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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

Frequency-dependent polarization of repeating fast radio bursts—implications for their origin

Yi FengORCID; Di LiORCID; Yuan-Pei YangORCID; Yongkun ZhangORCID; Weiwei ZhuORCID; Bing ZhangORCID; Wenbin LuORCID; Pei WangORCID; Shi DaiORCID; Ryan S. LynchORCID; Jumei YaoORCID; Jinchen JiangORCID; Jiarui NiuORCID; Dejiang ZhouORCID; Heng XuORCID; Chenchen MiaoORCID; Chenhui NiuORCID; Lingqi MengORCID; Lei QianORCID; Chao-Wei TsaiORCID; Bojun WangORCID; Mengyao XueORCID; Youling YueORCID; Mao YuanORCID; Songbo ZhangORCID; Lei ZhangORCID

<jats:p> The polarization of fast radio bursts (FRBs), which are bright astronomical transient phenomena, contains information about their environments. Using wide-band observations with two telescopes, we report polarization measurements of five repeating FRBs and find a trend of lower polarization at lower frequencies. This behavior is modeled as multipath scattering, characterized by a single parameter, σ <jats:sub>RM</jats:sub> , the rotation measure (RM) scatter. Sources with higher σ <jats:sub>RM</jats:sub> have higher RM magnitude and scattering time scales. The two sources with the highest σ <jats:sub>RM</jats:sub> , FRB 20121102A and FRB 20190520B, are associated with compact persistent radio sources. These properties indicate a complex environment near the repeating FRBs, such as a supernova remnant or a pulsar wind nebula, consistent with their having arisen from young stellar populations. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1266-1270

Concise syntheses of GB22, GB13, and himgaline by cross-coupling and complete reduction

Eleanor M. LandwehrORCID; Meghan A. BakerORCID; Takuya OgumaORCID; Hannah E. Burdge; Takahiro KawajiriORCID; Ryan A. ShenviORCID

<jats:p> Neuroactive metabolites from the bark of <jats:italic>Galbulimima belgraveana</jats:italic> occur in variable distributions among trees and are not easily accessible through chemical synthesis because of elaborate bond networks and dense stereochemistry. Previous syntheses of complex congeners such as himgaline have relied on iterative, stepwise installation of multiple methine stereocenters. We decreased the synthetic burden of himgaline chemical space to nearly one-third of the prior best (7 to 9 versus 19 to 31 steps) by cross-coupling high fraction aromatic building blocks (high F <jats:sub>sp</jats:sub> 2) followed by complete, stereoselective reduction to high fraction sp <jats:sup>3</jats:sup> products (high F <jats:sub>sp</jats:sub> 3). This short entry into <jats:italic>Galbulimima</jats:italic> alkaloid space should facilitate extensive chemical exploration and biological interrogation. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1270-1274

