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Naturejobs

prospects

Shaking off genome fatigue p3

Paul Smaglik

doi:10.1038/35097201


Special Report

Population Genetics p4

Population geneticists are in short supply, as the need to translate large data sets into disease-susceptibility traits grows, says Eugene Russo

Eugene Russo

doi:10.1038/35097203


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Opinion

Industrial 'R' up in a downturn p439

In markets that have never been tougher, IT and telecoms companies are well structured for essential innovation. Investors are recognizing this, but some governments risk losing long-term opportunities by failing to invest in related research.

doi:10.1038/35097214


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News

Large Hadron Collider in crisis as magnet costs spiral upwards p441

David Adam

doi:10.1038/35097216


Senators call for biodefence boost p441

Jonathan Knight

doi:10.1038/35097219


Bilateral Vietnam study plans to assess war fallout of dioxin p442

Rex Dalton

doi:10.1038/35097221


Eviction threat to Belgium's science academies p442

Quirin Schiermeier

doi:10.1038/35097224


Doctors propose panel on research misconduct p442

Erica Klarreich

doi:10.1038/35097226


Testing time for gene patent as Europe rebels p443

Meredith Wadman

doi:10.1038/35097228


Last-minute floods sink research p443

Alison Abbott

doi:10.1038/35097231


Mouse genome roars ahead with new map p444

Declan Butler

doi:10.1038/35097234


Psychiatrist launches lawsuit over 'academic freedom' p444

David Spurgeon

doi:10.1038/35097237


NASA budget problems alarm space-station collaborators p445

William Triplett

doi:10.1038/35097240


Vatican approves use of animal transplants 'to benefit humans' p445

Xavier Bosch

doi:10.1038/35097243


news in brief p446

doi:10.1038/35097246


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News

Erratum p447

doi:10.1038/35097250


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news feature

Hard times for high tech p448

Computer and telecoms firms are losing money and laying off staff — yet say that R&D remains a priority. Can their scientists really remain immune to the economic downturn? Declan Butler and Jim Giles investigate.

Declan Butler and Jim Giles

doi:10.1038/35097252


Biologists join the dots p450

Tiny specks of semiconductor can make biological molecules and cellular components glow in a kaleidoscope of colours. These 'quantum dots' may soon be a standard biological tool, says Erica Klarreich.

Erica Klarreich

doi:10.1038/35097256


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Correspondence

Rules on originality need to be clearly set out p453

Tadasu Nagaoka and Hisatsugu Miyakoshi

doi:10.1038/35097263


Related problems p453

Alex C. W. May

doi:10.1038/35097265


Give us time to put reforms into action p453

Enrico Garaci

doi:10.1038/35097267


In the stem-cell debate, new concepts need new words p453

Confusion arises when the existing vocabulary we use is inadequate to describe new methodologies.

Ann A. Kiessling

doi:10.1038/35097269


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Book Reviews

Whither evo–devo? p455

Assessing the interplay between evolutionary and developmental processes.

Axel Meyer reviews From DNA to Diversity: Molecular Genetics and the Evolution of Animal Design by Sean B. Carroll, Jennifer K. Grenier and Scott D. Weatherbee

doi:10.1038/35097131


The shrinking world of corals p456

doi:10.1038/35097134


No easy answers p457

Xavier Bosch reviews Human Trials: Scientists, Investors, and Patients in the Quest for a Cure by Susan Quinn

doi:10.1038/35097137


Is content king? p458

Johanna McEntyre reviews The Encyclopedia of Life Sciences (http://www.els.net)

doi:10.1038/35097140


Poking around among the mammals p459

doi:10.1038/35097144


A new window on space p459

Ingo Lehmann reviews Revealing the Universe: The Making of the Chandra X-ray Observatory by Wallace Tucker and Karen Tucker

doi:10.1038/35097147


Science in culture p460

Martin Kemp reviews

doi:10.1038/35097149


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words

Tales behind the tags p461

Physics is crowded with evocative phrases, but these alone cannot show the whole picture.

Philip Morrison

doi:10.1038/35097170


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concepts

The natural economy p463

Jeff Harvey


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News and Views

Talk of genetics and vice versa p465

Does our ability to talk lie in our genes? The suspicion is bolstered by the discovery of a gene that might affect how the brain circuitry needed for speech and language develops.

