Article
|
Open Access
Featured
-
-
Article
| Open AccessImpact of secretin receptor homo-dimerization on natural ligand binding
GPCRs can form functionally important dimers. Here, authors study impact of dimerization of the secretin receptor on peptide ligand binding and show high receptor conformational dynamics that facilitate G protein recruitment and activation.
- Kaleeckal G. Harikumar
- , Sarah J. Piper
- & Laurence J. Miller
-
Article
| Open AccessAngle between DNA linker and nucleosome core particle regulates array compaction revealed by individual-particle cryo-electron tomography
Here, using cryo-ET, the 3D structures of individual nucleosome particles were characterized to observe changes under varying ionic strengths and in the presence of protein H1, revealing key regulatory roles in chromatin organization dynamics.
- Meng Zhang
- , César Díaz-Celis
- & Gang Ren
-
Article
| Open AccessCellular structure of dinosaur scales reveals retention of reptile-type skin during the evolutionary transition to feathers
The evolution of feathers is associated with the evolution of related skin microstructures. Here, the authors demonstrate that Psittacosaurus, a non-avian feathered dinosaur, retained scaled skin like its ancestors in body regions lacking feathers.
- Zixiao Yang
- , Baoyu Jiang
- & Maria E. McNamara
-
Article
| Open AccessThe actin cytoskeleton plays multiple roles in structural colour formation in butterfly wing scales
NCOMMS-23-44446C Vivid structural colours in butterflies are caused by photonic nanostructures scattering light, however insight into the development of such structures in vivo remains scarce. Here the authors show that actin plays a vital and direct templating role during structural colour formation in butterfly scales, providing ridge patterning mechanisms that are likely universal across lepidoptera.
- Victoria J. Lloyd
- , Stephanie L. Burg
- & Andrew J. Parnell
-
Article
| Open AccessPhotoacoustic Tomography with Temporal Encoding Reconstruction (PATTERN) for cross-modal individual analysis of the whole brain
Here, the authors introduce Photoacoustic Tomography with Temporal Encoding Reconstruction (PATTERN) - a high-speed, non-destructive photoacoustic brain imaging technique that constructs 3D fluorescent maps of the brain and improves upon some of the limitations associated with traditional whole-brain optical imaging techniques.
- Yuwen Chen
- , Haoyu Yang
- & Bo Lei
-
Article
| Open AccessStructural mechanisms for binding and activation of a contact-quenched fluorophore by RhoBAST
FLAPs have recently emerged as RNA counterparts to fluorescent proteins. Here, the authors determine the crystal structure of a FLAP called RhoBAST in complex with its ligand TMR-DN and reveal the mechanisms for binding and activation.
- Yufan Zhang
- , Zhonghe Xu
- & Xianyang Fang
-
Article
| Open AccessZero-shot learning enables instant denoising and super-resolution in optical fluorescence microscopy
The authors introduce ZS-DeconvNet, an unsupervised computational super-resolution method for multiple types of microscopes, that enhances image resolution by more than 1.5 times over the diffraction limit with 10 times lower fluorescence than regular superresolution imaging conditions.
- Chang Qiao
- , Yunmin Zeng
- & Qionghai Dai
-
Article
| Open AccessSpatial mapping of hepatic ER and mitochondria architecture reveals zonated remodeling in fasting and obesity
Hepatocytes are central for maintaining metabolic homeostasis during nutritional transitions. Here, we show that the structural remodelling of hepatic organelles is part of hepatocytes’ metabolic plasticity to adapt to cycles of fasting/feeding and this process is zonated in the liver.
- Güneş Parlakgül
- , Song Pang
- & Ana Paula Arruda
-
Article
| Open AccessARTseq-FISH reveals position-dependent differences in gene expression of micropatterned mESCs
Hu et al. describe ARTseq-FISH, a spatial omics method that enables multiplexed detection of mRNAs, proteins and phospho-proteins simultaneously and at the same resolution. The authors investigate gene expression changes in a heterogenous colony of micropatterned mESCs.
- Xinyu Hu
- , Bob van Sluijs
- & Maike M. K. Hansen
-
Article
| Open AccessHuman connectome topology directs cortical traveling waves and shapes frequency gradients
The factors that determine the direction of traveling waves in the brain are not well understood. Here, the authors show that the sum of incoming structural connection strengths shape both traveling wave direction and frequency gradients.
- Dominik P. Koller
- , Michael Schirner
- & Petra Ritter
-
Article
| Open AccessFunctional connectivity development along the sensorimotor-association axis enhances the cortical hierarchy
Human cortical maturation is organized along the sensorimotor-association axis. Here, the authors investigate in multiple cohorts if the development of functional connectivity during adolescence conforms to this hierarchy.
