Table of contents

indicates content that is available online only


Top

Editorials

Spring-cleaning in France p133

The French scientific research system is ripe for reform.

doi:10.1038/453133a


The gathering storm rages on p133

Two years on, a National Academies report on US competitiveness struggles to make an impact.

doi:10.1038/453133b


Bountiful noise p134

Whether in music or in nature, noise can be full of riches. The trick is to recognize the treasures.

doi:10.1038/453134a


Top

Research Highlights

Climatic volcanoes p136

doi:10.1038/453136a


Materials science: Carbon on display p136

doi:10.1038/453136b


Organic chemistry: Flushing out HIV p136

doi:10.1038/453136c


Developmental biology: Antler insight p136

doi:10.1038/453136d


Neuroscience: Bird brains p136

doi:10.1038/453136e


Microbiology: A genetic monster p136

doi:10.1038/453136f


Nanotechnology: Tiny carbon workers p137

doi:10.1038/453137a


Chemical biology: Maths and malaria p137

doi:10.1038/453137b


Astronomy: Galactic mapping p137

doi:10.1038/453137c


Microbiology: Fuel cell p137

doi:10.1038/453137d


Top

Journal Club

Journal club p137

François Balloux

doi:10.1038/453137e


Top

News

Top billing for platypus at end of evolution tree p138

Monotreme's genome shares features with mammals, birds and reptiles.

Susan Brown

doi:10.1038/453138a


Chemists spin a web of data p139

Chemspider website provides free information on millions of molecules.

Geoff Brumfiel

doi:10.1038/453139a


Medical schools swap pigs for plastic p140

Doctors used to try out their surgical skills on animals before being allowed to work on patients. Now just a handful of US medical schools still have animal labs. Meredith Wadman asks if they've lost a vital tool.

Meredith Wadman

doi:10.1038/453140a


Phoenix descending p142

NASA's Mars strategy goes from "follow the water" to "arrive at the ice".

Eric Hand

doi:10.1038/453142a


Research revolution? p143

Valérie Pecresse has been a member of the French National Assembly (Yvelines department) since 2002. She rose to prominence as the combative spokeswoman for Nicolas Sarkozy's centre–right UMP party during the 2007 presidential race, after which she was appointed minister for higher education and research.

doi:10.1038/453143a


Sidelines p143

Scribbles on the margins of science.

doi:10.1038/453143b


Institutes marshal locals to boost African physics p145

doi:10.1038/453145a


Patent on Mexican yellow beans is reversed p145

doi:10.1038/453145b


Drug firm turns spotlight on basic systems biology p145

doi:10.1038/453145c


NASA watchdog calls for Orion board suspensions p145

doi:10.1038/453145d


Sacked whistle-blower demands reinstatement p145

doi:10.1038/453145e


Elephant-hunting season opens in South Africa p145

doi:10.1038/453145f


Correction p145

doi:10.1038/453145g


Top

News Features

Earth science: Harnessing the hum p146

A new way to analyse seismic vibrations is bringing order out of noise to help predict volcanic eruptions or create detailed images of Earth's interior. Rachel Courtland reports.

doi:10.1038/453146a


Cell biology: The cellular hullabaloo p150

The inner life of a cell is noisy. Helen Pearson discovers how the resulting randomness makes life more challenging — and richer.

doi:10.1038/453150a


Top

Correspondence

Long-range energy forecasts are no more than fairy tales p154

Vaclav Smil

doi:10.1038/453154a


Energy assumptions were reasonable at the time, but not now p154

Christopher B. Field

doi:10.1038/453154b


Future scenarios for emissions need continual adjustment p155

Richard G. Richels, Richard S. J. Tol & Gary W. Yohe

doi:10.1038/453155a


Climate policies will stimulate technology development p155

Ottmar Edenhofer, Bill Hare, Brigitte Knopf & Gunnar Luderer

doi:10.1038/453155b


IPCC's climate-policy assumptions were justified p155

Joseph Romm

doi:10.1038/453155c


Top

Books and Arts

Not so amateur p156

Volunteer star-gazers tracking satellites at the start of the space age often surpassed the professionals.