Global urban environmental change drives adaptation in white clover

James S. SantangeloORCID; Rob W. NessORCID; Beata Cohan; Connor R. FitzpatrickORCID; Simon G. InnesORCID; Sophie Koch; Lindsay S. MilesORCID; Samreen Munim; Pedro R. Peres-NetoORCID; Cindy Prashad; Alex T. Tong; Windsor E. AguirreORCID; Philips O. AkinwoleORCID; Marina Alberti; Jackie Álvarez; Jill T. Anderson; Joseph J. AndersonORCID; Yoshino Ando; Nigel R. AndrewORCID; Fabio AngeolettoORCID; Daniel N. AnstettORCID; Julia AnstettORCID; Felipe Aoki-Gonçalves; A. Z. Andis AriettaORCID; Mary T. K. Arroyo; Emily J. AustenORCID; Fernanda Baena-DíazORCID; Cory A. Barker; Howard A. BaylisORCID; Julia M. Beliz; Alfonso Benitez-MoraORCID; David Bickford; Gabriela Biedebach; Gwylim S. BlackburnORCID; Mannfred M. A. BoehmORCID; Stephen P. Bonser; Dries BonteORCID; Jesse R. Bragger; Cristina BranquinhoORCID; Kristien I. BransORCID; Jorge C. Bresciano; Peta D. BromORCID; Anna BucharovaORCID; Briana Burt; James F. Cahill; Katelyn D. Campbell; Elizabeth J. CarlenORCID; Diego CarmonaORCID; Maria Clara CastellanosORCID; Giada CentenaroORCID; Izan Chalen; Jaime A. Chaves; Mariana Chávez-Pesqueira; Xiao-Yong Chen; Angela M. ChiltonORCID; Kristina M. Chomiak; Diego F. Cisneros-HerediaORCID; Ibrahim K. Cisse; Aimée T. ClassenORCID; Mattheau S. Comerford; Camila Cordoba Fradinger; Hannah Corney; Andrew J. Crawford; Kerri M. CrawfordORCID; Maxime DahirelORCID; Santiago DavidORCID; Robert De Haan; Nicholas J. Deacon; Clare DeanORCID; Ek del-ValORCID; Eleftherios K. Deligiannis; Derek DenneyORCID; Margarete A. Dettlaff; Michelle F. DiLeoORCID; Yuan-Yuan Ding; Moisés E. Domínguez-López; Davide M. DominoniORCID; Savannah L. Draud; Karen DysonORCID; Jacintha EllersORCID; Carlos I. EspinosaORCID; Liliana EssiORCID; Mohsen Falahati-AnbaranORCID; Jéssica C. F. FalcãoORCID; Hayden T. Fargo; Mark D. E. FellowesORCID; Raina M. Fitzpatrick; Leah E. Flaherty; Pádraic J. FloodORCID; María F. Flores; Juan FornoniORCID; Amy G. Foster; Christopher J. FrostORCID; Tracy L. FuentesORCID; Justin R. FulkersonORCID; Edeline GagnonORCID; Frauke GarbschORCID; Colin J. GarrowayORCID; Aleeza C. GersteinORCID; Mischa M. Giasson; E. Binney Girdler; Spyros GkelisORCID; William GodsoeORCID; Anneke M. GolemiecORCID; Mireille Golemiec; César González-LagosORCID; Amanda J. GortonORCID; Kiyoko M. GotandaORCID; Gustaf Granath; Stephan Greiner; Joanna S. GriffithsORCID; Filipa GriloORCID; Pedro E. GundelORCID; Benjamin Hamilton; Joyce M. Hardin; Tianhua He; Stephen B. Heard; André F. HenriquesORCID; Melissa Hernández-PovedaORCID; Molly C. Hetherington-Rauth; Sarah J. HillORCID; Dieter F. HochuliORCID; Kathryn A. HodginsORCID; Glen R. HoodORCID; Gareth R. HopkinsORCID; Katherine A. HovanesORCID; Ava R. HowardORCID; Sierra C. Hubbard; Carlos N. Ibarra-CerdeñaORCID; Carlos Iñiguez-ArmijosORCID; Paola Jara-ArancioORCID; Benjamin J. M. JarrettORCID; Manon Jeannot; Vania Jiménez-LobatoORCID; Mae Johnson; Oscar Johnson; Philip P. JohnsonORCID; Reagan Johnson; Matthew P. Josephson; Meen Chel JungORCID; Michael G. JustORCID; Aapo KahilainenORCID; Otto