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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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December 2018 Volume 19, Issue 12 |
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| Comment Research Highlights Reviews Amendments & Corrections | |
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Nature Index 2018 Rising Stars
Creative minds drive the scientific enterprise. This supplement profiles up-and-coming researchers in the natural sciences who have achieved excellence in the Nature Index, and have demonstrated the passion, ambition and resilience to rise even higher in the competitive world of academia.
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One and one is not two: taking a fresh look at membrane interfaces Brian Belardi & Daniel A. Fletcher pp747 - 748 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0057-3 Dan Fletcher's lab comments on the unique properties of membranes at cell–cell adhesions, suggesting that cell–cell interfaces are a separate cellular compartment. Full Text | PDF
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150 years of Darwin's theory of intercellular flow of hereditary information Yongsheng Liu & Qi Chen pp749 - 750 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0072-4 Full Text | PDF
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Research Highlights | |
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Myc in elongation and repression Eytan Zlotorynski p751 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0079-x Transcription elongation supported by the super elongation complex, and H3K9 methylation and gene repression by G9a mediate the oncogenic function of Myc. PDF
| PrEView of cell–cell communication Paulina Strzyz pp752 - 753 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0073-3 Endothelial cells in white adipose tissue communicate with adipocytes through extracellular vesicles, relaying systemic metabolic information. PDF
| Inhibition by nuclear cGAS Grant Otto pp752 - 753 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0082-2 Cyclic GMP–AMP synthase (cGAS) inhibits DNA damage repair in the nucleus and thereby promotes tumorigenesis. PDF
| Selenium cysteine and epileptic seizures Ueli Schibler p753 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0050-x Ueli Schibler explains why the phenotype of a mutation in a codon of the '21st amino acid' selenium cysteine was unexpectedly specific. PDF
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Reviews | |
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A new era for understanding amyloid structures and disease Matthew G. Iadanza, Matthew P. Jackson, Eric W. Hewitt, Neil A. Ranson & Sheena E. Radford pp755 - 773 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0060-8 The aggregation of proteins into amyloid fibrils and their deposition into plaques and intracellular inclusions is the hallmark of amyloid disease. Recent advances in structural biology techniques have provided insight into how amyloid structure may affect the ability of fibrils to spread in a prion-like manner and into their roles in disease. Full Text | PDF
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Functions and mechanisms of epigenetic inheritance in animals Ksenia Skvortsova, Nicola Iovino & Ozren Bogdanović pp774 - 790 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0074-2 Epigenetic profiling of germline and zygotic genomes has revealed that a fraction of mammalian genomes do not undergo epigenetic reprogramming during early development, highlighting the importance of epigenetic inheritance in animals. Inheritance of histone modifications, tRNA fragments and microRNAs can affect gene regulation in the offspring; however, in mammals, epigenetic inheritance rarely operates beyond two generations. Full Text | PDF
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Translation deregulation in human disease Soroush Tahmasebi, Arkady Khoutorsky, Michael B. Mathews & Nahum Sonenberg pp791 - 807 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0034-x Translation deregulation causes many human diseases, which can be broadly categorized into tRNA or ribosomal dysfunction, and deregulation of the integrated stress response or the mTOR pathway. The complexity of the translation process and its cellular contexts could explain the phenotypic variability of these disorders. Full Text | PDF Collection: Translation and protein quality control
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Amendments & Corrections | |
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Author Correction: Regulation of microRNA biogenesis and its crosstalk with other cellular pathways Thomas Treiber, Nora Treiber & Gunter Meister p808 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0070-6 Full Text | PDF
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Publisher Correction: Post-transcriptional gene regulation by mRNA modifications Boxuan Simen Zhao, Ian A. Roundtree & Chuan He p808 | doi:10.1038/s41580-018-0075-1 Full Text | PDF
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