Steven Pinker

doi:10.1038/35097173


Bose–Einstein condensates: Mastering the language of atoms p466

Physicists can already make ultracold atoms perform quantum tricks in sophisticated magnetic and optical traps. But a fast route to trapping atoms on a microchip opens up new possibilities.

Ron Folman and Jörg Schmiedmayer

doi:10.1038/35097176


Bacterial genomics: A plague o' both your hosts p467

The genome of the bacterium that causes plague is highly dynamic, and scarred by genes acquired from other organisms. Does this explain its ability to kill both mammals and insects?

Stewart T. Cole and Carmen Buchrieser

doi:10.1038/35097178


100 and 50 years ago p469

doi:10.1038/35097181


Global change: Chill taken out of the tropics p470

A paradox in palaeoclimatology has been the apparent existence of a cool sea surface in the tropics under conditions of high CO2 in the atmosphere. It looks as if that paradox has been resolved.

Lee R. Kump

doi:10.1038/35097183


Neurobiology: Developing order p471

Different types of nerve cells are made in a particular sequence during development. But how? Studies of fruitflies reveal a temporal order in the expression of the genes that regulate these decisions.

Rick Livesey and Connie Cepko

doi:10.1038/35097186


Gravitational physics: Black hole blockbuster p473

Sarah Tomlin

doi:10.1038/35097189


Acoustic physics: Suspended by sound p474

Ultrasound waves can levitate heavy balls of tungsten. This contact-free method of keeping items suspended in the air can be applied to the investigation and processing of new materials.

E. H. Brandt

doi:10.1038/35097192


Human genetics: To clot or not p475

In multicellular animals, there has to be a balance between the free flow and clotting of blood. One molecule involved is von Willebrand factor, and the enzyme that cuts it down to size is now unveiled.

Amanda J. Fosang and Peter J. Smith

doi:10.1038/35097196


Daedalus: Learning from melting p476

David Jones

doi:10.1038/35097199


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Brief Communications

Snapping shrimp make flashing bubbles p477

The cavitation bubbles created by shrimp in stunning their prey have some surprising properties.

Detlef Lohse, Barbara Schmitz and Michel Versluis

doi:10.1038/35097152


Carbon emissions: The economic benefits of the Kyoto Protocol p478

Giulio A. De Leo, Luca Rizzi, Andrea Caizzi and Marino Gatto

doi:10.1038/35097156


Palaeolithic paintings: Evolution of prehistoric cave art p479

H. Valladas, J. Clottes, J.-M. Geneste, M. A. Garcia, M. Arnold, H. Cachier and N. Tisnérat-Laborde

doi:10.1038/35097160


Physiology: Cold current in thermoreceptive neurons p480

Gordon Reid and Maria-Luiza Flonta

doi:10.1038/35097164


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Articles

Warm tropical sea surface temperatures in the Late Cretaceous and Eocene epochs p481

Paul N. Pearson, Peter W. Ditchfield, Joyce Singano, Katherine G. Harcourt-Brown, Christopher J. Nicholas, Richard K. Olsson, Nicholas J. Shackleton and Mike A. Hall

doi:10.1038/35097000

See also: News and Views by Kump


Mutations in a member of the ADAMTS gene family cause thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura p488

Gallia G. Levy, William C. Nichols, Eric C. Lian, Tatiana Foroud, Jeanette N. McClintick, Beth M. McGee, Angela Y. Yang, David R. Siemieniak, Kenneth R. Stark, Ralph Gruppo, Ravindra Sarode, Susan B. Shurin, Visalam Chandrasekaran, Sally P. Stabler, Hernan Sabio, Eric E. Bouhassira, Jefferson D. Upshaw, Jr, David Ginsburg and Han-Mou Tsai

doi:10.1038/35097008

See also: News and Views by Fosang & Smith


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Letters to Nature

Light interference from single atoms and their mirror images p495

J. Eschner, Ch. Raab, F. Schmidt-Kaler and R. Blatt

doi:10.1038/35097017


Bose–Einstein condensation on a microelectronic chip p498

W. Hänsel, P. Hommelhoff, T. W. Hänsch and J. Reichel

doi:10.1038/35097032

See also: News and Views by Folman & Schmiedmayer


Spatially resolved electronic structure inside and outside the vortex cores of a high-temperature superconductor p501

