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Editorials

To thwart disease, apply now p823

Translational medicine is a key addition to the biomedical research enterprise. Policy-makers and research leaders now must build the infrastructure to take discoveries from the bench to application.

doi:10.1038/453823a


The price isn't right p824

ITER will cost more to build than previously thought. Now is the time to be honest about how much.

doi:10.1038/453824a


Open to interpretation p824

The use of 'dignity' as the foundation for an ethical law in Switzerland is compromising research.

doi:10.1038/453824b


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Research Highlights

Palaeobiology: Remember this p826

doi:10.1038/453826a


Neuroscience: Shiver stoppers p826

doi:10.1038/453826b


Zoology: The skin off my back p826

doi:10.1038/453826c


Microscopy: Laser focus p826

doi:10.1038/453826d


Molecular biology: Lost in transcription p826

doi:10.1038/453826e


Animal behaviour: Best and brightest p826

doi:10.1038/453826f


Nanotechnology: Golden advance p827

doi:10.1038/453827a


Photonics: Cancer zapper p827

doi:10.1038/453827b


Geophysics: Mysterious mountains p827

doi:10.1038/453827c


Psychology: Not fair! p827

doi:10.1038/453827d


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Journal Club

Journal club p827

David Beerling

doi:10.1038/453827e


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News

Egg shortage hits race to clone human stem cells p828

Researchers back bid to pay donors.

Brendan Maher

doi:10.1038/453828a


Fusion reactor faces cost hike p829

ITER will also be delayed by up to three years.

Geoff Brumfiel

doi:10.1038/453829a


The winding road from ideas to income p830

Huge numbers of offices have been established over the past 30 years to help university researchers take their discoveries from the lab to the clinic. Meredith Wadman assesses their success.

Meredith Wadman

doi:10.1038/453830a


Swiss court bans work on macaque brains p833

Universities appeal against ruling on animals' dignity.

Alison Abbott

doi:10.1038/453833a


Sidelines p834

Scribbles on the margins of science.

doi:10.1038/453834a


Near-perfect 'black' p834

Philip Ball

doi:10.1038/453834b


NIH responds to critics on peer review p835

Agency sets its sights on transformative research.

Meredith Wadman

doi:10.1038/453835a


Beep-beep! Roadrunner breaks petaflop barrier p837

doi:10.1038/453837a


Physicist's involvement in historical race row disputed p837

doi:10.1038/453837b


Panel urges further review of controversial NIH lab p837

doi:10.1038/453837c


Publications follow policy on stem-cell research p837

doi:10.1038/453837d


Senate climate debate suffers death by hot air p837

doi:10.1038/453837e


Japanese lab installed on space station p837

doi:10.1038/453837f


Corrections p837

doi:10.1038/453837g


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Column

A delicate balance p838

Near-term and long-term research are vying for attention. David Goldston says that a fuller congressional debate is needed.

David Goldston

doi:10.1038/453838a


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News Features

Translational research: Getting the message across p839

doi:10.1038/453839a


Translational research: Crossing the valley of death p840

A chasm has opened up between biomedical researchers and the patients who need their discoveries. Declan Butler asks how the ground shifted and whether the US National Institutes of Health can bridge the gap.

doi:10.1038/453840a


Translational research: The full cycle p843

Results can be thrust from bench to bedside, but there is also much to be learned by pushing the other way. Heidi Ledford tells tales of clinical trials that have prompted a change in tack.

doi:10.1038/453843a


Translational research: A case history p846

The Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research is focused on translating research into cures. Helen Pearson investigates whether its sometimes unusual methods are producing results.

doi:10.1038/453846a


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Correspondence

European research system must not go bananas p850

Andre Geim

doi:10.1038/453850a


Large projects can create useful partnerships p850

Josef Settele, Joachim Spangenberg & Ingolf Kühn

doi:10.1038/453850b


European research needs a dash of anarchy p850

Theo Wallimann

doi:10.1038/453850c


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Commentaries

Follow the leader p851

If Japan is to become a front-runner in pharmaceutical development, it must not only speed up its approval of new drugs, but also enhance its own research capabilities, argue Kaori Tsuji and Kiichiro Tsutani.

doi:10.1038/453851a


A new relationship p853

Fuelling innovation requires a different kind of collaboration between industrial and academic researchers, argues Bill Destler.

doi:10.1038/453853a


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Books and Arts

A prescription for public health p855

Will high drug prices and a lack of new medicines force the pharmaceutical industry to restructure and take a more personalized approach to research, asks Merrill Goozner.

Merrill Goozner reviews Reasonable Rx: Solving the Drug Price Crisis by Stan Finkelstein & Peter Temin

doi:10.1038/453855a


Complementary cures tested p856

Toby Murcott reviews Trick or Treatment? Alternative Medicine on Trial by Simon Singh & Edzard Ernst

doi:10.1038/453856a


Saving water p857

doi:10.1038/453857a


Suppressing science p857

Dick Taverne reviews Doubt Is Their Product: How Industry's Assault on Science Threatens Your Health by David Michaels

doi:10.1038/453857b


Culture dish p858

doi:10.1038/453858a


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Essay

Science & Music: Raising the roof p859

Michael Barron explores how physics, psychology and fashion have influenced concert hall acoustics.

