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  • Ink-jet printing methods are an attractive approach to nanofabrication, where electrohydrodynamic control allows for flexible and cheap fabrication. Here, a new approach is presented using electrostatic nanodroplet autofocussing to produce high aspect ratio nanoscale structures like plasmonic nanoantennas.

    • P. Galliker
    • J. Schneider
    • D. Poulikakos
    Article
  • Magnetometers based on organic magnetoresistance are limited by narrow sensitivity ranges, degradation and temperature fluctuations. Bakeret al. demonstrate a magnetic resonance-based organic thin film magnetometer, which overcomes these drawbacks by exploiting the metrological nature of magnetic resonance.

    • W.J. Baker
    • K. Ambal
    • C. Boehme
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Synaptic GTPase-activating protein, SynGAP, is a postsynaptic signalling protein that can regulate synaptic function. McMahonet al. express different SynGAP isoforms in neurons and find that the effect on synaptic strength depends on alternative promoter usage and alternative splicing of the C-terminus.

    • A.C. McMahon
    • M.W. Barnett
    • P.C. Kind
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Cachexia, or muscle-wasting syndrome, is often observed in patients with cancer or sepsis, and no specific treatment of cachexia is currently available. In this study, Di Marcoet al.show that low doses of pateamine A, an inhibitor of translation initiation, prevent cachexia in a mouse model of the disease.

    • Sergio Di Marco
    • Anne Cammas
    • Imed Eddine Gallouzi
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Palaeoclimate proxies, such as shells, record past ocean changes. A radiocarbon study based on a shell chronology from the Icelandic shelf is used to track changes in ocean circulation and climate for the past 1,350 years, suggesting a declining influence of North Atlantic surface waters on the Icelandic shelf over the last millennium.

    • Alan D. Wanamaker Jr
    • Paul G. Butler
    • Christopher A. Richardson
    ArticleOpen Access
  • High-intensity laser-plasma ion generation is promising as a compact proton source for applications like ion beam therapy. Using a femtosecond table-top laser system, Zeilet al. show that protons efficiently gain energy in the pre-thermal intra-pulse phase of the generation process.

    • K. Zeil
    • J. Metzkes
    • U. Schramm
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase catabolises poly(ADP-ribose), which is covalently attached to proteins following post-translational modification. In this study, the structure of poly(ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase fromTetrahymena thermophilais reported in complex with the small molecule inhibitor RBPI-3.

    • Mark S. Dunstan
    • Eva Barkauskaite
    • Ivan Ahel
    Article
  • Devices made up of nanowires offer promise for a range of electronic, photonic and energy applications. Liuet al. fabricate a miniature capacitor by employing a thin layer of Cu2O as a separator between layers of carbon and copper.

    • Zheng Liu
    • Yongjie Zhan
    • Pulickel M. Ajayan
    Article
  • Topological phases are unusual states of matter whose properties are robust against small perturbations. Using a photonic quantum walk system, Kitagawaet al. simulate one-dimensional topological phases and reveal novel topological phenomena far from the static or adiabatic regimes.

    • Takuya Kitagawa
    • Matthew A. Broome
    • Andrew G. White
    Article
  • The monolayer transition-metal dichalcogenide molybdenum disulphide has recently attracted attention owing to its distinctive electronic properties. Cao and co-workers present numerical evidence suggesting that circularly polarized light can preferentially excite a single valley in the band structure of this system.

    • Ting Cao
    • Gang Wang
    • Ji Feng
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Metamaterial lenses enable super-resolution imaging of structures, beating the diffraction limit. Lemoultet al. propose a resonant metalens based on plasmonic nanorods that uses polychromatic light to achieve sub-diffraction limit focusing and imaging in the visible spectral region.

    • Fabrice Lemoult
    • Mathias Fink
    • Geoffroy Lerosey
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Exposure to ultraviolet light is responsible for a large proportion of melanomas but the molecular mechanisms are unknown. In this study, melanoma is found to be induced in mice by UVA and UVB light in a pigment-dependent and -independent manner, respectively, resulting in different types of DNA damage.

    • Frances P. Noonan
    • M. Raza Zaidi
    • Edward C. De Fabo
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Geometrically frustrated spin systems are a class of statistical mechanical models that have received widespread attention, especially in condensed matter physics. This study experimentally demonstrates a quantum information processor that can simulate the behaviour of such frustrated spin system.

    • Jingfu Zhang
    • Man-Hong Yung
    • Jonathan Baugh
    Article
  • Inositol polyphosphate 4 phosphatase regulates phosphoinositide signalling and is associated with an increased risk of asthma. Aichet al. show that, in a mouse model of airway inflammation, calpains degrade inositol polyphosphate 4 phosphatase resulting in exacerbated phosphoinositide 3-kinase signalling.

    • Jyotirmoi Aich
    • Ulaganathan Mabalirajan
    • Balaram Ghosh
    Article