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  • Vascular plants with root systems evolved in the mid-Palaeozoic with symbiotic fungi. Fieldet al. show that in contrast to non-vascular plants lacking roots, the efficiency of plant–fungal symbiosis increased for vascular plants with root systems as carbon dioxide levels declined in the mid-Palaeozoic.

    • Katie J. Field
    • Duncan D. Cameron
    • David J. Beerling
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The size of dicotyledon leaves and their venation vary enormously across ecosystems. In this study, using 485 plant species, scaling relationships are presented between vein traits and leaf size, and explained based on a developmental algorithm that demonstrates why smaller leaves persist in drier areas.

    • Lawren Sack
    • Christine Scoffoni
    • Thusuong Tran
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The compositional makeup of skeletons and teeth in invertebrates and vertebrates is generally different. This study examines the material composition and properties of freshwater crayfish mandibles and finds, in an unusual case of convergent evolution, that they are composed of an apatite layer that is similar to mammalian enamel.

    • Shmuel Bentov
    • Paul Zaslansky
    • Barbara Aichmayer
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The damaging effects of loud noise on auditory function are well established, but the effects of low-level noise are not so well understood. Zhou and Merzenich chronically expose adult rats to structured low-level noise and find that it causes auditory cortex damage and sound discrimination impairment.

    • Xiaoming Zhou
    • Michael M. Merzenich
    Article
  • The bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) and Smad1 signalling pathway is required for embryogenesis. In this study, Smad1 is shown to be phosphorylated by Atm in response to DNA damage and this results in elevated Smad1 signalling, thus uncovering a new role for this pathway in the DNA damage response.

    • Jenny Fung Ling Chau
    • Deyong Jia
    • Baojie Li
    Article
  • The calving of the Mertz Glacier occurred in 2010 in East Antarctica, brought on by the re-positioning of a large iceberg. Using satellite data, this study shows a reduction in sea ice production following the calving, interpreted as a potential regime shift towards reduced sea ice production for the coming decades.

    • T. Tamura
    • G.D. Williams
    • K.I. Ohshima
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Strain engineering has been proposed as a promising strategy for manipulating the electronic properties of graphene. This scanning tunnelling microscopy study demonstrates the feasibility of controlling strain patterns in graphene down to the nanoscale.

    • Jiong Lu
    • A.H. Castro Neto
    • Kian Ping Loh
    Article
  • Studying the dynamics of electrons is important for understanding fundamental processes in materials. Here the ionization of a pair of electrons in argon atoms is explored on attosecond timescales, offering insight into their correlated emission and the double ionization mechanism.

    • Boris Bergues
    • Matthias Kübel
    • Matthias F. Kling
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Putative fossil melanosomes have been reported but, because their shape and size correspond well with those of bacteria, further evidence is required to confirm their identity. This study reports evidence of melanin in association with melanosome-like microbodies in an argentinoid fish eye from the early Eocene.

    • Johan Lindgren
    • Per Uvdal
    • Volker Thiel
    Article
  • Quantum-mechanical tunnelling currents across nanometre-scale gaps between electrodes are sensitive to the medium in the gap. Albrecht reviews progress towards using tunnelling currents to probe single-molecule processes, and in biosensor and sequencing applications.

    • T. Albrecht
    Review Article
  • Tuning the properties of responsive materials by applying an external stimulus could lead to their application as chemical switches or molecular sensors. Coronadoet al. develop a non-porous one-dimensional coordination polymer, the magnetic properties of which undergo drastic changes on chemisorption of gaseous HCl.

    • Eugenio Coronado
    • Mónica Giménez-Marqués
    • Lee Brammer
    Article
  • As lengthscales in plasmonic structures enter the sub-nanometre regime, quantum effects become increasingly important. Here, a quantum-corrected model is presented that addresses quantum effects in realistic-sized plasmonic structures, a situation not feasible for full-quantum-mechanical simulations.

    • Ruben Esteban
    • Andrei G. Borisov
    • Javier Aizpurua
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Culture conditions are critical for the successful induction of pluripotent stem cells and define whether cells are primed or naïve. Here, activation of JAK/STAT3 signalling is shown to be sufficient and dominant over antagonistic cues to enable the induction of a naïve pluripotent state in stem cells.

    • Anouk L. van Oosten
    • Yael Costa
    • José C.R. Silva
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Hox gene expression is induced upon cellular differentiation and is inhibited in pluripotent cells. Bocker and colleagues show that the maintenance of induced transcription depends on Tet2 mediated hydroxylation of 5-methylcytosine at theHoxagene locus, indicating that this epigenetic switch is required for an active chromatin state and gene expression.

    • Michael T. Bocker
    • Francesca Tuorto
    • Achim Breiling
    Article
  • Electronic and optoelectronic devices based on gallium nitride suffer from self-heating arising as a result of their operation. This study presents and demonstrates a strategy for managing this problem that relies on graphene quilts which dissipate the heat away.

    • Zhong Yan
    • Guanxiong Liu
    • Alexander A. Balandin
    ArticleOpen Access