched on to remove damaged cells and cellular debris.

    • Helmut Kettenmann
    News & Views
  • A huge phytoplankton bloom in the Southern Ocean yields estimates of how a continuous supply of iron affects oceanic carbon sequestration. But iron is not the only factor — nutrient supply is crucial too.

    • Philip W. Boyd
    News & Views
  • A sophisticated survey of certain volatile organic compounds in the air over forest ecosystems shows how such work can reveal varied emission patterns of different chiral, or mirror-image, forms of these compounds.

    • Euripides G. Stephanou
    News & Views
  • 'Zero-knowledge' proofs are all about knowing more, while knowing nothing. When married to cryptographic techniques, they are one avenue being explored towards improving the security of online transactions.

    • Bernard Chazelle
    News & Views
  • Proteins aren't just defined by their constituent amino acids — structural modifications can yield complex mixtures of protein forms. An approach that controls the addition of such modifications may help to define their role.

    • Gijsbert Grotenbreg
    • Hidde Ploegh
    News & Views
  • A long-standing mathematical model for the growth of grains in two dimensions has been generalized to three and higher dimensions. This will aid our practical understanding of certain crucial properties of materials.

    • David Kinderlehrer
    News & Views
  • Does blood formation in mammalian embryos and adults have separate origins or a common source? The most recent investigations into the question add a further chapter to this long-running story.

    • Hiroo Ueno
    • Irving L. Weissman
    News & Views
  • Inventor of science's most widespread programming language, Fortran.

    • Martin Campbell-Kelly
    News & Views
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Insight

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Article

  • Over 50 years ago, von Neumann derived an exact formula for the growth rate of a cell in a two-dimensional cellular structure. Now the extension of this result into three (and higher) dimensions has been found. The formula could lead to predictive models for various industrial and commercial processing scenarios, such as controlling the head on a pint of beer.

    • Robert D. MacPherson
    • David J. Srolovitz
    Article
  • Genetic marking is used to perform a non-invasive cell tracing technique, labelling cells of the definitive haematopoetic system and observed the migration of haematopoetic progenitors from the yolks sac to the fetal liver and thymus.

    • Igor M. Samokhvalov
    • Natalia I. Samokhvalova
    • Shin-ichi Nishikawa
    Article
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Letter

  • This paper reports that large isotopic differences in the stable chlorine isotope ratios of meteoritic, mantle and crustal materials do not exist, that carbonaceous chondrites, mantle and crust all have the same 37Cl/35Cl ratios, establishing that there were no nebular reservoirs with distinct isotopic compositions, no isotopic fractionation during differentiation of the Earth and no late Cl-bearing volatile additions to the crust.

    • Z. D. Sharp
    • J. D. Barnes
    • V. S. Kamenetsky
    Letter
  • A vacuum-packaged resonator has been designed that contains the solution with particles of interest inside microfluidic channels. It is demonstrated that this device can weigh single nanoparticles, single bacterial cells and sub-monolayers of proteins adsorbed on the channel walls with sub-femtogram resolution.

    • Thomas P. Burg
    • Michel Godin
    • Scott R. Manalis
    Letter
  • A study of a phytoplankton bloom in the Southern Ocean induced by the supply of iron from deep waters below finds that the efficiency of fertilization (the ratio of carbon exported to the ocean interior to the amount of iron supplied) is at least ten times higher than estimates from short-term experiments. This suggests that changes in the supply of iron from deep water to the surface ocean may have a greater effect on atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations than previously thought.

    • Stéphane Blain
    • Bernard Quéguiner
    • Thibaut Wagener
    Letter
  • A report on three-dimensional tomographic imaging of seismic velocities and attenuation in the Taupo Volcanic Zone, an active continental rift where earthquakes are known to occur in the lower crust finds that crustal earthquakes form a continuous band along the rift, and often occur in swarms, suggesting fluid movement in critically loaded fault zones.

    • Martin Reyners
    • Donna Eberhart-Phillips
    • Graham Stuart
    Letter
  • Surprisingly, invasive plant species that have successfully colonized resource-poor habitats in Hawaii tend to be more efficient than native species at using limiting resources. The work has important implications for habitat management and conservation.

    • Jennifer L. Funk
    • Peter M. Vitousek
    Letter
  • Measurements of the wings of swifts in a wind tunnel reveal the remarkable changes of in-flight performance afforded by changing wing shape. Swifts can halve sink speed or triple turning rate by choosing the most suitable sweep. Extended wings are superior for slow glides and turns. But swept wings are superior for fast glides and turns, they allow the birds to bear the extreme accelerational loads of fast manoeuvres in the air.

    • D. Lentink
    • U. K. Müller
    • J. L. van Leeuwen
    Letter
  • Excitatory synapses become stronger upon usage, a process known as Long Term Potentiation (LTP) that is involved in learning and memory. Excitatory LTP is accompanied by LTP at adjacent inhibitory synapses, and it is sensitive to morphine. It is suggested that disruption of such fine balance between neuronal excitation and inhibition would enhance dopamine neurons' firing during addictive processes.

    • Fereshteh S. Nugent
    • Esther C. Penick
    • Julie A. Kauer
    Letter
  • Vertebrate oocytes are arrested in meiosis II until fertilization. This is one of two papers that link two previously known regulators of this arrest: the kinase Rsk that is activated by the Mos–MAPK pathway, directly phosphorylates Xerp1/Emi2 and thereby promotes its ability to inhibit the anaphase promoting complex APC/C.

    • Tomoko Nishiyama
    • Keita Ohsumi
    • Takeo Kishimoto
    Letter
  • Vertebrate oocytes are arrested in meiosis II until fertilization. This is one of two papers that link two previously known regulators of this arrest: the kinase Rsk that is activated by the Mos–MAPK pathway, directly phosphorylates Xerp1/Emi2 and thereby promotes its ability to inhibit the anaphase promoting complex APC/C.

    • Daigo Inoue
    • Munemichi Ohe
    • Noriyuki Sagata
    Letter
  • Many proteins are modulated by post-translational modifications, and it has generally not been possible to access pure mimics of complex post-translational modifications. Here, a chemical tagging method is used to attach multiple carbohydrates to bacterially expressed protein scaffolds, allowing reconstitution of functionally effective mimics of higher organism post-translational modifications.

    • Sander I. van Kasteren
    • Holger B. Kramer
    • Benjamin G. Davis
    Letter
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Prospects

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Regions

  • Flush with funds, Florida is enjoying a state-backed bioscience boom, says Gene Russo.

    • Gene Russo
    Regions
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Movers

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Networks and Society

  • NIH award may not be enough to ferry postdocs towards research independence.

    • Monya Baker
    Networks and Society
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Career View

  • My old research area seems to be heating up. Did I miss the wave or start it?

    • Moira Sheehan
    Career View
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Recruitment

  • More universities are offering career and technology-transfer advice — but not enough scientists are utilizing these offices.

    • Michael Alvarez
    Recruitment
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Authors

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Insight

  • The importance of carbohydrates in biological processes has long been underappreciated. Armed with new tools for synthesizing, modifying and studying oligosaccharides and glycoconjugates, our understanding of these biomolecules is rapidly improving. This knowledge is also yielding promising candidates for carbohydrate-based diagnostics, drugs and vaccines.

    Insight
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