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Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde mar. 1997 / hasta dic. 2023 Science Journals

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0036-8075

ISSN electrónico

1095-9203

Editor responsable

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

Schrödinger’s Oxford years Schrödinger in Oxford David C. Clary World Scientific, 2022. 420 pp.

Cormac O’Raifeartaigh

<jats:p>A welcome new tome offers an incomplete portrait of a flawed genius</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1236-1236

Drawing the mind, one neuron at a time The Brain in Search of Itself: Santiago Ramón y Cajal and the Story of the Neuron Benjamin Ehrlich Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2022. 464 pp.

Alex Gomez-Marin

<jats:p>A new biography celebrates the Spaniard who founded modern neuroscience</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1237-1237

Brazilian cave heritage under siege

Rodrigo Lopes Ferreira; Enrico Bernard; Francisco William da Cruz Júnior; Luis Beethoven Piló; Allan Calux; Marconi Souza-Silva; Jos Barlow; Paulo S. Pompeu; Pedro Cardoso; Stefano Mammola; Alejandro Martínez García; William R. Jeffery; William Shear; Rodrigo A. Medellín; J. Judson Wynne; Paulo A. V. Borges; Yoshitaka Kamimura; Tanja Pipan; Nadja Zupan Hajna; Alberto Sendra; Stewart Peck; Bogdan P. Onac; David C. Culver; Hannelore Hoch; Jean-François Flot; Fabio Stoch; Martina Pavlek; Matthew L. Niemiller; Shirish Manchi; Louis Deharveng; Danté Fenolio; José-María Calaforra; Jill Yager; Christian Griebler; Fadi Henri Nader; William F. Humphreys; Alice C. Hughes; Brock Fenton; Paolo Forti; Francesco Sauro; George Veni; Amos Frumkin; Efrat Gavish-Regev; Cene Fišer; Peter Trontelj; Maja Zagmajster; Teo Delic; Diana M. P. Galassi; Ilaria Vaccarelli; Marjan Komnenov; Guilherme Gainett; Valeria da Cunha Tavares; Ľubomír Kováč; Ana Z. Miller; Kazunori Yoshizawa; Tiziana Di Lorenzo; Oana T. Moldovan; David Sánchez-Fernández; Soumia Moutaouakil; Francis Howarth; Helena Bilandžija; Tvrtko Dražina; Nikolina Kuharić; Valerija Butorac; Charles Lienhard; Steve J. B. Cooper; David Eme; André Menezes Strauss; Mattia Saccò; Yahui Zhao; Paul Williams; Mingyi Tian; Krizler Tanalgo; Kyung-Sik Woo; Miran Barjakovic; Gary F. McCracken; Nancy B Simmons; Paul A. Racey; Derek Ford; José Ayrton Labegalini; Nivaldo Colzato; Maria João Ramos Pereira; Ludmilla M. S. Aguiar; Ricardo Moratelli; Gerhard Du Preez; Abel Pérez-González; Ana Sofia P. S. Reboleira; John Gunn; Ann Mc Cartney; Paulo E. D. Bobrowiec; Dmitry Milko; Wanja Kinuthia; Erich Fischer; Melissa B. Meierhofer; Winifred F Frick

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1238-1239

Brazil’s mangroves: Natural carbon storage

Denilson da S. Bezerra; Adriano de Lima Santos; Janaina Santos Bezerra; Silvana Amaral; Milton Kampel; Liana O. Anderson; Flávia Rebelo Mochel; Jorge Luiz Silva Nunes; Naíla Arraes de Araujo; Larissa Nascimento Barreto; Maria do S. S. Pinheiro; Marcio José Celeri; Fabrício B. Silva; Alexsandro Mendonça Viegas; Stella Manes; Taissa C. S. Rodrigues; Josué C. Viegas; Ulisses D. V. Souza; André L. S. Santos; Celso H. L. Silva-Junior

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1239-1239

Disrupting targets’ dependency on bullies

Susanne Täuber; Morteza Mahmoudi

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1239-1239

In Science Journals

Michael Funk (eds.)