Owen Gingerich reviews Keep Watching the Skies! The Story of Operation Moonwatch and the Dawn of the Space Age by W. Patrick McCray

doi:10.1038/453156a


How brains develop p157

Bruce M. Hood reviews The Fundamentals of Brain Development: Integrating Nature & Nurture by Joan Stiles and The Baby in the Mirror: A Child's World from Birth to Three by Charles Fernyhough

doi:10.1038/453157a


Learning from climates past p158

Chris Turney reviews Fixing Climate: What Past Climate Changes Reveal About the Current Threat — and How to Counter It by Wallace S. Broecker & Robert Kunzig

doi:10.1038/453158a


Mountains into molehills p158

Emma Marris reviews Burning the Future: Coal in America and Mountain Top Removal

doi:10.1038/453158b


Saving art in situ p159

A conservation scientist explains how borrowing gadgets from Mars rovers helps preserve culture on Earth.

Giacomo Chiari

doi:10.1038/453159a


Top

Essay

Science & Music: Facing the music p160

At the heart of any scientific explanation of music is an understanding of how and why it affects us. In the first of a nine-part essay series, Philip Ball explores just how far we can hope to achieve a full scientific theory of music.

Philip Ball

doi:10.1038/453160a


Top

News and Views

Planetary science: Music of the stratospheres p163

Fifteen-year oscillations in Saturn's equatorial stratosphere bear a striking resemblance to the shorter-term oscillations seen on Earth and Jupiter — akin to notes played on a cello, a violin and a viola.

Timothy E. Dowling

doi:10.1038/453163a

See also: Editor's summary


Computational biochemistry: Old enzymes, new tricks p164

Although enzymes are superb catalysts, their range of reactions is limited to those that support life. Their repertoire could be expanded by a method that allows artificial enzymes to be made from scratch.

Giovanna Ghirlanda

doi:10.1038/453164a


50 & 100 years ago p165

doi:10.1038/453165a


Device physics: Chance match p166

A clever device uses the quantum statistics of electron tunnelling to match image patterns. The circuit is low-power, works at room temperature — and could point to a way forward for silicon electronics.

Robert M. Westervelt

doi:10.1038/453166a


Quantum information: Stopping the rot p167

Uncontrollable outside influences undermine the whole enterprise of quantum computing. Nailing down the sources of this 'decoherence' in a solid-state system is a step towards solving the problem.

Philip C. E. Stamp

doi:10.1038/453167a

See also: Editor's summary


Obesity: What's your fat-cell allowance? p169

Sadaf Shadan

doi:10.1038/453169a


Molecular biology: An HIV secret uncovered p169

With two catalytic activities and many substrates, how does HIV's reverse transcriptase enzyme know what to do to which substrate? Zooming in on the enzyme's molecular interactions provides tantalizing clues.

Eddy Arnold & Stefan G. Sarafianos

doi:10.1038/453169b

See also: Editor's summary


Top

News and Views Q&A

Materials science: Supramolecular polymers p171

Most polymers consist of long molecular chains made up of many units connected by covalent bonds — but supramolecular polymers are different. The strikingly dynamic properties of these materials arise from the reversible bonds that hold their chains together, and open up the prospect of many new applications.

Tom F. A. de Greef & E. W. Meijer

doi:10.1038/453171a


Top

Articles

Genome analysis of the platypus reveals unique signatures of evolution p175

A list of authors and their affiliations appears at the end of the paper

doi:10.1038/nature06936

See also: Editor's summary


Dynamic binding orientations direct activity of HIV reverse transcriptase p184

Elio A. Abbondanzieri, Gregory Bokinsky, Jason W. Rausch, Jennifer X. Zhang, Stuart F. J. Le Grice & Xiaowei Zhuang

doi:10.1038/nature06941

See also: Editor's summary | News and Views by Arnold & Sarafianos


Kemp elimination catalysts by computational enzyme design p190

Daniela Röthlisberger, Olga Khersonsky, Andrew M. Wollacott, Lin Jiang, Jason DeChancie, Jamie Betker, Jasmine L. Gallaher, Eric A. Althoff, Alexandre Zanghellini, Orly Dym, Shira Albeck, Kendall N. Houk, Dan S. Tawfik & David Baker

doi:10.1038/nature06879

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


Top

Letters

Semi-annual oscillations in Saturn's low-latitude stratospheric temperatures p196

