Πέμπτη 23 Ιουλίου 2020

Genomic insights into the early peopling of the Caribbean
The Caribbean was one of the last regions of the Americas to be settled by humans, but where they came from and how and when they reached the islands remain unclear. We generated genome-wide data for 93 ancient Caribbean islanders dating between 3200 and 400 calibrated years before the present and found evidence of at least three separate dispersals into the region, including two early dispersals into the Western Caribbean, one of which seems connected to radiation events in North America. This was...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Systemic racism persists in the sciences
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
An unusual superconductor
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
News at a glance
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
A membrane protein insertion complex
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Earth's climate destiny finally seen more clearly
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
The impact of COVID-19 and strategies for mitigation and suppression in low- and middle-income countries
The ongoing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic poses a severe threat to public health worldwide. We combine data on demography, contact patterns, disease severity, and health care capacity and quality to understand its impact and inform strategies for its control. Younger populations in lower-income countries may reduce overall risk, but limited health system capacity coupled with closer intergenerational contact largely negates this benefit. Mitigation strategies that slow but do not interrupt...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Tools suggest people reached Americas early
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Avoiding another Hiroshima
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Data secrecy may cripple U.S. attempts to slow pandemic
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Moved to metastasize by gut microbiota
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Research cruises gingerly resume
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Raising rabbit resistance
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
University reopening plans under fire
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Remote structuring of near-field landscapes
The electromagnetic near field enables subwavelength applications such as near-field microscopy and nanoparticle manipulation. Present methods to structure the near field rely on optical antenna theory, involving nanostructures that locally convert propagating waves into confined near-field patterns. We developed a theory of remote rather than local near-field shaping, based on cascaded mode conversion and interference of counterpropagating guided waves with different propagation constants. We demonstrate...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Polio vaccinators are back after pandemic pause
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Working through grief
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Aftermath
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Global prospects for COVID-19 control
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
COVID-19 affects HIV and tuberculosis care
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Rab32 puts itaconate where it's needed
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Mathematical models to guide pandemic response
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Lost years
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
The COVID-19 pandemic and human fertility
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
A stowaway in protein export
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Tying amines down for stable CO2 capture
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Chaperone-mediated autophagy regulates the pluripotency of embryonic stem cells
Embryonic stem cells can propagate indefinitely in a pluripotent state, able to differentiate into all types of specialized cells when restored to the embryo. What sustains their pluripotency during propagation remains unclear. Here, we show that core pluripotency factors OCT4 and SOX2 suppress chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA), a selective form of autophagy, until the initiation of differentiation. Low CMA activity promotes embryonic stem cell self-renewal, whereas its up-regulation enhances differentiation....
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Fine-tuning stemness
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Ultrahigh-strength and ductile superlattice alloys with nanoscale disordered interfaces
Alloys that have high strengths at high temperatures are crucial for a variety of important industries including aerospace. Alloys with ordered superlattice structures are attractive for this purpose but generally suffer from poor ductility and rapid grain coarsening. We discovered that nanoscale disordered interfaces can effectively overcome these problems. Interfacial disordering is driven by multielement cosegregation that creates a distinctive nanolayer between adjacent micrometer-scale superlattice...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Interrogating hot electrons in tunnel junctions
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Anomalous absorption of electromagnetic waves by 2D transition metal carbonitride Ti3CNTx (MXene)
Lightweight, ultrathin, and flexible electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding materials are needed to protect electronic circuits and portable telecommunication devices and to eliminate cross-talk between devices and device components. Here, we show that a two-dimensional (2D) transition metal carbonitride, Ti3CNTx MXene, with a moderate electrical conductivity, provides a higher shielding effectiveness compared with more conductive Ti3C2Tx or metal foils of the same thickness. This exceptional...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Was smallpox a widespread mild disease?
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Cell growth dilutes the cell cycle inhibitor Rb to trigger cell division
Cell size is fundamental to cell physiology. For example, cell size determines the spatial scale of organelles and intracellular transport and thereby affects biosynthesis. Although some genes that affect mammalian cell size have been identified, the molecular mechanisms through which cell growth drives cell division have remained elusive. We show that cell growth during the G1 phase of the cell division cycle dilutes the cell cycle inhibitor Retinoblastoma protein (Rb) to trigger division in human...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Beth Cindy Levine (1960-2020)
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Erratum for the Research Article: "Global wildlife trade across the tree of life," by B. R. Scheffers, B. F. Oliveira, I. Lamb, D. P. Edwards
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Ecology and economics for pandemic prevention
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Autophagy regulates stemness
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
The pull of the red planet
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Taking the temperature of hot carriers
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Fiction meets the near future
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Learning from evolution
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Nicaragua's COVID-19 crisis demands a response
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
A complex dispersal into the Caribbean
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
A community-led approach to COVID-19
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Above and beyond antibody abundance
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Lessons from viruses that affect lagomorphs
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Holocene forest dynamics in Africa
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
How stick insects got their colors
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Growing in the light
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Inactive ingredients may not be inert
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Dogs race through development
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Strength through disorder
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Cooperative carbon capture and steam regeneration with tetraamine-appended metal-organic frameworks
Natural gas has become the dominant source of electricity in the United States, and technologies capable of efficiently removing carbon dioxide (CO2) from the flue emissions of natural gas–fired power plants could reduce their carbon intensity. However, given the low partial pressure of CO2 in the flue stream, separation of CO2 is particularly challenging. Taking inspiration from the crystal structures of diamine-appended metal–organic frameworks exhibiting two-step cooperative CO2 adsorption, we...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Shields up!
