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  • Artist's rendition of extracellular vesicles

    This Collection highlights selected articles from across the Nature Portfolio that document the recent progress in understanding the biology of Extracellular Vesicle-mediated cell–cell communication and advances in clinical translation of EVs.

  • A swirl of cells in brightly contrasting colors

    In this collection, we highlight recent papers published across Nature Portfolio journals on topics including embryonic development and stem cells, clinical and translational research, stem cell-based tissue engineering, and tissue stem cells.

  • To address health disparities and facilitate increasingly personalized treatments, Horwitz, Riley, Millan & Gunawardane call for the development of new models for basic and disease research that reflect diverse ancestral backgrounds and sex, and for the inclusion of diverse populations among donors and research participants.

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    • Using single-cell transcriptomics and functional assays, we identified various subsets of pancreatic beta cells. One subset, characterized by high levels of CD63, demonstrated enhanced glucose metabolism, mitochondrial activity, and glucose-induced insulin secretion, and the proportion of these beta cells was decreased in mouse models of type 2 diabetes (T2D) and humans with T2D.

      Research Briefing
    • Biomolecular condensation of macromolecules is an increasingly important concept in cell biology. Indeed, research on condensates touches on multiple areas of research, from biochemistry to biophysics and from organelles to cell polarity. We asked experts at the forefront of this field to comment on what excites them most regarding biomolecular condensation, as well as on current challenges, priorities and needs for the functional study of condensates.

      • Christine Mayr
      • Tanja Mittag
      • Huaiying Zhang
      Viewpoint
    • The molecular and cellular events that occur during the onset of human organogenesis remain mysterious. We used single-cell and spatial transcriptomics to provide a global view of human embryonic cell-type specification, shedding light on developmental processes such as axial patterning, stage transition, and differences between human and mouse embryonic development.

      Research Briefing
    • Programmed cell death (PCD) enables cells to co-ordinate their exit to benefit the surviving organism. A new study describes how cells can programme their death by inducing extensive disulfide bonding of the actin cytoskeleton in response to an imbalance of cystine, a raw material for glutathione production.

      • Laura M. Machesky
      News & Views
    • Activation of a crucial immune adaptor protein, STING, is tightly regulated by subcellular trafficking, but how it is deactivated remains less well defined. A study now shows that ESCRT-dependent encapsulation of STING-carrying vesicles by lysosomal compartments — through the process of microautophagy — mediates the termination of STING signalling.

      • Sonia Assil
      • Søren R. Paludan
      News & Views
  • Dimple Notani is principal investigator (PI) at the National Centre for Biological Sciences (NCBS) in Bangalore, India, studying gene regulation. Nature Cell Biology contacted Dimple to discuss the state of the field and her experience running a research lab in India through a pandemic and as a junior PI.

    • Melina Casadio
    Q&A
  • Daylon James is an associate professor at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York, where his work focuses on reproductive biology and cell-based approaches for treating infertility. Arun Sharma is an assistant professor at the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center Regenerative Medicine Institute, and his lab works on modelling cardiovascular diseases and developing cell-based screening platforms for drug toxicity. Many of us also know them as the hosts of the Stem Cell Podcast. Here, we ask them about the podcast and discuss their view on the stem cell field and science communication.

    • Stylianos Lefkopoulos
    Q&A
  • Kara McKinley is an assistant professor of stem-cell and regenerative biology at Harvard University. In addition to advancing our understanding of endometrial regeneration, she has tackled the gender bias in the academic job market by founding the ‘Leading Edge Fellows’ program. Nature Cell Biology contacted her to discuss her career and goals for our research community.

    • Melina Casadio
    Q&A
  • The Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology (IMCB) in Singapore has helped the local scientific community to grow. Nature Cell Biology spoke to Wanjin Hong (executive director at A*STAR’s IMCB) and Guillaume Thibault (associate professor affiliated with Nanyang Technological University Singapore, National University of Singapore and A*STAR’s IMCB), who have dedicated parts of their careers to the growth of cell biology research in Singapore, about the history and directions of cell biological research programs in Singapore.

    • Melina Casadio
    Q&A
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Extracellular vesicles

Selected, recent articles from across the Nature Portfolio that document the recent progress in understanding the biology of EV-mediated cell–cell communication and advances in clinical translation of EVs.
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