S. Kailing; Eunice Kariñho-BetancourtORCID; Regina KarousouORCID; Lauren A. KirnORCID; Anna KirschbaumORCID; Anna-Liisa Laine; Jalene M. LaMontagneORCID; Christian LampeiORCID; Carlos Lara; Erica L. LarsonORCID; Adrián Lázaro-Lobo; Jennifer H. Le; Deleon S. Leandro; Christopher LeeORCID; Yunting LeiORCID; Carolina A. LeónORCID; Manuel E. Lequerica TamaraORCID; Danica C. LevesqueORCID; Wan-Jin LiaoORCID; Megan Ljubotina; Hannah LockeORCID; Martin T. Lockett; Tiffany C. LongoORCID; Jeremy T. Lundholm; Thomas MacGillavry; Christopher R. Mackin; Alex R. Mahmoud; Isaac A. Manju; Janine MariënORCID; D. Nayeli MartínezORCID; Marina Martínez-BartoloméORCID; Emily K. MeinekeORCID; Wendy Mendoza-Arroyo; Thomas J. S. MerrittORCID; Lila Elizabeth L. Merritt; Giuditta Migiani; Emily S. MinorORCID; Nora Mitchell; Mitra Mohammadi BazarganiORCID; Angela T. MolesORCID; Julia D. MonkORCID; Christopher M. MooreORCID; Paula A. Morales-MoralesORCID; Brook T. MoyersORCID; Miriam Muñoz-RojasORCID; Jason Munshi-SouthORCID; Shannon M. Murphy; Maureen M. MurúaORCID; Melisa Neila; Ourania Nikolaidis; Iva NjunjićORCID; Peter NoskoORCID; Juan Núñez-FarfánORCID; Takayuki Ohgushi; Kenneth M. OlsenORCID; Øystein H. OpedalORCID; Cristina Ornelas; Amy L. ParachnowitschORCID; Aaron S. Paratore; Angela M. Parody-Merino; Juraj PauleORCID; Octávio S. PauloORCID; João Carlos PenaORCID; Vera W. PfeifferORCID; Pedro Pinho; Anthony Piot; Ilga M. PorthORCID; Nicholas Poulos; Adriana PuentesORCID; Jiao Qu; Estela Quintero-VallejoORCID; Steve M. RacitiORCID; Joost A. M. RaeymaekersORCID; Krista M. Raveala; Diana J. Rennison; Milton C. RibeiroORCID; Jonathan L. Richardson; Gonzalo Rivas-TorresORCID; Benjamin J. RiveraORCID; Adam B. RoddyORCID; Erika Rodriguez-MuñozORCID; José Raúl RománORCID; Laura S. Rossi; Jennifer K. RowntreeORCID; Travis J. RyanORCID; Santiago SalinasORCID; Nathan J. Sanders; Luis Y. Santiago-RosarioORCID; Amy M. SavageORCID; J.F. ScheepensORCID; Menno SchilthuizenORCID; Adam C. SchneiderORCID; Tiffany ScholierORCID; Jared L. Scott; Summer A. Shaheed; Richard P. Shefferson; Caralee A. Shepard; Jacqui A. Shykoff; Georgianna Silveira; Alexis D. Smith; Lizet Solis-Gabriel; Antonella Soro; Katie V. Spellman; Kaitlin Stack WhitneyORCID; Indra Starke-Ottich; Jörg G. StephanORCID; Jessica D. StephensORCID; Justyna Szulc; Marta SzulkinORCID; Ayco J. M. Tack; Ítalo TamburrinoORCID; Tayler D. Tate; Emmanuel TergeminaORCID; Panagiotis TheodorouORCID; Ken A. ThompsonORCID; Caragh G. ThrelfallORCID; Robin M. TinghitellaORCID; Lilibeth Toledo-Chelala; Xin TongORCID; Léa UroyORCID; Shunsuke UtsumiORCID; Martijn L. VandegehuchteORCID; Acer VanWallendaelORCID; Paula M. Vidal; Susana M. Wadgymar; Ai-Ying WangORCID; Nian Wang; Montana L. Warbrick; Kenneth D. WhitneyORCID; Miriam Wiesmeier; J. Tristian WilesORCID; Jianqiang WuORCID; Zoe A. XirocostasORCID; Zhaogui Yan; Jiahe Yao; Jeremy B. Yoder; Owen Yoshida; Jingxiong ZhangORCID; Zhigang ZhaoORCID; Carly D. ZiterORCID; Matthew P. ZuelligORCID; Rebecca A. ZufallORCID; Juan E. ZuritaORCID; Sharon E. ZytynskaORCID; Marc T. J. JohnsonORCID

