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Volume 20 Issue 1, January 2023

Method of the Year 2022: Long-read sequencing

Long-read sequencing is our pick for the Method of the Year 2022, owing to its unparalleled utility in reading genomes, transcriptomes and epigenomes with high accuracy and completeness.

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Image: Aleksandr Khakimullin / Alamy Stock Photo. Cover Design: Thomas Phillips.

Editorial

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This Month

  • Many scientists are active on social media, especially Twitter. The social media world is changing, but these researchers want to stay socially connected.

    • Vivien Marx
    This Month
  • Planaria are a group of worms within the phylum Platyhelminthes (flatworms). Many species, including Schmidtea mediterranea, have the ability to regenerate their body from small pieces of tissue and are easy to keep in the laboratory, which makes them a prime model system for studying whole-body regeneration.

    • Leonard Drees
    • Jochen C. Rink
    This Month
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News Feature

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Comment

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Methods to Watch

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Research Highlights

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Research Briefings

  • During the first two years of postnatal development, the human brain undergoes rapid, pronounced changes in size, shape and content. Using high-resolution MRI, we constructed month-to-month atlases of infants 2 weeks to 2 years old, capturing key spatiotemporal traits of early brain development in terms of cortical geometries and tissue properties.

    Research Briefing
  • We trained DEDAL, an algorithm based on deep-learning language models, to generate pairwise alignments of protein sequences taking into account the sequence-specific context of amino acid substitutions or gaps. DEDAL improved the alignment correctness on remote homologs by up to threefold and the discrimination of remote homologs from evolutionarily unrelated sequences.

    Research Briefing
  • Localization Model Fit (LocMoFit) is a tool that enables fitting of super-resolution microscopy data to an arbitrary geometric model. The fit extracts quantitative parameters of individual cellular structures, which can be used to investigate dynamic and heterogenous protein assemblies and to create average protein distribution maps.

    Research Briefing
  • We engineered a 3D outer-blood-retina-barrier (3D-oBRB) with a fully polarized retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) monolayer on top of a Bruch’s membrane and a fenestrated choriocapillaris network. This 3D-oBRB tissue faithfully recapitulates RPE– choriocapillaris interactions, dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD) phenotypes (including sub-RPE drusen deposits and choriocapillaris degeneration) and the wet AMD phenotype of choriocapillaris neovascularization.

    Research Briefing
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Matters Arising

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