Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain
the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in
Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles
and JavaScript.
Understanding the cellular target of hit compounds from phenotypic screens presents a major challenge yet is essential in the development of chemical probes. Here, the authors reveal the target of Hedgehog Pathway Inhibitor-1, by converting it to a bifunctional degrader, to be BET bromodomains.
Allergic asthma is characterized by goblet cell metaplasia. Here, the authors show protein SUMOylation contributes to goblet cell metaplasia and SUMOylation-mediated ROCK2 activation is an integral component of Rho/ROCK signalling pathway in controlling the airway goblet cell metaplasia.
Antibiotic resistance ABC-F factors protect the ribosome from important antibiotics. Here, for one of them, the authors describe its molecular regulation that involves ribosome stalling by antibiotics for which the factor provides resistance.
Here, the authors devise a method, combining the break junction technique with a suspended heat-flux sensor, to measure the total thermal and electrical conductance of a single molecule, at room temperature, together with its Seebeck coefficient.
The main limitations in NMR techniques are low sensitivity and the requirement for complex instrumentation. Here the authors show that a microfluidic chip with a single untuned planar spiral microcoil, combined with laser-light induced hyperpolarization, allows for multidimensional and heteronuclear Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy on picomole quantities of material.
In this work, a nanobody based intermolecular strain sensor was used to follow the mechanical strain in the nuclear lamina. The results indicate that mechanical state of the nuclear lamina is not only affected by the cell contractility, but also chromatin packing.
Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) play key roles in the immune response but their properties at the single-cell level are less well understood. Here, the authors characterize differential features of lncRNAs and protein-coding genes upon Ebola infection in macaques at single-cell resolution.
Liquid crystal elastomer printing methods are often limited to planar structures. In this work, authors integrate 4D printed structures with fully impregnated composite interfaces to enable programmable deformation ability and high bearing capacity by adjusting the off-centre distribution of the fibres.
The ambient environmental temperature changes the extent or severity of a virus infection. Here the authors show that influenza and SARS-CoV-2 infection at higher temperatures promotes gut microbiota derived deoxycholic acid signalling which increases host resistance to infection.
Minimally invasive implants have potential in treating intervertebral disc degeneration, but providing sufficient mechanical support is challenging. Here, the authors report the development of a nucleus pulposus scaffold, with properties designed to match those of native nucleus pulposus.
Understanding genetic regulation and the underlying mechanism for genetic associations with human phenotypes is complicated by cellular heterogeneity and linkage disequilibrium. Here, the authors propose an analytical framework to decode genetic variation of gene regulation at both cell-type and single-nucleotide levels.
Live-cell RNA imaging with high spatial and temporal resolution remains a major challenge. Here the authors design spirocyclic rhodamine probes that enable a fluorescent light-up aptamer system suitable for visualizing RNAs in live or fixed cells with two different super-resolution microscopy modalities SMLM and STED.
Interleukin 26 (IL-26) has been shown to have antimicrobial and pro-inflammatory effects. Here the authors establish a role for IL-26 in the generation of IL-17A producing Th17 CD4+ T cells and suggest it involves epithelial cross talk in skin lesions of psoriasis patients.
Addictive substances may impair cognitive flexibility. Here the authors show that in rodents, increased activity of striatal direct-pathway medium spiny neurons (dMSNs) in response to cocaine inhibits cholinergic interneurons (CINs), reducing cognitive flexibility.
Exciton-polaritons are part-light part-matter states in semiconductors. Here the authors leverage momentum-resolved optical microscopy to image ballistic and diffusive propagation of exciton-polaritons on femtosecond scales.
Chemotherapy-induced cytosolic DNA has been shown to activate the cGAS-STING pathway. Here, the authors demonstrate that the efficacy of low-dose doxorubicin to elicit a STING-mediated anti-tumour immune response can be enhanced by liposomal-loading with indocyanine green, resulting in ultrasound-activatable enhanced nuclear doxorubicin localisation and release of mitochondrial DNA.
Paediatric acute respiratory distress syndrome (pARDS) is associated with significant mortality and morbidity. Here the authors use single cell sequencing of tracheal aspirate samples from children with pARDS and characterise immune phenotypes and associations with infection stage and pathogen.
Here the authors study RPA, a key component in DNA replication and repair using single molecule DNA Curtains and Markov chain modelling. They reveal that the bimolecular nature of RPA dynamics on ssDNA is tuned by the Rad52 mediator to assist the loading of the Rad51 recombinase.
Here, the authors show that longer duration and greater degree of overweight and obesity during early adulthood as well as younger age of onset of a high body mass index are associated with a higher risk of 18 cancer types.