<jats:p>Urbanization transforms environments in ways that alter biological evolution. We examined whether urban environmental change drives parallel evolution by sampling 110,019 white clover plants from 6169 populations in 160 cities globally. Plants were assayed for a Mendelian antiherbivore defense that also affects tolerance to abiotic stressors. Urban-rural gradients were associated with the evolution of clines in defense in 47% of cities throughout the world. Variation in the strength of clines was explained by environmental changes in drought stress and vegetation cover that varied among cities. Sequencing 2074 genomes from 26 cities revealed that the evolution of urban-rural clines was best explained by adaptive evolution, but the degree of parallel adaptation varied among cities. Our results demonstrate that urbanization leads to adaptation at a global scale.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1275-1281

The histone H3.1 variant regulates TONSOKU-mediated DNA repair during replication

Hossein DavarinejadORCID; Yi-Chun HuangORCID; Benoit MermazORCID; Chantal LeBlancORCID; Axel PouletORCID; Geoffrey ThomsonORCID; Valentin JolyORCID; Marcelo MuñozORCID; Alexis Arvanitis-VigneaultORCID; Devisree ValsakumarORCID; Gonzalo VillarinoORCID; Alex RossORCID; Benjamin H. RotsteinORCID; Emilio I. Alarcon; Joseph S. BrunzelleORCID; Philipp VoigtORCID; Jie DongORCID; Jean-François CoutureORCID; Yannick JacobORCID

<jats:p>The tail of replication-dependent histone H3.1 varies from that of replication-independent H3.3 at the amino acid located at position 31 in plants and animals, but no function has been assigned to this residue to demonstrate a unique and conserved role for H3.1 during replication. We found that TONSOKU (TSK/TONSL), which rescues broken replication forks, specifically interacts with H3.1 via recognition of alanine 31 by its tetratricopeptide repeat domain. Our results indicate that genomic instability in the absence of ATXR5/ATXR6-catalyzed histone H3 lysine 27 monomethylation in plants depends on H3.1, TSK, and DNA polymerase theta (Pol θ). This work reveals an H3.1-specific function during replication and a common strategy used in multicellular eukaryotes for regulating post-replicative chromatin maturation and TSK, which relies on histone monomethyltransferases and reading of the H3.1 variant.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1281-1286

Recovery of particulate methane monooxygenase structure and activity in a lipid bilayer

Christopher W. KooORCID; Frank J. TucciORCID; Yuan HeORCID; Amy C. RosenzweigORCID

<jats:p>Bacterial methane oxidation using the enzyme particulate methane monooxygenase (pMMO) contributes to the removal of environmental methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Crystal structures determined using inactive, detergent-solubilized pMMO lack several conserved regions neighboring the proposed active site. We show that reconstituting pMMO in nanodiscs with lipids extracted from the native organism restores methane oxidation activity. Multiple nanodisc-embedded pMMO structures determined by cryo–electron microscopy to 2.14- to 2.46-angstrom resolution reveal the structure of pMMO in a lipid environment. The resulting model includes stabilizing lipids, regions of the PmoA and PmoC subunits not observed in prior structures, and a previously undetected copper-binding site in the PmoC subunit with an adjacent hydrophobic cavity. These structures provide a revised framework for understanding and engineering pMMO function.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1287-1291

