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Editorials

A new Silver Age? p1029

The Spanish government has doubled research spending in four years. The next government must create the legal structures to ensure that this money is wisely spent.

doi:10.1038/4511029a


Lone Star vs creationism p1030

The battle against anti-scientific literalism continues. Next stop Texas.

doi:10.1038/4511030a


Time to take control p1030

With money now flowing in, the fight against malaria must shift from advocacy to getting results.

doi:10.1038/4511030b

See also: Editor's summary


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Research Highlights

Research highlights p1032

doi:10.1038/4511032a


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Journal Club

Journal club p1033

Eric J. Nestler

doi:10.1038/4511033a


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News

Animal-rights activists invade Europe p1034

Experts fear extremists may be travelling from Britain.

Geoff Brumfiel

doi:10.1038/4511034a


Acclaimed photo was faked p1034

Chinese prizewinner merged two images.

Jane Qiu

doi:10.1038/4511034b


Revamp for NIH grants p1035

US funding body slims down application process.

Meredith Wadman

doi:10.1038/4511035a


The aftermath of independence p1036

The formerly Serbian province of Kosovo unilaterally declared its independence on 17 February. Some 10,000 Serbian students and academics live in enclaves in the ethnically divided city of Kosovska Mitrovica in the north of the new country dominated by Kosovar Albanians. Endocrinologist Aleksandar Jovanovic, vice-rector for science and international relations at the University of Mitrovica, discusses recent events.

Quirin Schiermeier

doi:10.1038/4511036a


Neglected diseases get vaccine research boost p1037

Drug company opens non-profit centre in Italy.

Alison Abbott

doi:10.1038/4511037a


Snapshot: 'Doomsday vault' opens p1037

Michael Hopkin

doi:10.1038/4511037b


Sidelines p1037

Scribbles on the margins of science.

doi:10.1038/4511037c


Iran refuses to cooperate with atomic agency p1038

IAEA report highlights unanswered questions.

Declan Butler

doi:10.1038/4511038a


First chapter of book of life goes live p1038

Online encyclopedia launches first data.

Emma Marris

doi:10.1038/4511038b


Meat meter measures marbled muscles p1039

Scientists devise way to measure tastiness of meat.

David Cyranoski

doi:10.1038/4511039a


English grants under review p1039

Funding agency ditches peer review in favour of metrics.

Daniel Cressey

doi:10.1038/4511039b


Strict ordering slashes tarmac time p1040

Physicist identifies fastest way to board aircraft.

Philip Ball

doi:10.1038/4511040a


UCLA wins restraining order against activists p1041

doi:10.1038/4511041a


Indonesia relents over bird-flu sample release p1041

doi:10.1038/4511041b


Biosafety lapses cost Texas A&M $1 million p1041

doi:10.1038/4511041c


US missile destroys toxic tank on spy satellite p1041

doi:10.1038/4511041d


Florida adopts teaching of evolution in its schools p1041

doi:10.1038/4511041e


Grey wolf no longer in danger, says US government p1041

doi:10.1038/4511041f


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News Features

Malaria: The end of the beginning p1042

After decades of work, a pioneering malaria vaccine may soon reach the final phase of clinical trials. In the first of two features on efforts against malaria, Brendan Maher reports on a vaccine that is far from perfect — but which may provide new direction and save thousands of lives.

doi:10.1038/4511042a


Malaria: The big push p1047

Zambia, with help from partners around the world, is stepping up its battle against malaria. Michael Hopkin reports from the rural front line.

doi:10.1038/4511047a


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Correspondence

Political debate: science will be the loser p1050

Daniel Sarewitz

doi:10.1038/4511050a


Political debate: it is a risk, but one that's worth taking p1050

Neal Lane

doi:10.1038/4511050b


Government subsidized by academia on conservation p1050

Philip Wheeler

doi:10.1038/4511050c


Celebrations for Darwin downplay Wallace's role p1050

George W. Beccaloni & Vincent S. Smith

doi:10.1038/4511050d


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Commentary

The billion-dollar malaria moment p1051

For years the global malaria effort has been asking for more resources. Now the field needs to figure out a systematic strategy for spending the money effectively, says Mark Grabowsky.

doi:10.1038/4511051a

See also: Editor's summary


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Books and Arts

Pest friends in the Cretaceous p1053

Fossils preserved in amber hint at surprising links between dinosaurs and their insect contemporaries.

