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Volume 446 Issue 7135, 29 March 2007

Editorial

  • Britain's restructuring of research funding and the budget announced last week are welcome. But a cloud still hangs over basic biomedical science.

    Editorial

    Advertisement

  • A new consortium will fulfil a genomics dream — provided it gets the support it deserves.

    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

  • As politicians propose higher biofuel targets, soaring maize prices in the United States are putting new investment in ethanol production on hold. Lucy Odling-Smee reports.

    Business
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News Feature

  • Researchers have found certain stem-cell studies notoriously difficult to replicate. Erika Check finds out why, and whether it is slowing down the field.

    News Feature
  • How much can geometry and mathematics reveal about paintings? How far should hidden meanings be trusted in art? Jo Marchant investigates the latest, and possibly most controversial, interpretation of a Renaissance masterpiece.

    • Jo Marchant
    News Feature
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Correspondence

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Books & Arts

  • Three authors present very different views of the developing field of systems biology.

    • Eric Werner
    Books & Arts
  • Sarah Jacobs mutates genetic information into art.

    • Martin Kemp
    Books & Arts
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Connections

  • Networks of interactions between thousands of molecules within cells seem to defy comprehension, but shared principles of design may simplify the picture.

    • Uri Alon
    Connections
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News & Views

  • Environmental pollutants such as dioxins affect human health. It now seems that dioxins exert their effect by forming atypical enzyme complexes that mediate the breakdown of steroid-hormone receptors.

    • J. Wade Harper
    News & Views
  • Images of nanoscale structures can be constructed using the flow of electrons ejected from a metal probe tip by a fast laser pulse. The technique adds new dimensions to established methods of microscopy.

    • Herman Batelaan
    • Kees Uiterwaal
    News & Views
  • The conclusion that the primary divergences of the modern groups of mammals occurred in the mid-Cretaceous requires fresh thinking about this facet of evolutionary history — especially in ecological terms.

    • David Penny
    • Matthew J. Phillips
    News & Views
  • A receptor molecule in the fruitfly Drosophila melanogaster responds to a male pheromone in both sexes. But the effect of this response on sexual behaviour is not the same in males and females.

    • Charalambos P. Kyriacou
    News & Views
  • Electrons in one particular solid phase of plutonium are complex characters: while bound to atoms, in a quantum-mechanical mixture of two different valence states, they also roam freely throughout the crystal.

    • Robert C. Albers
    • Jian-Xin Zhu
    News & Views
  • Telling if a molecule is right-handed or left-handed is a venerable problem, but traditional approaches cannot touch the subtlest cases. As so often, technical innovation has provided the way forward.

    • Laurence D. Barron
    News & Views
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Correction

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Article

  • A massive compliation of molecular data to shows that not only did mammalian evolution have deep roots, but that the extant Orders of mammals did not become established until many millions of years after the dinosaurs had headed for their last round-up. In other words, the great end-Creatceous mass extinction had relatively little effect on mammal evolution.

    • Olaf R. P. Bininda-Emonds
    • Marcel Cardillo
    • Andy Purvis
    Article
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Letter

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Prospects

  • Being a pioneer has its own set of rewards and challenges.

    • Paul Smaglik
    Prospects
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Regions

  • Despite tight government budgets, Colorado is brimming with alternative-energy jobs potential. Amanda Haag reports.

    • Amanda Haag
    Regions
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Movers

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Networks and Support

  • Polish researchers who head home have more opportunities than they used to

    • Jacek Kuznicki
    • Marta Miaczynska
    Networks and Support
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Career View

  • Parenting has made me a better mentor

    • Moira Sheehan
    Career View
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Recruiters

  • The right kind of postgraduate training could help you to realize biotech's potential as well as your own.

    • Sheldon Schuster
    Recruiters
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Authors

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Brief Communications Arising

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