- Audrey C. Luo
- , Valerie J. Sydnor
- & Theodore D. Satterthwaite
-
Article
| Open AccessCortex-wide transcranial localization microscopy with fluorescently labeled red blood cells
Existing neuroimaging tools are still hampered by restricted field-of-view, slow imaging speed or suboptimal spatial resolution. Here, the authors present a fluorescence localization imaging approach aided by sparsely-labeled red blood cells for cortex-wide morphological and functional cerebral angiography with high spatiotemporal resolution.
- Quanyu Zhou
- , Chaim Glück
- & Zhenyue Chen
-
Article
| Open AccessIlluminating the complete ß-cell mass of the human pancreas- signifying a new view on the islets of Langerhans
The pancreatic islets of Langerhans play a pivotal role in regulating blood glucose homeostasis through the regulated secretion of the hormones insulin and glucagon. Here, the authors use deep tissue 3D imaging to re-construct the entire human pancreas at microscopic resolution and display previously unrecognized heterogeneities in the islet’s cellularity with pre-clinical and clinical implications.
- Joakim Lehrstrand
- , Wayne I. L. Davies
- & Ulf Ahlgren
-
Article
| Open AccessMicroenvironmental reorganization in brain tumors following radiotherapy and recurrence revealed by hyperplexed immunofluorescence imaging
Improved imaging techniques are required to help advance our understanding of the complex role of the tumour microenvironment (TME). Here, the authors develop a high-throughput, highly multiplexed tissue visualisation workflow and demonstrate its utility by characterising the response of the TME to radiotherapy in preclinical models of glioblastoma.
- Spencer S. Watson
- , Benoit Duc
- & Johanna A. Joyce
-
Article
| Open AccessOptogenetic control of mRNA condensation reveals an intimate link between condensate material properties and functions
Biomolecular condensates play important roles in diverse cellular activities. Here the authors employ optogenetic tool and single-molecule mRNA imaging, showing that sequestering target mRNAs into condensates lead to translation inhibition.
- Min Lee
- , Hyungseok C. Moon
- & Yongdae Shin
-
Article
| Open AccessAlkyne-tagged SERS nanoprobe for understanding Cu+ and Cu2+ conversion in cuproptosis processes
Simultaneously quantifying mitochondrial Cu+ and Cu2+ levels is vital for understanding the molecular mechanism of mitochondria-related biological events. Here the authors report an alkynyl-labeled SERS probe to simultaneously monitor free Cu+ and Cu2+ in mitochondria, and unveil their roles during ischemia and cuproptosis processes.
- Sihan Zhang
- , Yuxiao Mei
- & Yang Tian
-
Article
| Open AccessLarge-volume focus control at 10 MHz refresh rate via fast line-scanning amplitude-encoded scattering-assisted holography
This study presents a wavefront shaping scheme to control optical focus in a large 3D space at the unprecedented rate of 30 MHz with micron-scale precision and random accessibility via reallocation of degrees of freedom in spatiotemporal domain.
- Atsushi Shibukawa
- , Ryota Higuchi
- & Mooseok Jang
-
Article
| Open AccessSubcellular pathways through VGluT3-expressing mouse amacrine cells provide locally tuned object-motion-selective signals in the retina
How the spatial distribution of synapses relates to the subcellular integration and transmission of signals is not fully understood. Here authors combine functional and connectomic analysis to map the subcellular flow of information in retinal amacrine cells.
- Karl Friedrichsen
- , Jen-Chun Hsiang
- & Josh L. Morgan
-
Article
| Open AccessContext-aware deep learning enables high-efficacy localization of high concentration microbubbles for super-resolution ultrasound localization microscopy
Ultrasound localisation microscopy enables deep tissue microvascular imaging. Here, authors introduce LOCA-ULM, a deep learning pipeline enhancing localisation accuracy in high microbubble concentrations. LOCA-ULM reveals dense cerebrovascular networks and enhances the sensitivity of functional ULM.
- YiRang Shin
- , Matthew R. Lowerison
- & Pengfei Song
-
Article
| Open AccessBiomimetic NIR-II fluorescent proteins created from chemogenic protein-seeking dyes for multicolor deep-tissue bioimaging
Near-infrared-I/II fluorescent proteins (NIR-I/II FPs) are crucial for in vivo imaging, but their availability is still scarce. Here, the authors make use of protein-seeking NIR-II dyes as chromophores, which covalently bind to tag proteins and thus creating biomimetic NIR-II FPs.
