Table of contents


Top

Editorial

Be prepared p585

doi:10.1038/nm0609-585

Pushing 'shovel-ready' technologies through the pipeline has the potential to substantially bolster defenses against the emerging flu strain and future pandemics.


Top

News

Computational tools evolve to reveal patterns in flu data p587

Kirsten Dorans

doi:10.1038/nm0609-587


Bone seems susceptible to range of drugs p588

Charlotte Schubert

doi:10.1038/nm0609-588


UK budget puts faith in biomedical sector p589

Jon Evans

doi:10.1038/nm0609-589a


NIH draft seen as 'working compromise' p589

Stu Hutson

doi:10.1038/nm0609-589b


Mind the skills gap p589

Jon Evans

doi:10.1038/nm0609-589c


News in brief pp590 - 591

doi:10.1038/nm0609-590


Straight talk with ... Otto Yang and Patrick Miller pp592 - 593

Kirsten Dorans

doi:10.1038/nm0609-592

Even with a recent influx of research money into biomedical research, competition for grants is unlikely to ease off any time soon. Otto Yang and Patrick Miller have experienced firsthand the challenges grant writing and both published books on the process. Yang and Miller shared some of their grant writing tips with Kirsten Dorans.


A cultured response to HIV pp594 - 597

Melinda Wenner

doi:10.1038/nm0609-594

In recent years, research has continued to demonstrate that HIV wreaks terrible havoc in the gut. A few scientists believe that probiotic yogurt might help to counter some of the virus's devastating effects on the intestine. Melinda Wenner reports on a pilot project that is helping a Tanzanian community make its own probiotic yogurt for HIV-infected locals and empowering women in the process.


Publication of fake journals raises ethical questions p598

Stu Hutson

doi:10.1038/nm0609-598a


Malaria drug delivery program launches amid skepticism p598

Nayanah Siva

doi:10.1038/nm0609-598b


Top

Book Review

Worried about your memory? p599

Howard Eichenbaum reviews Can't Remember What I Forgot: The Good News from the Front Lines of Memory Research by Sue Halpern

doi:10.1038/nm0609-599


Top

Correspondence

Mesenchymal stem cells: another anti-inflammatory treatment for sepsis? pp601 - 602

Guillaume Monneret

doi:10.1038/nm0609-601


Reply to 'Mesenchymal stem cells: another anti-inflammatory treatment for sepsis?' p602

Krisztián Németh, Asada Leelahavanichkul, Peter S T Yuen, Balázs Mayer, Alissa Parmelee, Kent Doi, Pamela G Robey, Kantima Leelahavanichkul, Beverly H Koller, Jared M Brown, Xuzhen Hu, Ivett Jelinek, Robert A Star & Éva Mezey

doi:10.1038/nm0609-602a


Reassessing the human mammary stem cell concept by modeling limiting dilution transplantation assays pp602 - 604

Thierry Bonnefoix & Mary Callanan

doi:10.1038/nm0609-602b


Reply to 'Reassessing the human mammary stem cell concept by modeling limiting dilution transplantation assays' pp604 - 605

Peter Eirew, Miao Yu, Ryan Brinkman & Connie J Eaves

doi:10.1038/nm0609-604


Top

News and Views

In the shadow of the thrombus pp607 - 608

Lawrence Brass

doi:10.1038/nm0609-607

Platelets accumulate on the downstream face of a developing blood clot after local changes in blood flow. These findings offer new insights into how platelets pile up at sites of vascular injury (pages 665–673).

See also: Article by Nesbitt et al.


Tension in the vasculature pp608 - 610

Andrew V Benest & Hellmut G Augustin

doi:10.1038/nm0609-608

Blood vessels arise from progenitor cells, grow and branch by sprouting from preexisting vessels and remodel by splitting longitudinally. A new study proposes an additional mechanism. It seems that vascularization can proceed through the mechanical translocation and expansion of existing vessels, which loop into vascularising tissue (pages 657–664).

See also: Article by Kilarski et al.


Stomaching calcium for bone health pp610 - 612

Brendan F Boyce

doi:10.1038/nm0609-610

Calcium deficiency in the elderly is associated with low gastric acid secretion and bone loss. A new study linking defects in gastric acid secretion with bone destruction and impaired mineralization bolsters the view that calcium supplements can prevent these bone defects—but do they all work (pages 674–681)?

See also: Article by Schinke et al.


IFN-alpha wakes up sleeping hematopoietic stem cells pp612 - 613

Emmanuelle Passegué & Patricia Ernst

doi:10.1038/nm0609-612

The cytokine interferon-alpha stimulates the turnover and proliferation of hematopoietic cells in vivo (pages 696–700). The findings hint at a new strategy to treat hematopoietic cancers.

See also: Letter by Sato et al.


Top

Community Corner

Compound clamps down on prostate cancer p615

doi:10.1038/nm0609-615


Top

Between Bedside and Bench

Expansion and contraction: treating diabetes with bariatric surgery pp616 - 617

Allison B Goldfine, Steven E Shoelson & Vincent Aguirre

doi:10.1038/nm0609-616

Bariatric surgery is not only one of the most immediate and effective ways to slim down: recent clinical data show that certain procedures are also particularly good at quelling type 2 diabetes. In "Bedside to Bench," Allison Goldfine, Steven Shoelson and Vincent Aguirre outline how researchers can better understand these new clinical findings at the mechanistic level. In the accompanying "Bench to Bedside," Jorge Plutzky takes a look how proper regulation of the storage of fatty acids helps maintain their effectiveness as signaling molecules and reins in their potential pathological effects. Such research is leading to new ways of thinking about how to combat type 2 diabetes.