Michael Barron

doi:10.1038/453859a

See also: Editor's summary


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News and Views

Biochemistry: Molecular cloaking devices p861

Protease enzymes cut other proteins into pieces, but some can be blocked by inhibitors. One such inhibitor binds to the substrate rather than the enzyme, suggesting a new tactic for drug discovery.

Thomas Kodadek

doi:10.1038/453861a

See also: Editor's summary


Physical chemistry: Cool it, baby p862

A long-sought but short-lived molecule has been made and characterized for the first time. This compound decays at low temperatures using an unusual trick — a mechanism known as quantum tunnelling.

Markku Räsänen

doi:10.1038/453862a

See also: Editor's summary


Animal behaviour: Guardian caterpillars p863

Christopher Surridge

doi:10.1038/453863a


Huntington's disease: Genetics lends a hand p863

A monkey model of Huntington's disease created by gene transfer is only a work in progress. But as a technological feat it offers great promise for fathoming this devastating condition.

Stéphane Palfi & Bechir Jarraya

doi:10.1038/nature06365

See also: Editor's summary


Nuclear physics: A neutrino's wobble? p864

Periodic oscillations have been observed in what should be straightforward exponential decay curves of two radioactive isotopes. An entirely mysterious phenomenon, its proposed cause seems equally exotic.

Philip M. Walker

doi:10.1038/453864a


50 & 100 Years Ago p865

doi:10.1038/453865a

See also: Editor's summary


Condensed-matter physics: Paralysed by disorder p866

In a disordered medium, a quantum particle can literally stop itself in its tracks. This localization phenomenon can be observed directly using the coldest known form of matter, caught in a laser trap.

Daniel A. Steck

doi:10.1038/453866a

See also: Editor's summary


Obituary: Willis E. Lamb Jr (1913–2008) p867

Meticulous physicist and discoverer of the Lamb shift.

Murray Sargent

doi:10.1038/453867a


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Review

What we can do and what we cannot do with fMRI p869

Nikos K. Logothetis

doi:10.1038/nature06976

See also: Editor's summary


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Articles

A phosphatase cascade by which rewarding stimuli control nucleosomal response p879

Alexandre Stipanovich, Emmanuel Valjent, Miriam Matamales, Akinori Nishi, Jung-Hyuck Ahn, Matthieu Maroteaux, Jesus Bertran-Gonzalez, Karen Brami-Cherrier, Hervé Enslen, Anne-Gaëlle Corbillé, Odile Filhol, Angus C. Nairn, Paul Greengard, Denis Hervé & Jean-Antoine Girault

doi:10.1038/nature06994

See also: Editor's summary


Structural basis for the regulated protease and chaperone function of DegP p885

Tobias Krojer, Justyna Sawa, Eva Schäfer, Helen R. Saibil, Michael Ehrmann & Tim Clausen

doi:10.1038/nature07004

See also: Editor's summary


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Letters

Direct observation of Anderson localization of matter waves in a controlled disorder p891

Juliette Billy, Vincent Josse, Zhanchun Zuo, Alain Bernard, Ben Hambrecht, Pierre Lugan, David Clément, Laurent Sanchez-Palencia, Philippe Bouyer & Alain Aspect

doi:10.1038/nature07000

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


Anderson localization of a non-interacting Bose–Einstein condensate p895

Giacomo Roati, Chiara D'Errico, Leonardo Fallani, Marco Fattori, Chiara Fort, Matteo Zaccanti, Giovanni Modugno, Michele Modugno & Massimo Inguscio

doi:10.1038/nature07071

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


Magnetic order close to superconductivity in the iron-based layered LaO1-xFxFeAs systems p899

Clarina de la Cruz, Q. Huang, J. W. Lynn, Jiying Li, W. Ratcliff II, J. L. Zarestky, H. A. Mook, G. F. Chen, J. L. Luo, N. L. Wang & Pengcheng Dai

doi:10.1038/nature07057

See also: Editor's summary


Two-band superconductivity in LaFeAsO0.89F0.11 at very high magnetic fields p903

F. Hunte, J. Jaroszynski, A. Gurevich, D. C. Larbalestier, R. Jin, A. S. Sefat, M. A. McGuire, B. C. Sales, D. K. Christen & D. Mandrus

doi:10.1038/nature07058

See also: Editor's summary


Capture of hydroxymethylene and its fast disappearance through tunnelling p906

Peter R. Schreiner, Hans Peter Reisenauer, Frank C. Pickard IV, Andrew C. Simmonett, Wesley D. Allen, Edit Mátyus & Attila G. Császár

doi:10.1038/nature07010

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


Continental mantle signature of Bushveld magmas and coeval diamonds p910

Stephen H. Richardson & Steven B. Shirey

doi:10.1038/nature07073

See also: Editor's summary


Ultrasonic frogs show hyperacute phonotaxis to female courtship calls p914

Jun-Xian Shen, Albert S. Feng, Zhi-Min Xu, Zu-Lin Yu, Victoria S. Arch, Xin-Jian Yu & Peter M. Narins

doi:10.1038/nature06719

See also: Editor's summary


Perceptual accuracy and conflicting effects of certainty on risk-taking behaviour p917

