Showing Results for
- Academic Journals (60)
Search Results
- 60
Academic Journals
- 60
- 1From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedLetter to the Editor Author(s): Haris Doukas, Alexandros Nikas Author Affiliations: Involve citizens in climate-policy modelling The latest draft of the working-group report on mitigating climate change is now...
- 2From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedObesity increases the risk of mortality because of metabolic sequelae such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.sup.1. Thermogenesis by adipocytes can counteract obesity and metabolic diseases.sup.2,3. In...
- 3From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedInvestigation team rules out idea that the coronavirus came from a laboratory leak, but offers two hypotheses popular in Chinese media. COVID origin search must continue after WHO report, say scientists Investigation...
- 4From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedPlastics are key components of almost any technology today. Although their production consumes substantial feedstock resources, plastics are largely disposed of after their service life. In terms of a circular...
- 5From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedCurrent X-ray imaging technologies involving flat-panel detectors have difficulty in imaging three-dimensional objects because fabrication of large-area, flexible, silicon-based photodetectors on highly curved surfaces...
- 6From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedImmunologist Kizzmekia Corbett helped to design the Moderna vaccine. Now she volunteers her time talking about vaccine science with people of colour. COVID-vaccine designer tackles hesitancy -- in churches and on...
- 7From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedTo protect the planet's health, the agency must rediscover its capacity for connecting organizations. To protect the planet's health, the agency must rediscover its capacity for connecting organizations. Author(s):...
- 8From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedPlastics are invaluable materials, but they use up petroleum resources and persist in the environment. A high-performance plastic derived from renewable oils has been designed at the molecular level to be truly...
- 9From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedAstrocytes are glial cells that are abundant in the central nervous system (CNS) and that have important homeostatic and disease-promoting functions.sup.1. However, little is known about the homeostatic anti-inflammatory...
- 10From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedThe genome sequence of switchgrass (Panicum virgatum) sheds light on genetic mechanisms that have enabled the ancestors of this valuable biomass crop to adapt to cycles of climate warming and cooling. High-quality...
- 11From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedIn contrast to nearly all other tissues, the anatomy of cell differentiation in the bone marrow remains unknown. This is owing to a lack of strategies for examining myelopoiesis--the differentiation of myeloid...
- 12From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedIn the race against emerging coronavirus variants, researchers are looking beyond antibodies for clues to lasting protection from COVID-19. In the race against emerging coronavirus variants, researchers are looking...
- 13From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedFor those fortunate enough to have survived a deadly disease, a vital question remains: how long does their hard-earned immunity last? Tracking of antibodies in Ebola survivors reveals a surprising pattern. A...
- 14From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedThe brainstem is a key centre in the control of body movements. Although the precise nature of brainstem cell types and circuits that are central to full-body locomotion are becoming known.sup.1-5, efforts to understand...
- 15From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedA pot of 2,700-year-old goo, found in an aristocratic man's grave, hints at the rise of manufactured beauty-care products. A pot of 2,700-year-old goo, found in an aristocratic man's grave, hints at the rise of...
- 16From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedHow to make plastics less harmful is an urgent question in chemistry -- and must be for policy, too. How to make plastics less harmful is an urgent question in chemistry -- and must be for policy, too. Author...
- 17From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedOrganoids that contain an ancient version of a gene that influences brain development are smaller and bumpier than those with human genes. Organoids that contain an ancient version of a gene that influences brain...
- 18From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedA Correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-03177-5 Author(s): Eric Vallabh Minikel 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 , Konrad J. Karczewski 1 4 , Hilary C. Martin 9 , Beryl B. Cummings 1 4 5 ,...
- 19From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedHistone methyltransferases of the nuclear receptor-binding SET domain protein (NSD) family, including NSD1, NSD2 and NSD3, have crucial roles in chromatin regulation and are implicated in oncogenesis.sup.1,2. NSD enzymes...
- 20From:Nature (Vol. 590, Issue 7846) Peer-ReviewedLetter to the Editor Author(s): Oliver P. Richmond, Gëzim Visoka Author Affiliations: Peace-making: new technologies are no panacea For peace-making, artificial-intelligence and data-driven approaches (see, for...