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- 1From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedSeeds of progress: German chemicals company BASF has received its first approval to market genetically modified seeds. Its herbicide-tolerant soya bean 'Cultivance', which was developed with Embrapa, the Brazilian...
- 2From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedWolf winners: Physicists Anton Zeilinger, John Clauser and Alain Aspect share the prestigious 2010 Wolf Prize in Physics for their work on quantum entanglement. Biologist Axel Ullrich took the medicine prize for his...
- 3From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedBlind Data: Celebrating Science and Design Dana Centre, London 10-11 February. See go.nature.com/QhPGsZ The offspring of a speed-dating mixer between young scientists and designers is exhibited at London's Dana...
- 4From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedInquiry clears Mann: Climate scientist Michael Mann of Pennsylvania State University, University Park, has been cleared of allegations of research misconduct by a committee at his university. The committee, convened to...
- 5From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedTwo independent projects in different countries and with very different subjects came to the same conclusion at around the same time. Both pinpoint a gene as having a crucial role in the formation of the...
- 6From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedMoths and butterflies hitch rides on jet streams. go.nature.com/11M6Qo...
- 7From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedDepression exit: London-based pharma giant GlaxoSmithKline revealed plans on 4 February to shut down early-stage research into pain and depression medications, and open a new research arm dedicated to finding treatments...
- 8From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedNature Mater. doi:10.1038/nmat2622 (2010) Strong materials, such as ceramics, are often brittle and prone to snapping--but those that deform gracefully under tension, such as metals, are weaker. Now, Dongchan Jang...
- 9From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedExperiments with simple chordate animals show how decay may make the resulting fossils seem less evolved. The consequence is to distort evidence of the evolution of the earliest vertebrates and their precursors. Just...
- 10From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedIn extremely acidic environments, enteric bacteria such as Escherichia coli rely on the amino acid antiporter AdiC to expel protons by exchanging intracellular agmatine ([Agm.sup.2+]) for extracellular arginine...
- 11From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedThe cool molecular gas from which stars form has been detected in relatively ordinary faraway galaxies. The results point to a continuous fuelling of gas into the star-forming guts of assembling galaxies. Stars form...
- 12From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedImmune homeostasis is dependent on tight control over the size of a population of regulatory T ([T.sub.reg]) cells capable of suppressing over-exuberant immune responses. The [T.sub.reg] cell subset is comprised of...
- 13From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedCell Stem Cell 6, 175-181 (2010) Loss of the directional asymmetry of cell division seen in certain stem-cell populations may give rise to cancer. Inke Nathke of the University of Dundee, UK, and her colleagues...
- 14From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedStudy shows religion scarcely influences moral intuition. go.nature.com/FlpnkJ...
- 15From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedAs calls for reform intensify following recent furores about e-mails, conflicts of interest, glaciers and extreme weather, five climatologists propose ways forward for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change....
- 16From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedNearly five years after biologists thrilled the conservation world by saying that they had videotaped the elusive ivory-billed woodpecker, the US Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) is on the verge of approving a final...
- 17From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedPredicting the Unpredictable: The Tumultuous Science of Earthquake Prediction by Susan E. Hough Princeton University Press: 2009. 272 pp. $24.95, 16.95 [pounds sterling] The recent earthquake in Haiti is a...
- 18From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedKnowledge about the earliest stages of vertebrate evolution draws heavily on information from 500-million-year-old fossils of early chordates--an animal group that includes vertebrates and their closest relatives....
- 19From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-Reviewed"I wish people would read my scientific papers rather than my e-mails." Phil Jones, who stepped aside as director of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU), University of East Anglia, UK, following allegations that e-mails...
- 20From: Nature. (Vol. 463, Issue 7282) Peer-ReviewedArising from: J. Ridgway et al. Nature 444,1083-1087 (2006) Delta-like 4 (DLL4)-mediated Notch signalling has emerged as an attractive target for cancer therapy (1,2). However, the potential side effects of blocking...