V. F. Mitrovic acute, E. E. Sigmund, M. Eschrig, H. N. Bachman, W. P. Halperin, A. P. Reyes, P. Kuhns and W. G. Moulton

doi:10.1038/35097039


Swollen liquid-crystalline lamellar phase based on extended solid-like sheets p504

Jean-Christophe P. Gabriel, Franck Camerel, Bruno J. Lemaire, Hervé Desvaux, Patrick Davidson and Patrick Batail

doi:10.1038/35097046


High frequency of 'super-cyclones' along the Great Barrier Reef over the past 5,000 years p508

Jonathan Nott and Matthew Hayne

doi:10.1038/35097055


Multiple benefits of gregariousness cover detectability costs in aposematic aggregations p512

Marianna Riipi, Rauno V. Alatalo, Leena Lindström and Johanna Mappes

doi:10.1038/35097061


Positive selection of a gene family during the emergence of humans and African apes p514

Matthew E. Johnson, Luigi Viggiano, Jeffrey A. Bailey, Munah Abdul-Rauf, Graham Goodwin, Mariano Rocchi and Evan E. Eichler

doi:10.1038/35097067


A forkhead-domain gene is mutated in a severe speech and language disorder p519

Cecilia S. L. Lai, Simon E. Fisher, Jane A. Hurst, Faraneh Vargha-Khadem and Anthony P. Monaco

doi:10.1038/35097076

See also: News and Views by Pinker


Genome sequence of Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague p523

J. Parkhill, B. W. Wren, N. R. Thomson, R. W. Titball, M. T. G. Holden, M. B. Prentice, M. Sebaihia, K. D. James, C. Churcher, K. L. Mungall, S. Baker, D. Basham, S. D. Bentley, K. Brooks, A. M. Cerdeño-Tárraga, T. Chillingworth, A. Cronin, R. M. Davies, P. Davis, G. Dougan, T. Feltwell, N. Hamlin, S. Holroyd, K. Jagels, A. V. Karlyshev, S. Leather, S. Moule, P. C. F. Oyston, M. Quail, K. Rutherford, M. Simmonds, J. Skelton, K. Stevens, S. Whitehead and B. G. Barrell

doi:10.1038/35097083

See also: News and Views by Cole & Buchrieser


An endogenous cannabinoid (2-AG) is neuroprotective after brain injury p527

David Panikashvili, Constantina Simeonidou, Shimon Ben-Shabat, Lumír Hanus caron, Aviva Breuer, Raphael Mechoulam and Esther Shohami

doi:10.1038/35097089


A synthetic glycolipid prevents autoimmune encephalomyelitis by inducing TH2 bias of natural killer T cells p531

Katsuichi Miyamoto, Sachiko Miyake and Takashi Yamamura

doi:10.1038/35097097


Direct ligand–receptor complex interaction controls Brassica self-incompatibility p534

Seiji Takayama, Hiroko Shimosato, Hiroshi Shiba, Miyuki Funato, Fang-Sik Che, Masao Watanabe, Megumi Iwano and Akira Isogai

doi:10.1038/35097104


Quality control of mRNA 3'-end processing is linked to the nuclear exosome p538

Patricia Hilleren, Terri McCarthy, Michael Rosbash, Roy Parker and Torben Heick Jensen

doi:10.1038/35097110


Transmission intensity and impact of control policies on the foot and mouth epidemic in Great Britain p542

Neil M. Ferguson, Christl A. Donnelly and Roy M. Anderson

doi:10.1038/35097116


erratum: The timing of the last deglaciation in North Atlantic climate records p548

Claire Waelbroeck, Jean-Claude Duplessy, Elisabeth Michel, Laurent Labeyrie, Didier Paillard and Josette Duprat

doi:10.1038/35097124


erratum: Control of conformational and interpolymer effects in conjugated polymers p548

J. Kim and M. Swager

doi:10.1038/35097126


erratum: Partitioning selection and complementarity in biodiversity experiments p548

Michel Loreau and Andy Hector

doi:10.1038/35097128


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New on the Market

High-throughput screening p549

Assay kits, plates, probes and rotors for high throughput.

doi:10.1038/35097167


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