Karen Chin reviews What Bugged the Dinosaurs? Insects, Disease, and Death in the Cretaceous by George Poinar, Jr & Roberta Poinar

doi:10.1038/4511053a


Exhibition: Shots of Silicon Valley p1054

Fred Turner reviews Gabriele Basilico: From San Francisco to Silicon Valley

doi:10.1038/4511054a


Fly image wins photo prize p1054

Joanne Baker reviews the winning image in the photographic competition that forms part of celebrations marking the 200th anniversary of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences

doi:10.1038/4511054b


Biopiracy started with a bounce p1055

Michael Gollin reviews The Thief at the End of the World: Rubber, Power, and the Seeds of Empire by Joe Jackson

doi:10.1038/4511055a


A feverish imagination p1056

Martin Kemp reviews the poems, plays and novels that punctuated the life of Ronald Ross

doi:10.1038/4511056a

See also: Editor's summary


Hidden treasures: Eise Eisinga Planetarium p1057

The world's oldest functioning planetarium was built by an eighteenth-century wool-comber in the Netherlands. Alison Abbot reports, in the second of her monthly series on small museums

Alison Abbot

doi:10.1038/4511057a

See also: Editor's summary


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Essay

When authorship met authenticity p1058

As counterfeit drugs abound, Adrian Johns recalls how medical patenting was created in the seventeenth century to secure trust across growing international trade networks by quashing fakes.

Adrian Johns

doi:10.1038/4511058a

See also: Editor's summary


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News and Views

Palaeoclimate: The rhythm of the rains p1061

Deposits in a Chinese cave tell the story of the region's climate stretching back more than 200,000 years, well past the last interglacial warm period — an invaluable resource for understanding the Asian monsoon.

Jonathan Overpeck & Julia Cole

doi:10.1038/4511061a

See also: Editor's summary


50 & 100 Years Ago p1062

doi:10.1038/4511062a


Biotechnology: A hold on plant meiosis p1063

The process of meiosis involves genetic shuffling that dilutes the desirable traits of sexually reproducing crops. Identification of a mutation in which shuffling does not occur is a step forward for plant breeders.

Peter J. van Dijk

doi:10.1038/4511063a

See also: Editor's summary


History of science: Quinine steps back in time p1065

Chemists have long memories. The claim, dating back to 1918, that a crucial step in a synthesis of quinine had been carried out has been validated experimentally, closing a chapter in this fascinating story.

Philip Ball

doi:10.1038/4511065a

See also: Editor's summary


Cancer: Crossing over to drug resistance p1066

Certain cancers stem from mutations that prevent a cell from repairing its damaged DNA efficiently. But antitumour chemotherapy that exploits that repair defect can in turn be nullified by counter-mutation.

David M. Livingston & Daniel P. Silver

doi:10.1038/4511066a

See also: Editor's summary


Environmental economics: To the rich man the spoils p1067

Global economic growth during the past century has lifted many into lives of unprecedented luxury. The cost has been the degradation of vital ecosystems — a cost borne disproportionately by the world's poor.

R. Kerry Turner & Brendan Fisher

doi:10.1038/4511067a


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Brief Communications Arising

Do animal personalities emerge? pE8

François Massol & Pierre-André Crochet

doi:10.1038/nature06743


Wolf et al. reply pE9

Max Wolf, G. Sander van Doorn, Olof Leimar & Franz J. Weissing

doi:10.1038/nature06744


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Review

Autophagy fights disease through cellular self-digestion p1069

Noboru Mizushima, Beth Levine, Ana Maria Cuervo & Daniel J. Klionsky

doi:10.1038/nature06639

See also: Editor's summary


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Article

Proteomic analysis of active multiple sclerosis lesions reveals therapeutic targets p1076

May H. Han, Sun-Il Hwang, Dolly B. Roy, Deborah H. Lundgren, Jordan V. Price, Shalina S. Ousman, Guy Haskin Fernald, Bruce Gerlitz, William H. Robinson, Sergio E. Baranzini, Brian W. Grinnell, Cedric S. Raine, Raymond A. Sobel, David K. Han & Lawrence Steinman

doi:10.1038/nature06559

See also: Editor's summary


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Letters

A minimum column density of 1 g cm-2 for massive star formation p1082

Mark R. Krumholz & Christopher F. McKee

doi:10.1038/nature06620

See also: Editor's summary


Designing metallic glass matrix composites with high toughness and tensile ductility p1085

Douglas C. Hofmann, Jin-Yoo Suh, Aaron Wiest, Gang Duan, Mary-Laura Lind, Marios D. Demetriou & William L. Johnson

doi:10.1038/nature06598

See also: Editor's summary


Millennial- and orbital-scale changes in the East Asian monsoon over the past 224,000 years p1090