Glenn S. Orton, Padma A. Yanamandra-Fisher, Brendan M. Fisher, A. James Friedson, Paul D. Parrish, Jesse F. Nelson, Amber Swenson Bauermeister, Leigh Fletcher, Daniel Y. Gezari, Frank Varosi, Alan T. Tokunaga, John Caldwell, Kevin H. Baines, Joseph L. Hora, Michael E. Ressler, Takuya Fujiyoshi, Tetsuharu Fuse, Hagop Hagopian, Terry Z. Martin, Jay T. Bergstralh, Carly Howett, William F. Hoffmann, Lynne K. Deutsch, Jeffrey E. Van Cleve, Eldar Noe, Joseph D. Adams, Marc Kassis & Eric Tollestrup

doi:10.1038/nature06897

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


An equatorial oscillation in Saturn's middle atmosphere p200

T. Fouchet, S. Guerlet, D. F. Strobel, A. A. Simon-Miller, B. Bézard & F. M. Flasar

doi:10.1038/nature06912

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


Quantum oscillations in a molecular magnet p203

S. Bertaina, S. Gambarelli, T. Mitra, B. Tsukerblat, A. Müller & B. Barbara

doi:10.1038/nature06962

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


Colossal cages in zeolitic imidazolate frameworks as selective carbon dioxide reservoirs p207

Bo Wang, Adrien P. Côté, Hiroyasu Furukawa, Michael O'Keeffe & Omar M. Yaghi

doi:10.1038/nature06900

See also: Editor's summary


Increasing risk of Amazonian drought due to decreasing aerosol pollution p212

Peter M. Cox, Phil P. Harris, Chris Huntingford, Richard A. Betts, Matthew Collins, Chris D. Jones, Tim E. Jupp, José A. Marengo & Carlos A. Nobre

doi:10.1038/nature06960

See also: Editor's summary


Scale effects and human impact on the elevational species richness gradients p216

D. Nogués-Bravo, M. B. Araújo, T. Romdal & C. Rahbek

doi:10.1038/nature06812


Neutral metacommunity models predict fish diversity patterns in Mississippi–Missouri basin p220

Rachata Muneepeerakul, Enrico Bertuzzo, Heather J. Lynch, William F. Fagan, Andrea Rinaldo & Ignacio Rodriguez-Iturbe

doi:10.1038/nature06813

See also: Editor's summary


REST maintains self-renewal and pluripotency of embryonic stem cells p223

Sanjay K. Singh, Mohamedi N. Kagalwala, Jan Parker-Thornburg, Henry Adams & Sadhan Majumder

doi:10.1038/nature06863


Long-term haematopoietic reconstitution by Trp53-/-p16Ink4a-/-p19Arf-/- multipotent progenitors p228

Omobolaji O. Akala, In-Kyung Park, Dalong Qian, Michael Pihalja, Michael W. Becker & Michael F. Clarke

doi:10.1038/nature06869

See also: Editor's summary


Discrete fixed-resolution representations in visual working memory p233

Weiwei Zhang & Steven J. Luck

doi:10.1038/nature06860

See also: Editor's summary


TGF-beta-induced Foxp3 inhibits TH17 cell differentiation by antagonizing RORbold gammat function p236

Liang Zhou, Jared E. Lopes, Mark M. W. Chong, Ivaylo I. Ivanov, Roy Min, Gabriel D. Victora, Yuelei Shen, Jianguang Du, Yuri P. Rubtsov, Alexander Y. Rudensky, Steven F. Ziegler & Dan R. Littman

doi:10.1038/nature06878


Imaging of Rab5 activity identifies essential regulators for phagosome maturation p241

Masahiro Kitano, Michio Nakaya, Takeshi Nakamura, Shigekazu Nagata & Michiyuki Matsuda

doi:10.1038/nature06857


Chromatin decouples promoter threshold from dynamic range p246

Felix H. Lam, David J. Steger & Erin K. O'Shea

doi:10.1038/nature06867


Top

Naturejobs

Prospect

Prospects p251

Postdocs need a set of defined, widely endorsed core competencies. Or do they?

Gene Russo

doi:10.1038/nj7192-251a


Region

Toronto rising p252

Specialist research centres are springing up in Canada's biggest city, nourished by government funds that also attract high-calibre scientists. Kurt Kleiner reports.

Kurt Kleiner

doi:10.1038/nj7192-252a


Career View

Karin Lochte, director, Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Bremerhaven, Germany p254

Oceanographer and climate change specialist heads to Germany's Wegener Institute.

Virginia Gewin

doi:10.1038/nj7192-254a


Animal assets in academia p254

Trying to get vets into academia.

Virginia Gewin

doi:10.1038/nj7192-254b


Going with your gut p254

I strive to find the best hummus — and the best experimental approach.

Zachary Lippman

doi:10.1038/nj7192-254c


Spotlight

Spotlight on North Carolina and Research Triangle Park

doi:10.1038/nj0207


Top

Futures

The icosahedral anaster p256

A slight detour?

John P. Boyd

doi:10.1038/453256a


Main navigation

Gateways and databases

Extra navigation

.
  • Japanese table of contents

naturejobs

natureproducts


ADVERTISEMENT