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Volume 547 Issue 7661, 6 July 2017

In this week’s special issue, Nature zeroes in on that most basic element of life: the cell. Technological advances are powering analyses previously impossible at the single-cell level. As a result, researchers are at last starting to chart how many different types of cell exist in complex organisms, what they do and how they change during development. Efforts to trace cell lineage are examined in a News Feature (page 20), along with a profile of Aviv Regev (page 24), who is spearheading an effort to catalogue every kind of cell in the human body. Elsewhere, researchers explore how the genome is packaged in a mouse cell throughout the division cycle (page 61) and what this might mean for examining genome interactions in 3D (page 34). And Amir Giladi and Ido Amit discuss how a focus on immune cells might aid our ability to combat diseases such as cancer (page 27). A Careers interview explores the reasons for making the move into single-cell analysis (page 129), and Toolbox takes a look at how best to probe the data being generated as the field expands (page 125). Cover illustration by Jasiek Krzysztofiak/Nature; Images: Morphart Creation/Shutterstock, Jezper/Shutterstock

Editorial

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World View

  • Many decisions about whose work is recognized are at least partially arbitrary, and we should acknowledge that, argues Simine Vazire.

    • Simine Vazire
    World View
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Seven Days

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News

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News Feature

  • Analyses of life's most basic elements promise to improve therapies and provide insights into some of the most fundamental processes in biology.

    News Feature
  • Aviv Regev is a maven of hard-core biological analyses. Now she is part of an effort to map every cell in the human body.

    • Anna Nowogrodzki
    News Feature
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Comment

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Books & Arts

  • Barbara Kiser reviews five of the week's best science picks.

    • Barbara Kiser
    Books & Arts
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Correspondence

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News & Views

  • DNA is packaged in the cell as chromatin, which folds into organized domains. Mapping of chromatin contacts in single cells sheds light on the dynamic evolution of these domains between cell divisions. See Article p.61

    • Robert A. Beagrie
    • Ana Pombo
    News & Views
  • Microscopic fossils show that, from 10,400 to 7,500 years ago, upwelling of a water mass called Circumpolar Deep Water destabilized Antarctic ice shelves — a finding that advances our understanding of ice-sheet retreat. See Article p.43

    • Jennifer Hertzberg
    News & Views
  • The binding of T-cell receptors to peptide molecules not normally present in the body can trigger an immune response. Predicting which peptide a T-cell receptor will bind to — a difficult feat — has now been achieved. See Letters p.89 & p.94

    • Sai T. Reddy
    News & Views
  • Integrated circuits usually have only one layer of electronic devices, which limits their performance and functionality. A 3D integrated circuit that incorporates multiple device layers enables a wealth of applications. See Letter p.74

    • Sherief Reda
    News & Views
  • An analysis of 360 breast-cancer genomes has identified cancer-driving mutations in 9 non-coding DNA sequences called promoters, which regulate gene expression. The result hints at the prevalence of non-coding drivers. See Article p.55

    • Sushant Kumar
    • Mark Gerstein
    News & Views
  • High-mass stars often pair up to form binary systems. Observations reveal that the stars in such systems are born farther apart than was formerly thought, casting fresh light on an enduring debate about star formation.

    • Aaron M. Geller
    News & Views
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Article

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Letter

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Addendum

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Toolbox

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Feature

  • Biologists are diving into sugar-molecule research thanks to new tools and techniques.

    • Esther Landhuis
    Feature
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Q&A

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Correction

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Futures

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Brief Communications Arising

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