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Volume 542 Issue 7640, 9 February 2017

The cover shows a reconstruction of Saccorhytus coronarius, a newly identified deuterostome dating back to the earliest Cambrian period in China. Deuterostomes constitute an array of organisms as varied as vertebrates, starfish, acorn worms and tunicates. But this range of forms, and a lack of extant morphological intermediates, makes it difficult to understand what early deuterostomes were like. The tiny fossils described by Simon Conway Morris and his Chinese colleagues reveal creatures with bag-like bodies and no anus. The primitive features seen in the remains have led the researchers to interpret them as the most basal known deuterostomes, suggesting that their earliest history lies among the meiofauna. Cover image: Jian Han/Dinghua Yan.

Editorial

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World View

  • Too many researchers make up or massage their data, says Timothy D. Clark. Only stringent demands for proof can stop them.

    • Timothy D. Clark
    World View
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Research Highlights

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Seven Days

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News

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News Feature

  • The intricate development of the fetus is yielding its long-held secrets to state-of-the-art molecular technologies that can make use of the mother's blood.

    • Claire Ainsworth
    News Feature
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Comment

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Books & Arts

  • Richard B. Norgaard is troubled by the incrementalism of Jeffrey Sachs's modest new plan for the US economy.

    • Richard B. Norgaard
    Books & Arts
  • Andreas Albrecht ponders a study of the physicists who grapple with the origins of the Universe.

    • Andreas Albrecht
    Books & Arts
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Correspondence

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Obituary

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News & Views

  • A mouse pancreas grown in a rat controls blood-sugar levels when transplanted into a mouse that models type 1 diabetes. This achievement provides a tantalizing glimpse of how organs could be grown for therapeutic use. See Article p.191

    • Qiao Zhou
    News & Views
  • The ocean's uptake of carbon dioxide increased during the 2000s. Models reveal that this was driven primarily by weak circulation in the upper ocean, solving a mystery of ocean science. See Letter p.215

    • Sara E. Mikaloff Fletcher
    News & Views
  • Newly discovered microscopic fossils might shed light on the early evolution of the deuterostomes, the animal group that includes vertebrates. But more work is needed to resolve the fossils' place in the deuterostome tree. See Letter p.228

    • Imran A. Rahman
    News & Views
  • WIMPs, or weakly interacting massive particles, are the leading candidates for dark matter, the 'missing' mass in the Universe. An experiment has obtained no evidence for such particles, despite an impressive increase in sensitivity.

    • Xiangdong Ji
    News & Views
  • Electrical stimulation of the human brain does not enhance memory, according to a report that is in apparent conflict with earlier work. But this discrepancy could enable deeper insight into brain dynamics by stimulating basic research.

    • Noah P. Young
    • Karl Deisseroth
    News & Views
  • Cellular organelles called peroxisomes aid metabolism, and defective peroxisome formation can cause disease. It emerges that peroxisomes can form de novo from the fusion of vesicles derived from two distinct organelle types. See Letter p.251

    • Ewald H. Hettema
    • Stephen J. Gould
    News & Views
  • The existence of medium-sized black holes has long been debated. Such an object has now been discovered in the centre of a dense cluster of stars, potentially enhancing our understanding of all black holes. See Letter p.203

    • Kayhan Gültekin
    News & Views
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Clarification

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Review Article

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Article

  • The authors inject mouse pluripotent stem cells into pancreatogenesis-disabled rat blastocysts and thereby generate rats with mouse pancreata from which the islets, when transplanted into mice, can provide a long-term cure for symptoms of diabetes, without continuous immunosuppression.

    • Tomoyuki Yamaguchi
    • Hideyuki Sato
    • Hiromitsu Nakauchi
    Article
  • The application of genome-wide CRISPR–Cas9 screening coupled with a fluorescent reporter to interrogate the microRNA pathway reveals that continual transient phosphorylation of Argonaute 2 is required to maintain the global efficiency of microRNA-mediated repression.

    • Ryan J. Golden
    • Beibei Chen
    • Joshua T. Mendell
    Article
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Letter

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Corrigendum

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Addendum

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Corrigendum

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Feature

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Correction

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Career Brief

  • Doing a US postdoc in the biomedical sciences can cost you future earnings.

    Career Brief
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Futures

  • Discretion is the better part of valour.

    • David Gullen
    Futures
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