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Feeling the pressure | Science

SummaryIn fall 2020, researchers at the University of Rochester reported creating the first ever material that conducts electricity without resistance at room temperature. The material is known as a "hydride," a combination of hydrogen with…

How microbiota improve immunotherapy | Science

SummaryAnimals have coevolved with complex communities of microorganisms living on barrier tissues, referred to as the microbiota or commensals. The microbiota controls immune function not only locally within barrier tissues but also…

Driving multiphase superconductivity | Science

SummarySymmetry and symmetry breaking are keys to much of the interesting phenomena in condensed matter physics. Conventional superconductivity, for example, requires both time reversal and inversion symmetry, and the removal of one of…

Immune imprinting in utero | Science

SummaryIncreasing evidence suggests that immune system development begins in utero and is heavily influenced by the maternal immune status during gestation (1). Pregnancy is associated with suppression of the maternal immune system to…

Selective pruning of synapses | Science

A fundamental question in developmental neuroscience is how different cell types wire together with exquisite specificity to ensure the formation of canonical neural circuits. Increasingly, non-neural cells have been implicated as being…

A trio of pyrroles | Science

Macrocycles encompassing four pyrrole rings are common motifs in biochemical and synthetic light harvesting and catalysis. Inaba et al. report a strained, smaller analog with three pyrroles. Their route cyclized a linear hexaketone…

pH-universal OER electrocatalyst | Science

The oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is the key electrocatalytic process in many electrochemical systems, including water splitting and metal–air batteries. Because of the acid-aggressive and strongly corrosive media, the development of…

Visibly controlling bond breaking | Science

Photodynamic bonds that are stable under dark conditions but break when photoexcited enable an array of materials applications where switching is desired. For cycloadditions and reversions of conjugated organic molecules or radical…

Mirror image DNA | Science

In a world barely nascent, scientists can create mirror images of the building blocks of life, including DNA, RNA, and protein, and use them to build a mirror image of life itself. This fantastic endeavor is not an easy task. A major…

Epigenetic control of metastasis | Science

Metastasis is when cancer becomes deadly. Unsuccessful searches for driver mutations of metastasis have led some to explore alternative epigenetic causes. Pierce et al. found that the protein kinase LKB1, better known for influencing cancer…

Collapse of fluke populations | Science

Parasitic flukes have highly complex life cycles circumscribing a definitive host's ecology. Parasites in wildlife are underappreciated, poorly recorded, and many species are endangered. Sitko and Heneberg collate reports of long-term…

Tracking severe malaria disease | Science

Female Anopheles mosquitoes transmit malaria sporozoites to humans in the context of a blood meal. In malaria-endemic areas, most of the ensuing infections are asymptomatic. Some, however, progress to an uncomplicated illness (fever,…

Fluid support | Science

A three-dimensional soft hydrogel structure (pictured above) bioprinted with the help of fluid supportPHOTO: BIOMATERIALS 276, 121034 (2021)" data-icon-position="" data-hide-link-title="0"> A three-dimensional…

Contrapuntal gene risk | Science

Identifying functional genetic variation in humans requires sifting through hundreds of thousands of individual variants and linking them to the trait of interest. We often do not know whether a gene is functional in a tissue or specific…

Learning to unplug | Science

Nestled in a state park, the wedding was a perfect opportunity to take a break from my Ph.D. and celebrate the union of my close friends. But my mind was somewhere else. Moments earlier, as my wife and I were waiting for the ceremony to…

Some light on diazotrophs | Science

About half of the planet's nitrogen fixation occurs out at sea by prokaryote diazotrophs, yet we still have a poor understanding of which ones do what. Karlusich et al. applied a combination of image capture and nitrogenase gene (nifH)…

Watching grain boundaries | Science

Grain boundaries play an important role in determining the properties of ceramics and other materials. However, tracking the migration of grain boundaries is difficult. Wei et al. used atomic-resolution scanning transmission electron…

Castration delays aging | Science

Castration prolongs the life of sheep by feminizing the epigenome to reduce androgen-regulated aging.PHOTO: ZOONAR GMBH/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO" data-icon-position="" data-hide-link-title="0"> Castration prolongs the…

Richard C. Lewontin (1929–2021) | Science

Richard Charles “Dick” Lewontin died at age 92 on 4 July, 3 days after Mary Jane, his wife of 73 years. Arguably the most influential population geneticist of the second half of the 20th century, Lewontin laid the theoretical and…

Making machine learning trustworthy | Science

Machine learning (ML) has advanced dramatically during the past decade and continues to achieve impressive human-level performance on nontrivial tasks in image, speech, and text recognition. It is increasingly powering many high-stake…

Nitrogen discourages legumes | Science

Anthropogenic nutrient enrichment of the global environment has been proceeding for many decades. Nitrogen deposition in particular leads to higher ecosystem productivity at the expense of biodiversity. In a global experiment spanning 45…

Plant-made vaccines and therapeutics | Science

Therapeutic proteins such as vaccines, antibodies, hormones, and cytokines are generally produced in bacteria or eukaryotic systems, including chicken eggs and mammalian or insect cell cultures, with high production yield according to…

Failure to protect? | Science

A study of asthmatic children, most of them Black, shows how a common clinical trial design can expose vulnerable participants to serious risks.ILLUSTRATION: STEPHAN SCHMITZJuan Celedón, a respected pulmonary researcher at the University of…

Tackling the Hubbard model | Science

The Hubbard model describes the physics of interacting particles on a lattice and is thought to contain elements essential to the superconductivity of the cuprates. Despite its apparent simplicity, solving the Hubbard model remains…

Blue carbon can’t wait | Science

PHOTO: FRANCOIS MORI/AP/SHUTTERSTOCKWhen the United Nations released its World Ocean Assessment in 2015, it was clear that the oceans were seriously degraded, with stressors on these environments projected to increase. The 2021 Assessment,…

Over the baby bump | Science

“Well, at least you have permanent job security,” my aunt casually remarked last summer, referring to my role in the federal government's COVID-19 response. I shuddered. Little did she know I had just learned the National Institutes of…

Commensal responses go retro | Science

Vertebrate immune systems must be able to process and respond to myriad intrakingdom and interkingdom interactions by commensals and pathogens. Counterintuitively, Lima-Junior et al. found that colonization of mouse skin by the bacterium…

Neurorobotics for neurorehabilitation | Science

Advances in peripheral nervous system (PNS) interfacing present a promising alternative to traditional neuromodulation (1), particularly for individuals with upper-limb amputations (2–7). Implanted electrodes have been shown to diminish…