- Jiajun Xu
- , Ningning Zhu
- & Shoujun Zhu
-
Article
| Open AccessProjective light-sheet microscopy with flexible parameter selection
Projection imaging for multi-cellular samples can be hindered by several factors, including low contrast. Here, the authors propose projective light-sheet imaging with parameter selection (props) of imaging depth, position and viewing angle.
- Bingying Chen
- , Bo-Jui Chang
- & Reto Fiolka
-
Article
| Open AccessBenchtop mesoSPIM: a next-generation open-source light-sheet microscope for cleared samples
The demand to image large biological samples at high resolution requires improvement in current light-sheet microscopy tools. Here, the authors present an improved, benchtop mesoSPIM with a significantly increased field-of-view, improved resolution and improved throughput.
- Nikita Vladimirov
- , Fabian F. Voigt
- & Fritjof Helmchen
-
Article
| Open AccessPhotoswitchable polyynes for multiplexed stimulated Raman scattering microscopy with reversible light control
Bioimaging with photocontrol and multiplexing capability is vital for studying cellular interactions and dynamics, but multiplexed stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) imaging with reversible photocontrol is elusive. Here, the authors report SRS microscopy with Carbow-switch enabling multiplexed SRS imaging and tracking in live cells with reversible photocontrol and high spatiotemporal selectivity.
- Yueli Yang
- , Xueyang Bai
- & Fanghao Hu
-
Article
| Open AccessDrug-resistant EGFR mutations promote lung cancer by stabilizing interfaces in ligand-free kinase-active EGFR oligomers
The Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) is frequently found to be mutated in non-small cell lung cancer. Here, the authors show that EGFR lung cancer mutations promote the assembly of kinase-active dimers within ligand-free EGFR oligomers. These dimers bind ligand with high affinity and promote tumor growth.
- R. Sumanth Iyer
- , Sarah R. Needham
- & Marisa L. Martin-Fernandez
-
Article
| Open AccessUltrasound-induced reorientation for multi-angle optical coherence tomography
Accessing multi-angle views of organoids is important for biology and oncology. The authors propose ultrasound-induced reorientation for multi-angle optical coherence tomography, using a 3D-printed acoustic trap to levitate and rotate samples with a model-based algorithm for reconstruction.
- Mia Kvåle Løvmo
- , Shiyu Deng
- & Monika Ritsch-Marte
-
Article
| Open AccessSynapsin 2a tetramerisation selectively controls the presynaptic nanoscale organisation of reserve synaptic vesicles
How synaptic vesicles (SVs) are clustered at the presynapse is suggestive of anchoring processes counteracting their diffusion. Here, the authors co-track recycling and reserve SVs in live neurons to find that Synapsin 2a tetramerization dynamically immobilizes reserve SVs at the presynapse.
- Shanley F. Longfield
- , Rachel S. Gormal
- & Frédéric A. Meunier
-
Article
| Open AccessIdentification of four biotypes in temporal lobe epilepsy via machine learning on brain images
Brain imaging-based disease progression modelling is a promising technique for disease stratification. Here the authors characterize distinct ‘trajectories’ of brain atrophy in temporal lobe epilepsy and identify four subtypes with distinct neuroanatomical signatures.
- Yuchao Jiang
- , Wei Li
- & Dongmei An
-
Article
| Open AccessDesymmetric homologating annulation to access chiral pentafulvenes and their application in bioimaging
Polycyclic/multisubstituted pentafulvenes are of interest as they frequently occur in biologically relevant motifs, electrochromic dyes, and solar cells. Here, the authors report an enantioselective homologating annulation of cyclopent-4-ene-dione with 3-cyano-4-methylcoumarins through L-tert-leucine derived thiourea catalysis, affording a wide range of enantioenriched polycyclic multi-substituted embedded aminopentafulvenes.
- Sanjay Singh
- , Ravi Saini
- & Ravi P. Singh
-
Article
| Open AccessLight-field flow cytometry for high-resolution, volumetric and multiparametric 3D single-cell analysis
Current imaging flow cytometry approaches remain limited in their ability to reveal subcellular information with high-resolution and instrumental simplicity. Here, the authors present a light-field flow cytometer capable of high-content, multi-color imaging of cells with high-resolution in 3D.
- Xuanwen Hua
- , Keyi Han
- & Shu Jia
-
Article
| Open AccessDistinct neurochemical influences on fMRI response polarity in the striatum
The relationship between striatal vascular and neural activity is not fully understood. Here the authors found neuronal activity inadequately explains striatal hemodynamic polarity, challenging classic fMRI interpretations.