Yongjin Wang, Hai Cheng, R. Lawrence Edwards, Xinggong Kong, Xiaohua Shao, Shitao Chen, Jiangyin Wu, Xiouyang Jiang, Xianfeng Wang & Zhisheng An

doi:10.1038/nature06692

See also: Editor's summary | News and Views by Overpeck & Cole


Arc-parallel flow in the mantle wedge beneath Costa Rica and Nicaragua p1094

Kaj Hoernle, David L. Abt, Karen M. Fischer, Holly Nichols, Folkmar Hauff, Geoffrey A. Abers, Paul van den Bogaard, Ken Heydolph, Guillermo Alvarado, Marino Protti & Wilfried Strauch

doi:10.1038/nature06550


Scaling laws of marine predator search behaviour p1098

David W. Sims, Emily J. Southall, Nicolas E. Humphries, Graeme C. Hays, Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Jonathan W. Pitchford, Alex James, Mohammed Z. Ahmed, Andrew S. Brierley, Mark A. Hindell, David Morritt, Michael K. Musyl, David Righton, Emily L. C. Shepard, Victoria J. Wearmouth, Rory P. Wilson, Matthew J. Witt & Julian D. Metcalfe

doi:10.1038/nature06518

See also: Editor's summary


Selection overrides gene flow to break down maladaptive mimicry p1103

George R. Harper Jr & David W. Pfennig

doi:10.1038/nature06532

See also: Editor's summary


Facultative cheater mutants reveal the genetic complexity of cooperation in social amoebae p1107

Lorenzo A. Santorelli, Christopher R. L. Thompson, Elizabeth Villegas, Jessica Svetz, Christopher Dinh, Anup Parikh, Richard Sucgang, Adam Kuspa, Joan E. Strassmann, David C. Queller & Gad Shaulsky

doi:10.1038/nature06558

See also: Editor's summary


Resistance to therapy caused by intragenic deletion in BRCA2 p1111

Stacey L. Edwards, Rachel Brough, Christopher J. Lord, Rachael Natrajan, Radost Vatcheva, Douglas A. Levine, Jeff Boyd, Jorge S. Reis-Filho & Alan Ashworth

doi:10.1038/nature06548

See also: Editor's summary | News and Views by Livingston & Silver


Secondary mutations as a mechanism of cisplatin resistance in BRCA2-mutated cancers p1116

Wataru Sakai, Elizabeth M. Swisher, Beth Y. Karlan, Mukesh K. Agarwal, Jake Higgins, Cynthia Friedman, Emily Villegas, Céline Jacquemont, Daniel J. Farrugia, Fergus J. Couch, Nicole Urban & Toshiyasu Taniguchi

doi:10.1038/nature06633

See also: Editor's summary | News and Views by Livingston & Silver


Gamete formation without meiosis in Arabidopsis p1121

Maruthachalam Ravi, Mohan P. A. Marimuthu & Imran Siddiqi

doi:10.1038/nature06557

See also: Editor's summary | News and Views by van Dijk


Regulation of progenitor cell proliferation and granulocyte function by microRNA-223 p1125

Jonathan B. Johnnidis, Marian H. Harris, Robert T. Wheeler, Sandra Stehling-Sun, Michael H. Lam, Oktay Kirak, Thijn R. Brummelkamp, Mark D. Fleming & Fernando D. Camargo

doi:10.1038/nature06607


Backbone structure of the infectious epsilon15 virus capsid revealed by electron cryomicroscopy p1130

Wen Jiang, Matthew L. Baker, Joanita Jakana, Peter R. Weigele, Jonathan King & Wah Chiu

doi:10.1038/nature06665


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Naturejobs

Prospect

Prospects p1135

Is science really undergoing globalization?

Gene Russo

doi:10.1038/nj7182-1135a


Career View

Felipe Pereira, distinguished professor, School of Energy Resources and Department of Mathematics, University of Wyoming, Laramie p1136

Energy demand brings Brazilian mathematician to Wyoming.

Virginia Gewin

doi:10.1038/nj7182-1136a


Neuroscience in the developing world p1136

Neuroscience training in Argentina, by any means necessary.

Paul Smaglik

doi:10.1038/nj7182-1136b


Role models p1136

My peers are my mentors.

Amanda Goh

doi:10.1038/nj7182-1136c


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Futures

Meeting with Max p1138

It's all about control.

John Gilbey

doi:10.1038/4511138a


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