<jats:p> Highlights from the <jats:italic>Science</jats:italic> family of journals </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1241-1243

In Other Journals

Caroline Ash; Jesse Smith (eds.)

<jats:p>Editors’ selections from the current scientific literature</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1242-1243

Multiple causal variants underlie genetic associations in humans

Nathan S. AbellORCID; Marianne K. DeGorterORCID; Michael J. Gloudemans; Emily GreenwaldORCID; Kevin S. SmithORCID; Zihuai He; Stephen B. MontgomeryORCID

<jats:p>Associations between genetic variation and traits are often in noncoding regions with strong linkage disequilibrium (LD), where a single causal variant is assumed to underlie the association. We applied a massively parallel reporter assay (MPRA) to functionally evaluate genetic variants in high, local LD for independent cis-expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL). We found that 17.7% of eQTLs exhibit more than one major allelic effect in tight LD. The detected regulatory variants were highly and specifically enriched for activating chromatin structures and allelic transcription factor binding. Integration of MPRA profiles with eQTL/complex trait colocalizations across 114 human traits and diseases identified causal variant sets demonstrating how genetic association signals can manifest through multiple, tightly linked causal variants.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1247-1254

Copper induces cell death by targeting lipoylated TCA cycle proteins

Peter TsvetkovORCID; Shannon CoyORCID; Boryana PetrovaORCID; Margaret DreishpoonORCID; Ana VermaORCID; Mai Abdusamad; Jordan RossenORCID; Lena Joesch-CohenORCID; Ranad Humeidi; Ryan D. Spangler; John K. EatonORCID; Evgeni Frenkel; Mustafa Kocak; Steven M. CorselloORCID; Svetlana LutsenkoORCID; Naama KanarekORCID; Sandro SantagataORCID; Todd R. GolubORCID

<jats:p>Copper is an essential cofactor for all organisms, and yet it becomes toxic if concentrations exceed a threshold maintained by evolutionarily conserved homeostatic mechanisms. How excess copper induces cell death, however, is unknown. Here, we show in human cells that copper-dependent, regulated cell death is distinct from known death mechanisms and is dependent on mitochondrial respiration. We show that copper-dependent death occurs by means of direct binding of copper to lipoylated components of the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. This results in lipoylated protein aggregation and subsequent iron-sulfur cluster protein loss, which leads to proteotoxic stress and ultimately cell death. These findings may explain the need for ancient copper homeostatic mechanisms.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1254-1261

Tracking the sliding of grain boundaries at the atomic scale

Lihua WangORCID; Yin ZhangORCID; Zhi ZengORCID; Hao ZhouORCID; Jian HeORCID; Pan LiuORCID; Mingwei ChenORCID; Jian HanORCID; David J. SrolovitzORCID; Jiao TengORCID; Yizhong GuoORCID; Guo YangORCID; Deli KongORCID; En MaORCID; Yongli HuORCID; Baocai YinORCID; XiaoXu HuangORCID; Ze ZhangORCID; Ting ZhuORCID; Xiaodong HanORCID

<jats:p>Grain boundaries (GBs) play an important role in the mechanical behavior of polycrystalline materials. Despite decades of investigation, the atomic-scale dynamic processes of GB deformation remain elusive, particularly for the GBs in polycrystals, which are commonly of the asymmetric and general type. We conducted an in situ atomic-resolution study to reveal how sliding-dominant deformation is accomplished at general tilt GBs in platinum bicrystals. We observed either direct atomic-scale sliding along the GB or sliding with atom transfer across the boundary plane. The latter sliding process was mediated by movements of disconnections that enabled the transport of GB atoms, leading to a previously unrecognized mode of coupled GB sliding and atomic plane transfer. These results enable an atomic-scale understanding of how general GBs slide in polycrystalline materials.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1261-1265