Sharoni Shafir, Taly Reich, Erez Tsur, Ido Erev & Arnon Lotem

doi:10.1038/nature06841

See also: Editor's summary


Towards a transgenic model of Huntington's disease in a non-human primate p921

Shang-Hsun Yang, Pei-Hsun Cheng, Heather Banta, Karolina Piotrowska-Nitsche, Jin-Jing Yang, Eric C. H. Cheng, Brooke Snyder, Katherine Larkin, Jun Liu, Jack Orkin, Zhi-Hui Fang, Yoland Smith, Jocelyne Bachevalier, Stuart M. Zola, Shi-Hua Li, Xiao-Jiang Li & Anthony W. S. Chan

doi:10.1038/nature06975

See also: Editor's summary | News and Views by Palfi & Jarraya


Substrate-targeting bold gamma-secretase modulators p925

Thomas L. Kukar, Thomas B. Ladd, Maralyssa A. Bann, Patrick C. Fraering, Rajeshwar Narlawar, Ghulam M. Maharvi, Brent Healy, Robert Chapman, Alfred T. Welzel, Robert W. Price, Brenda Moore, Vijayaraghavan Rangachari, Bernadette Cusack, Jason Eriksen, Karen Jansen-West, Christophe Verbeeck, Debra Yager, Christopher Eckman, Wenjuan Ye, Sarah Sagi, Barbara A. Cottrell, Justin Torpey, Terrone L. Rosenberry, Abdul Fauq, Michael S. Wolfe, Boris Schmidt, Dominic M. Walsh, Edward H. Koo & Todd E. Golde

doi:10.1038/nature07055

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


Sex determination involves synergistic action of SRY and SF1 on a specific Sox9 enhancer p930

Ryohei Sekido & Robin Lovell-Badge

doi:10.1038/nature06944

See also: Editor's summary


Draper-dependent glial phagocytic activity is mediated by Src and Syk family kinase signalling p935

Jennifer S. Ziegenfuss, Romi Biswas, Michelle A. Avery, Kyoungja Hong, Amy E. Sheehan, Yee-Guide Yeung, E. Richard Stanley & Marc R. Freeman

doi:10.1038/nature06901

See also: Editor's summary


Magnetic resonance imaging of pH in vivo using hyperpolarized 13C-labelled bicarbonate p940

Ferdia A. Gallagher, Mikko I. Kettunen, Sam E. Day, De-En Hu, Jan Henrik Ardenkjær-Larsen, René in 't Zandt, Pernille R. Jensen, Magnus Karlsson, Klaes Golman, Mathilde H. Lerche & Kevin M. Brindle

doi:10.1038/nature07017

See also: Editor's summary


Global control of cell-cycle transcription by coupled CDK and network oscillators p944

David A. Orlando, Charles Y. Lin, Allister Bernard, Jean Y. Wang, Joshua E. S. Socolar, Edwin S. Iversen, Alexander J. Hartemink & Steven B. Haase

doi:10.1038/nature06955

See also: Editor's summary


Domain organization of human chromosomes revealed by mapping of nuclear lamina interactions p948

Lars Guelen, Ludo Pagie, Emilie Brasset, Wouter Meuleman, Marius B. Faza, Wendy Talhout, Bert H. Eussen, Annelies de Klein, Lodewyk Wessels, Wouter de Laat & Bas van Steensel

doi:10.1038/nature06947

See also: Editor's summary


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Corrigendum

Lethargus is a Caenorhabditis elegans sleep-like state p952

David M. Raizen, John E. Zimmerman, Matthew H. Maycock, Uyen D. Ta, Young-jai You, Meera V. Sundaram & Allan I. Pack

doi:10.1038/nature07044


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Naturejobs

Prospect

Prospects p953

US universities may have to chip in more for researchers' salaries.

Gene Russo

doi:10.1038/nj7197-953a


Career View

Cato Laurencin, vice-president for health affairs, University of Connecticut Health Center, and dean, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington p954

Cato Laurencin brings medicine and engineering expertise to his new post.

Virginia Gewin

doi:10.1038/nj7197-954a


A route to postdoc diversity p954

Postdoc diversity programme shows signs of success.

Jill U. Adams

doi:10.1038/nj7197-954b


Winning a plant campaign p954

Going to battle, with vegetables.

Zachary Lippman

doi:10.1038/nj7197-954c


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Futures

Permanent position p956

A lesson from history.

John Gilbey

doi:10.1038/453956a


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