- Domenic H. Cerri
- , Daniel L. Albaugh
- & Yen-Yu Ian Shih
-
Article
| Open AccessAutomatic data-driven design and 3D printing of custom ocular prostheses
Manual processes to produce ocular prostheses are time-consuming and yield varying quality. Here, authors present an automatic digital end-to-end process for custom ocular prostheses. It creates shape and appearance from image data of an OCT device and produces them using a full-colour 3D printer.
- Johann Reinhard
- , Philipp Urban
- & Mandeep S. Sagoo
-
Article
| Open AccessMarShie: a clearing protocol for 3D analysis of single cells throughout the bone marrow at subcellular resolution
Three-dimensional analysis of the intact bone marrow within whole long bones remains very challenging. Here, the authors present a method that stabilizes the marrow and provides subcellular resolution of fluorescent signals throughout the murine femur.
- Till Fabian Mertens
- , Alina Tabea Liebheit
- & Anja Erika Hauser
-
Article
| Open AccessSEMORE: SEgmentation and MORphological fingErprinting by machine learning automates super-resolution data analysis
There is a lack of universal tools to analyse protein assemblies and quantify underlying structures in single-molecule localization microscopy. Here, the authors present SEMORE, a semi-automatic machine learning framework for system- and input-dependent analysis of super-resolution data.
- Steen W. B. Bender
- , Marcus W. Dreisler
- & Nikos S. Hatzakis
-
Article
| Open AccessVirtual histological staining of unlabeled autopsy tissue
Conventional staining of post-mortem samples can be affected by several factors, including tissue autolysis. Here, the authors demonstrate a virtual staining tool using a trained neural network to turn autofluorescence images of label-free autopsy tissue into brightfield equivalent images.
- Yuzhu Li
- , Nir Pillar
- & Aydogan Ozcan
-
Article
| Open AccessMulti-molecular hyperspectral PRM-SRS microscopy
Spatial imaging methods in lipid research can disrupt tissue integrity and can have limited spatial and spectral resolution. Here, the authors present an SRS-based hyperspectral imaging platform to visualise lipids and lipoproteins in a variety of tissues and animal species.
- Wenxu Zhang
- , Yajuan Li
- & Lingyan Shi
-
Article
| Open AccessOpen-source microscope add-on for structured illumination microscopy
Researchers developed an open-hardware structured illumination microscopy add-on. This affordable upgrade provides super-resolution capabilities for normal optical microscopes. Detailed instructions enable easy reproduction to help democratize advanced microscopy.
- Mélanie T. M. Hannebelle
- , Esther Raeth
- & Georg E. Fantner
-
Article
| Open AccessAn ultrasensitive and broadband transparent ultrasound transducer for ultrasound and photoacoustic imaging in-vivo
Transparent ultrasound transducers suffer from practical limitations due to acoustic impedance mismatch. By using a transparent adhesive based on silicon dioxide epoxy, the authors demonstrate a broadband, ultrasensitive transparent ultrasound transducer, advancing the possibilities of sensor fusion.
- Seonghee Cho
- , Minsu Kim
- & Chulhong Kim
-
Article
| Open AccessArticular surface interactions distinguish dinosaurian locomotor joint poses
Criteria for evaluating joint articulation in vertebrates are lacking. Here, the authors propose an approach for combining measurements of 3D articular overlap, symmetry, and congruence into a single metric, and apply this to examine the walking stride of Deinonychus antirrhopus.
- Armita R. Manafzadeh
- , Stephen M. Gatesy
- & Bhart-Anjan S. Bhullar
-
Article
| Open AccessA deep-learning-based framework for identifying and localizing multiple abnormalities and assessing cardiomegaly in chest X-ray
Accurate localization of abnormalities is crucial in the interpretation of chest X-rays. Here the authors present a deep learning framework for simultaneous localization of 14 thoracic abnormalities and calculation of cardiothoracic ratio, based on large X-ray dataset with bounding boxes created via a human-in-the-loop approach.
- Weijie Fan
- , Yi Yang
- & Dong Zhang
-
Article
| Open AccessMesoscopic calcium imaging in a head-unrestrained male non-human primate using a lensless microscope
Current systems for imaging calcium dynamics in the brains of non-human primates require the animal’s movement to be restricted. Here, the authors demonstrate a mesoscale calcium imaging device in a freely moving non-human primate which features a 20 mm2 field of view.
