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  • Electron spins at nitrogen-vacancy centres in diamond are thought to be the most promising building blocks for practical realizations of quantum computers. Yaoet al. present a scalable architecture for a quantum information processor based on such vacancy centres that operates at room temperature.

    • N.Y. Yao
    • L. Jiang
    • M.D. Lukin
    Article
  • Studying the effects of extracellular matrix stiffening has been impeded because mostin vitromodels are static. Here, dynamic hydrogels are developed that stiffen in the presence of cells and are used to investigate the short-term (minutes-to-hours) and long-term (days-to-weeks) cellular responses to dynamic stiffening.

    • Murat Guvendiren
    • Jason A. Burdick
    Article
  • The large virus family,Paramyxoviridae, includes several human and livestock viruses. This study, testing 119 bat and rodent species distributed globally, identifies novel putative paramyxovirus species, providing data with potential uses in predictions of the emergence of novel paramyxoviruses in humans and livestock.

    • Jan Felix Drexler
    • Victor Max Corman
    • Christian Drosten
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The assembly of microscopic particles into macroscopic structures may allow the fabrication of complex materials, but general strategies to provide a wide variety of structures are lacking. Khalilet al. develop a colloidal assembly system, which can be tuned to provide over 20 different pre-programmed structures.

    • Karim S. Khalil
    • Amanda Sagastegui
    • Benjamin B. Yellen
    Article
  • An understanding of the genetic network that controls the flower-bearing structure—the inflorescence—in plants helps to explain the diversity seen in plant forms. This work identifies a new mechanism for the generation of inflorescence complexity in legumes, which is based on the function of theVEG1gene.

    • Ana Berbel
    • Cristina Ferrándiz
    • Francisco Madueño
    Article
  • Self-assembly of multi-component systems can be used to construct discrete, well-defined, nanoscopic-sized cages. Pasqualeet al. report the self-assembly of conical-shaped carboxylic acid derivatives of calix[4]arene and calix[5]arene, and the uranyl cation UO22+into octahedral and icosahedral anionic metallocages.

    • Sara Pasquale
    • Sara Sattin
    • Javier de Mendoza
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Percolation transitions indicate the threshold above which a network can operate. This work examines a general class of models known as hierarchical networks, and shows they can be made to percolate explosively, if they share features of so-called 'small-world' networks.

    • Stefan Boettcher
    • Vijay Singh
    • Robert M. Ziff
    Article
  • Phage display screening can unravel protein–protein interactions, but its application has been mainly restricted to the cell surface. Here, a phage-based reagent is introduced that allows the targeting of combinatorial peptides to cell organelles, providing a tool for the discovery of intracellular ligand-receptors.

    • Roberto Rangel
    • Liliana Guzman-Rojas
    • Wadih Arap
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Fanconi's anaemia is characterized by an inability to repair DNA damage and is associated with mutations in the Fanconi anaemia nuclear complex, which includes the protein FANCM. This study reports the crystal structures of a fragment of FANCM bound to the histone-fold-containing protein complex, MHF1–MHF2.

    • Yuyong Tao
    • Changjiang Jin
    • Maikun Teng
    Article
  • The terahertz spectral region is desirable for applications such as imaging or spectroscopy, but progress is hampered by a lack of efficient terahertz devices. By exploiting intraband transitions in graphene, Sensale-Rodriguezet al. demonstrate a broadband intensity modulator working at terahertz frequencies.

    • Berardi Sensale-Rodriguez
    • Rusen Yan
    • Huili Grace Xing
    Article
  • Abnormal mitochondrial fission leads to apoptosis and disease. Li and colleagues reveal the mechanism with which the transcription factor Foxo3a suppresses Fis1-mediated mitochondrial fission and apoptosis in cardiomyocytes and adrenocortical cancer cells, which involves miR-484 inhibition of Fis1 translation.

    • Kun Wang
    • Bo Long
    • Pei-Feng Li
    Article
  • Bioengineered hair follicles can be produced from embryonic follicle germ cells, but whether these follicles can interact with the surrounding tissue and function normally is unknown. Here, bioengineered hair follicles transplanted into mouse dermis make connections with the surrounding tissue and show normal hair cycles.

    • Koh-ei Toyoshima
    • Kyosuke Asakawa
    • Takashi Tsuji
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Lamivudine treatment of hepatitis B is associated with drug-resistance mutations in the virus’ DNA polymerase. In this study, 11 patients with drug resistance are investigated and the primary mutation in the DNA polymerase shown to be essential but not sufficient for establishing drug resistance.

    • Hong Thai
    • David S. Campo
    • Yury Khudyakov
    Article
  • Bats use a process known as echolocation to measure the distance of an object by echo delay. Here, studies in newborn bats reveal that echo delay tuning of neurons in the auditory cortex is present at birth rather than acquired as a result of echolocation experience.

    • Manfred Kössl
    • Cornelia Voss
    • Marianne Vater
    Article
  • The kinetics of chemical reactions occurring within confined volumes is relevant to a range of systems, including biological cells. This study examines the kinetics of reaction networks, and finds that below a critical volume there may be pairs of species whose relative concentrations invert.

    • Rajesh Ramaswamy
    • Nélido González-Segredo
    • Ramon Grima
    Article
  • Calcium nanodomains arise from the cytoplasmic mouth of calcium channels but have not been directly visualized. In this study, the nanodomain of the CaV2.2 calcium channel is imaged using total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy and a genetically encoded calcium sensor attached to the carboxy terminus.

    • Lai Hock Tay
    • Ivy E. Dick
    • David T. Yue
    Article
  • The amyloid-β-peptide is pivotal to the pathology of Alzheimer's disease, but its mechanism of action remains uncertain. This study utilizesin vivotwo-photon calcium imaging to investigate the effects of this peptide on single cortical neurons of the visual cortex in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease.

    • Christine Grienberger
    • Nathalie L. Rochefort
    • Arthur Konnerth
    ArticleOpen Access