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- 1From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedTo the millions of people who watch television dramas such as CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, forensic science is an unerring guide to ferreting out the guilty and exonerating the innocent. It is a robust, high-tech...
- 2From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedThe discovery of two quasars in the distant Universe that apparently have no hot dust in their environments provides evidence that these systems represent the first generation of their family. In seeking to...
- 3From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedCellular senescence has been recently shown to have an important role in opposing tumour initiation and promotion. Senescence induced by oncogenes or by loss of tumour suppressor genes is thought to critically depend on...
- 4From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedThe trans-Pacific tsunami generated by the magnitude-8.8 Chile earthquake on 27 February exposed a problem with Australia's tsunami early-warning system. Since the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the Australian government...
- 5From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedAnimal market shake-up: On 9 March, drug companies Merck and Sanofi-Aventis announced that they would merge their animal-health businesses. Merck, headquartered in Whitehouse Station, New Jersey, and Sanofi-Aventis,...
- 6From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedEstimated decline in bluefin tuna in the West Atlantic between 1970 and 2007. Delegates at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora meeting in Doha, Qatar, are debating whether...
- 7From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedNeuron 65, 682-694 (2010) Rats that regularly consume alcohol and are then denied it show increased activity in a specific brain region. F. Woodward Hopf, at the University of California, San Francisco, and his...
- 8From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedPlants, similarly to animals, form polarized axes during embryo-genesis on which cell differentiation and organ patterning programs are orchestrated. During Arabidopsis embryogenesis, establishment of the shoot and root...
- 9From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedPipefish and related species provide rare examples of extreme male parental care. Controlled breeding experiments allow the resulting conflicts of interest between female, male and offspring to be explored. In sea...
- 10From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedThe terrorist explosions that ripped through Madrid's crowded commuter trains on the morning of 11 March 2004 killed 191 people, wounded some 2,000 more and prompted an international manhunt for the perpetrators. Soon...
- 11From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedThe brief review of William Langewiesche's book Fly By Wire (Nature 463, 882; 2010) incorrectly spelled the first name of Captain Sullenberger as "Chelsey". It should have read "Chesley"....
- 12From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedImproved control of the motional and internal quantum states of ultracold neutral atoms and ions has opened intriguing possibilities for quantum simulation and quantum computation. Many-body effects have been explored...
- 13From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedCurr. Biol. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2010.01.053 (2010) By decoding patterns of brain activity, researchers can tell which in a list of events a person is recalling. Eleanor Maguire and her colleagues at University...
- 14From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedInnate immunity represents the first line of inducible defence against microbial infection in plants and animals (1-3). In both kingdoms, recognition of pathogen- or microbe-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs or...
- 15From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedInhibition of an initiating oncogene often leads to extensive tumour cell death, a phenomenon known as oncogene addiction (1).This has led to the search for compounds that specifically target and inhibit oncogenes as...
- 16From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedThe research component of the European Union (EU) budget--known as the framework programme, now in its seventh iteration (FP7)--has experienced only incremental change each time the union has set its budget. The outcome...
- 17From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedInhibitors of RAF enzymes can suppress or activate the same signalling pathway. The details of how this happens provide a cautionary note for those targeting the pathway for anticancer drug discovery. Over the past...
- 18From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedThe first hovercraft has begun the hard task of practical development ... The experimental version now flying, the 'SR-NI', is an oval dish on top of which are mounted the propulsion and control systems, and the air...
- 19From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedScience doi:10.1126/science.1186802 (2010) The human mutation rate is lower than previously thought, according to researchers who sequenced the entire genomes of four family members--two siblings with rare genetic...
- 20From: Nature. (Vol. 464, Issue 7287) Peer-ReviewedYour call for simplification of European research funding (Nature 463, 999; 2010) is timely. In February we started a pan-European petition for simplification of the funding rules, addressed to the European Parliament...