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
The activities of drug inactive ingredients on biological targets
Excipients, considered "inactive ingredients," are a major component of formulated drugs and play key roles in their pharmacokinetics. Despite their pervasiveness, whether they are active on any targets has not been systematically explored. We computed the likelihood that approved excipients would bind to molecular targets. Testing in vitro revealed 25 excipient activities, ranging from low-nanomolar to high-micromolar concentration. Another 109 activities were identified by testing against clinical...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Sculpting the optical near field
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Determining plasmonic hot-carrier energy distributions via single-molecule transport measurements
Hot carriers in plasmonic nanostructures, generated via plasmon decay, play key roles in applications such as photocatalysis and in photodetectors that circumvent bandgap limitations. However, direct experimental quantification of steady-state energy distributions of hot carriers in nanostructures has so far been lacking. We present transport measurements from single-molecule junctions, created by trapping suitably chosen single molecules between an ultrathin gold film supporting surface plasmon...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Cytokines for maintaining T cells
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Structural basis for membrane insertion by the human ER membrane protein complex
A defining step in the biogenesis of a membrane protein is the insertion of its hydrophobic transmembrane helices into the lipid bilayer. The nine-subunit endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane protein complex (EMC) is a conserved co- and posttranslational insertase at the ER. We determined the structure of the human EMC in a lipid nanodisc to an overall resolution of 3.4 angstroms by cryo–electron microscopy, permitting building of a nearly complete atomic model. We used structure-guided mutagenesis...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Calcium imaging of left-right asymmetry
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
An evolution-based model for designing chorismate mutase enzymes
The rational design of enzymes is an important goal for both fundamental and practical reasons. Here, we describe a process to learn the constraints for specifying proteins purely from evolutionary sequence data, design and build libraries of synthetic genes, and test them for activity in vivo using a quantitative complementation assay. For chorismate mutase, a key enzyme in the biosynthesis of aromatic amino acids, we demonstrate the design of natural-like catalytic function with substantial sequence...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
A cell size sensor
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Itaconate is an effector of a Rab GTPase cell-autonomous host defense pathway against Salmonella
The guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) Rab32 coordinates a cell-intrinsic host defense mechanism that restricts the replication of intravacuolar pathogens such as Salmonella. Here, we show that this mechanism requires aconitate decarboxylase 1 (IRG1), which synthesizes itaconate, a metabolite with antimicrobial activity. We find that Rab32 interacts with IRG1 on Salmonella infection and facilitates the delivery of itaconate to the Salmonella-containing vacuole. Mice defective in IRG1 rescued the virulence...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
COVID-19 complications in South Africa
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Large-scale mutation in the evolution of a gene complex for cryptic coloration
The types of mutations affecting adaptation in the wild are only beginning to be understood. In particular, whether structural changes shape adaptation by suppressing recombination or by creating new mutations is unresolved. Here, we show that multiple linked but recombining loci underlie cryptic color morphs of Timema chumash stick insects. In a related species, these loci are found in a region of suppressed recombination, forming a supergene. However, in seven species of Timema, we found that a...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Testing biochemical data by simulation
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
New Products
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Steaming out captured CO2
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Simultaneous cross-evaluation of heterogeneous E. coli datasets via mechanistic simulation
The extensive heterogeneity of biological data poses challenges to analysis and interpretation. Construction of a large-scale mechanistic model of Escherichia coli enabled us to integrate and cross-evaluate a massive, heterogeneous dataset based on measurements reported by various groups over decades. We identified inconsistencies with functional consequences across the data, including that the total output of the ribosomes and RNA polymerases described by data are not sufficient for a cell to reproduce...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Viking smallpox diversity
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39
Diverse variola virus (smallpox) strains were widespread in northern Europe in the Viking Age
Smallpox, one of the most devastating human diseases, killed between 300 million and 500 million people in the 20th century alone. We recovered viral sequences from 13 northern European individuals, including 11 dated to ~600–1050 CE, overlapping the Viking Age, and reconstructed near-complete variola virus genomes for four of them. The samples predate the earliest confirmed smallpox cases by ~1000 years, and the sequences reveal a now-extinct sister clade of the modern variola viruses that were...
Science: Current Issue
Thu Jul 23, 2020 20:39

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