- Jimin Wu
- , Yuzhi Chen
- & Jacob T. Robinson
-
Article
| Open AccessGeometric transformation adaptive optics (GTAO) for volumetric deep brain imaging through gradient-index lenses
The GRIN lenses widely used for deep brain functional imaging suffer from a small measurement field of view due to strong fourth-order astigmatism. Here the authors report Geometric Transformation Adaptive Optics (GTAO) that corrects field-dependent astigmatism and enables large-volume in vivo imaging of deep mouse brain through 0.5 mm GRIN lenses.
- Yuting Li
- , Zongyue Cheng
- & Meng Cui
-
Article
| Open AccessDeepFocus: fast focus and astigmatism correction for electron microscopy
High-throughput electron microscopy demands minimal human intervention and high image quality. Here, authors introduce DeepFocus, a data-driven method for aberration correction in electron microscopy, robust for low SNR images, fast and easily adaptable to microscopes and samples. Peer Review Information: Nature Communications thanks Yang Zhang and the other, anonymous, reviewer(s) for their contribution to the peer review of this work. A peer review file is available.
- P. J. Schubert
- , R. Saxena
- & J. Kornfeld
-
Article
| Open AccessFluorogenic CRISPR for genomic DNA imaging
Conventional CRISPR-based approaches to monitor genomic loci can be hampered by high background and nonspecific nucleolar signal. Here, the authors propose a fluorogenic CRISPR (fCRISPR) tool that allows for high-contrast and sensitive imaging of genomic DNA.
- Zhongxuan Zhang
- , Xiaoxiao Rong
- & Xing Li
-
Article
| Open AccessIntraocular liver spheroids for non-invasive high-resolution in vivo monitoring of liver cell function
Longitudinal monitoring of liver function in vivo is hindered by the lack of high-resolution non-invasive imaging techniques. Here, the authors show a crucial and unique tool for longitudinal in vivo imaging of liver spheroids at cellular resolution to study liver physiology and disease.
- Francesca Lazzeri-Barcelo
- , Nuria Oliva-Vilarnau
- & Per-Olof Berggren
-
Article
| Open AccessA one-two punch targeting reactive oxygen species and fibril for rescuing Alzheimer’s disease
Toxic amyloid-beta plaque and harmful inflammation are two leading hallmarks of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and precise AD therapy is elusive due to the lack of dual-targeting therapy function, limited blood-brain barrier penetration, and low imaging sensitivity. Here, the authors address these issues by designing a near-infrared-II aggregation-induced emission nanotheranostic for precise AD therapy.
- Jiefei Wang
- , Ping Shangguan
- & Ben Zhong Tang
-
Article
| Open AccessA full-body transcription factor expression atlas with completely resolved cell identities in C. elegans
Invariant cell lineage in C. elegans enables the analysis of transcriptional regulatory mechanisms controlling the fate of each cell at spatiotemporal resolution. Here, the authors develop a tool automating C. elegans cell identification and create an expression atlas of 620 transcription factors.
- Yongbin Li
- , Siyu Chen
- & Xiao Liu
-
Article
| Open AccessSingle-cell mapping of lipid metabolites using an infrared probe in human-derived model systems
Current metabolic imaging studies are limited by low resolution and low specificity. Here, the authors present a single-cell metabolic imaging platform to monitor lipid metabolism with high specificity in various human-derived 2D and 3D culture systems.
- Yeran Bai
- , Carolina M. Camargo
- & Kenneth S. Kosik
-
Article
| Open AccessConformational coupling of the sialic acid TRAP transporter HiSiaQM with its substrate binding protein HiSiaP
Tripartite ATP-independent periplasmic (TRAP) transporters use an extra substrate binding protein to transport a variety of substrates in bacteria and archaea. Here the authors use a disulfide engineering approach to lock the TRAP transporter HiSiaPQM from H. influenzae in different conformational states for characterisation.
- Martin F. Peter
- , Jan A. Ruland
- & Gregor Hagelueken
-
Article
| Open AccessMuscle abnormalities worsen after post-exertional malaise in long COVID
In this longitudinal, case-controlled, cohort design study, authors show that post-exertional malaise is associated with severe exercise-induced myopathy, local and systemic metabolic disturbances and infiltration of amyloid-containing deposits in skeletal muscles of patients with long COVID.
- Brent Appelman
- , Braeden T. Charlton
- & Rob C. I. Wüst
Browse broader subjects
Browse narrower subjects
- Bioluminescence imaging
- 3-D reconstruction
- Diffusion tensor imaging
- Endoscopy
- Fluorescence imaging
- Functional magnetic resonance imaging
- Magnetic resonance imaging
- Magnetoencephalography
- Molecular imaging
- Optical imaging
- Positron-emission tomography
- Time-lapse imaging
- Ultrasound
- Viral tracing
- X-ray tomography