Wildfire smoke destroys stratospheric ozone

Peter BernathORCID; Chris BooneORCID; Jeff CrouseORCID

<jats:p>Large wildfires inject smoke and biomass-burning products into the mid-latitude stratosphere, where they destroy ozone, which protects us from ultraviolet radiation. The infrared spectrometer on the Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment satellite measured the spectra of smoke particles from the “Black Summer” fires in Australia in late 2019 and early 2020, revealing that they contain oxygenated organic functional groups and water adsorption on the surfaces. These injected smoke particles have produced unexpected and extreme perturbations in stratospheric gases beyond any seen in the previous 15 years of measurements, including increases in formaldehyde, chlorine nitrate, chlorine monoxide, and hypochlorous acid and decreases in ozone, nitrogen dioxide, and hydrochloric acid. These perturbations in stratospheric composition have the potential to affect ozone chemistry in unexpected ways.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1292-1295

Spectroscopy signatures of electron correlations in a trilayer graphene/hBN moiré superlattice

Jixiang YangORCID; Guorui ChenORCID; Tianyi HanORCID; Qihang ZhangORCID; Ya-Hui Zhang; Lili JiangORCID; Bosai LyuORCID; Hongyuan Li; Kenji WatanabeORCID; Takashi TaniguchiORCID; Zhiwen ShiORCID; Todadri SenthilORCID; Yuanbo ZhangORCID; Feng WangORCID; Long JuORCID

<jats:p>ABC-stacked trilayer graphene/hexagonal boron nitride moiré superlattice (TLG/hBN) has emerged as a playground for correlated electron physics. We report spectroscopy measurements of dual-gated TLG/hBN using Fourier transform infrared photocurrent spectroscopy. We observed a strong optical transition between moiré minibands that narrows continuously as a bandgap is opened by gating, indicating a reduction of the single-particle bandwidth. At half-filling of the valence flat band, a broad absorption peak emerges at ~18 milli–electron volts, indicating direct optical excitation across an emerging Mott gap. Similar photocurrent spectra are observed in two other correlated insulating states at quarter- and half-filling of the first conduction band. Our findings provide key parameters of the Hubbard model for the understanding of electron correlation in TLG/hBN.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1295-1299

Reactions between layer-resolved molecules mediated by dipolar spin exchange

William G. TobiasORCID; Kyle MatsudaORCID; Jun-Ru LiORCID; Calder MillerORCID; Annette N. Carroll; Thomas BilitewskiORCID; Ana Maria ReyORCID; Jun YeORCID

<jats:p>Microscopic control over polar molecules with tunable interactions enables the realization of distinct quantum phenomena. Using an electric field gradient, we demonstrated layer-resolved state preparation and imaging of ultracold potassium-rubidium molecules confined to two-dimensional planes in an optical lattice. The rotational coherence was maximized by rotating the electric field relative to the light polarization for state-insensitive trapping. Spatially separated molecules in adjacent layers interact through dipolar spin exchange of rotational angular momentum; by adjusting these interactions, we regulated the local chemical reaction rate. The resonance width of the exchange process vastly exceeded the dipolar interaction energy, an effect attributed to thermal energy. This work realized precise control of interacting molecules, enabling electric field microscopy on subwavelength scales and allowing access to unexplored physics in two-dimensional systems.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1299-1303

The trouble with labels

Nkuchia M. M’ikanatha

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 1306-1306

Response to Comment on “Reversible disorder-order transitions in atomic crystal nucleation”

Sungho Jeon; Sang-Yeon Hwang; Jim Ciston; Karen C. Bustillo; Bryan W. Reed; Sukjoon Hong; Alex Zettl; Woo Youn Kim; Peter Ercius; Jungwon Park; Won Chul Lee

<jats:p> Yu <jats:italic>et al</jats:italic> . suggested calculating precisely the size ranges of the three parts of our figure 3A, adjusting the free-energy levels in figure 3B, and considering the shape effect in the first-principles calculation. The first and second suggestions raise strong concerns for misinterpretation and overinterpretation of our experiments. The original calculation is sufficient to support our claim about crystalline-to-disordered transformations. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. No disponible