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  • The regenerative capacity of muscle stem cells is impaired in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Here, the authors show that the endocannabinoid receptor CB1 is activated by PAX7 in muscle stem cells, and that pharmacological inhibition of CB1 promotes stem cell activation and ameliorates symptoms in DMD mouse models.

    • Fabio A. Iannotti
    • Ester Pagano
    • Vincenzo Di Marzo
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The link between circulating lipids and breast cancer risk is complex. Here, the authors utilise data from more than 400,000 participants in two-sample Mendelian randomization to assess the link between blood lipids and breast cancer risk, and they find risk-promoting effects of raised LDL-cholesterol and CETP-mediated raised HDL-cholesterol.

    • Christoph Nowak
    • Johan Ärnlöv
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Despite the enormous potential of magnetically-guided soft robots for various applications, challenges related to inefficient locomotion in harsh environments hinder its development. Here, the authors demonstrate a multi-legged millirobot with excellent locomotion capability in harsh environments.

    • Haojian Lu
    • Mei Zhang
    • Yajing Shen
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Sequential alkene isomerization/functionalization enables enantioselective transformations of remote C–H bonds. Here, the authors report a chiral cobalt catalytic system for the highly enantioselective, remote C–H borylation of internal alkenes via an isomerization/hydroboration sequence.

    • Xu Chen
    • Zhaoyang Cheng
    • Zhan Lu
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Removal of daughter centriole-specific/enriched proteins (DCPs) and assembly of distal appendages (DA) are important for centrosome asymmetry. Here, the authors report that a centriolar distal end protein network regulates DCP removal, DA assembly, and ciliary vesicle docking.

    • Lei Wang
    • Marion Failler
    • Brian D. Dynlacht
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Several challenges are involved in direct targeting of mutant p53, while targeting altered fitness of cells with loss of wild type p53 is an alternative approach. Here they identify niclosamide to be selectively toxic to p53 deficient cells through a previously unknown mitochondrial uncoupling mechanism.

    • R. Kumar
    • L. Coronel
    • C. F. Cheok
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Exosomes mediate cell-to-cell communication by transporting proteins, mRNAs, and miRNAs but the mechanisms of protein sorting to exosomes are poorly understood. Here, the authors uncover that ubiquitin-like 3 (UBL3) regulates protein sorting to exosomes by acting as a posttranslational modification.

    • Hiroshi Ageta
    • Natsumi Ageta-Ishihara
    • Kunihiro Tsuchida
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The E. coli MinCDE system oscillates between cell poles to position the main division protein FtsZ. Here authors use in vitro reconstitution to show that MinDE oscillations also regulate unrelated membrane proteins spatiotemporally into patterns and gradients by forming a moving physical barrier.

    • Beatrice Ramm
    • Philipp Glock
    • Petra Schwille
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Reinjection of saltwater, co-produced with oil, has the potential to trigger damaging earthquakes. Here, using Oklahoma and Kansas as an example, the authors present a new physics-based methodology to forecast future probabilities of potentially damaging induced-earthquakes in space and time.

    • Cornelius Langenbruch
    • Matthew Weingarten
    • Mark D. Zoback
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Strobilurins are fungal metabolites that inspired the creation of β-methoxyacrylate agricultural fungicides. Here, Nofiani et al. identify the strobilurin biosynthesis gene cluster, encoding a polyketide synthase as well as an FAD-dependent oxygenase for an oxidative rearrangement leading to β-methoxyacrylate formation.

    • Risa Nofiani
    • Kate de Mattos-Shipley
    • Russell J. Cox
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The Polycomb Repressive-Deubiquitinase (PR-DUB) complex is responsible for the removal of the ubiquitin epigenetic modification from Histone 2A. Here the authors describe the structure of the Drosophila PR-DUB complex, providing new insight into its regulation and how cancer-associated mutations disrupt PR-DUB activity.

    • Martina Foglizzo
    • Adam J. Middleton
    • Peter D. Mace
    ArticleOpen Access
  • HTL and D14 receptors perceive the structurally similar signaling compounds karrikin and strigolactone. Here, the authors show that ShD14 and a divergent clade of ShHTLs from Strigae capable of recognizing strigolact are capable of recognizing strigolactone and provide structural insights into the evolution of ligand specificity.

    • Yuqun Xu
    • Takuya Miyakawa
    • Masaru Tanokura
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Channelrhodopsins are light-activated ion channels that mediate cation permeation across cell membranes upon light absorption. Here, the authors report the crystal structure of the most red-shifted channelrhodopsin from the algae Chlamydomonas noctigama at 2.6 Å resolution.

    • Kazumasa Oda
    • Johannes Vierock
    • Osamu Nureki
    ArticleOpen Access