Expansion and contraction: the mighty, mighty fatty acid pp618 - 619

Jorge Plutzky

doi:10.1038/nm0609-618


Top

Research Highlights

Research Highlights pp620 - 621

doi:10.1038/nm0609-620


Top

Brief Communication

Netting neutrophils in autoimmune small-vessel vasculitis pp623 - 625

Kai Kessenbrock, Markus Krumbholz, Ulf Schönermarck, Walter Back, Wolfgang L Gross, Zena Werb, Hermann-Josef Gröne, Volker Brinkmann & Dieter E Jenne

doi:10.1038/nm.1959

Neutrophils release neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), chromatin fibers that can ensnare bacteria. In small-vessel vasculitis (SVV), a chronic inflammatory condition linked to antineutrophil autoantibodies, these NETs express SVV-associated autoantigens, accumulate in inflamed kidneys and promote the autoimmune response against neutrophils in people with SVV.


Top

Articles

Myelin-specific T cells also recognize neuronal autoantigen in a transgenic mouse model of multiple sclerosis pp626 - 632

Gurumoorthy Krishnamoorthy, Amit Saxena, Lennart T Mars, Helena S Domingues, Reinhard Mentele, Avraham Ben-Nun, Hans Lassmann, Klaus Dornmair, Florian C Kurschus, Roland S Liblau & Hartmut Wekerle

doi:10.1038/nm.1975

T-cell recognition of autoantigens is important in the development of autoimmune disease. Now, Hartmut Wekerle and his colleagues demonstrate that organ-specific autoimmune responses may be driven by T cells that simultaneously respond to two different autoantigens found within the same target tissue.


Prostaglandin E2–EP4 signaling promotes immune inflammation through TH1 cell differentiation and TH17 cell expansion pp633 - 640

Chengcan Yao, Daiji Sakata, Yoshiyasu Esaki, Youxian Li, Toshiyuki Matsuoka, Kenji Kuroiwa, Yukihiko Sugimoto & Shuh Narumiya

doi:10.1038/nm.1968

Prostaglandins play a key role in inflammation in a variety of settings. Now, Shuh Narumiya and colleagues show that prostaglandin E2 drives the production of inflammatory T helper cells, and that this can be blocked by inhibiting its EP4 receptor subtype. EP4 inhibitors were also effective at inhibiting disease pathogenesis in animal models of two inflammatory diseases.


Toll-like receptor 2 ligands on the staphylococcal cell wall downregulate superantigen-induced T cell activation and prevent toxic shock syndrome pp641 - 648

Thu A Chau, Michelle L McCully, William Brintnell, Gary An, Katherine J Kasper, Enrique D Vinés, Paul Kubes, S M Mansour Haeryfar, John K McCormick, Ewa Cairns, David E Heinrichs & Joaquín Madrenas

doi:10.1038/nm.1965

Staphylococcal superantigens are potent activators of T cells, causing toxic shock syndrome and death. But surprisingly few staphylococcal infections of humans are associated with TSS, even though the bacteria produce the superantigen toxins. Joaquin Madrenas and his colleagues report that other components of the bacteria can downregulate the superantigen-induced T cell activation, protecting the host from death by TSS.


Cyclophilin A enhances vascular oxidative stress and the development of angiotensin II–induced aortic aneurysms pp649 - 656

Kimio Satoh, Patrizia Nigro, Tetsuya Matoba, Michael R O'Dell, Zhaoqiang Cui, Xi Shi, Amy Mohan, Chen Yan, Jun-ichi Abe, Karl A Illig & Bradford C Berk

doi:10.1038/nm.1958

The pathogenesis of aortic aneurysms involves inflammatory cell recruitment and increased levels of reactive oxygen species and matrix metalloproteases. Kimio Satoh et al. now mechanistically link the protein cyclophilin A—expressed in vascular smooth muscle cells—to these known mediators of aortic aneurysm formation and provide evidence in both mice and humans for the importance of cyclophilin A in aortic aneurysm formation.


Biomechanical regulation of blood vessel growth during tissue vascularization pp657 - 664

Witold W Kilarski, Branka Samolov, Ludvig Petersson, Anders Kvanta & Pär Gerwins

doi:10.1038/nm.1985

In this report, Witold Kilarski et al. show that the rapid formation of new vessels in healing wound tissue does not depend on endothelial cell proliferation and sprouting, which typically have been presumed to be needed for the growth of new blood vessels. Instead, preexisting vessels enlarge and translocate, a process driven by the tension generated by contracting fibroblasts and/or myofibroblasts (pages 608–610).

See also: News and Views by Benest & Augustin


A shear gradient–dependent platelet aggregation mechanism drives thrombus formation pp665 - 673

Warwick S Nesbitt, Erik Westein, Francisco Javier Tovar-Lopez, Elham Tolouei, Arnan Mitchell, Jia Fu, Josie Carberry, Andreas Fouras & Shaun P Jackson

doi:10.1038/nm.1955

Warwick Nesbitt, Erik Westein and coworkers describe a new mechanistic model for thrombus growth within a blood vessel, providing evidence that blood flow shear gradients—which can arise from vessel injury, stenosis or obstruction—are important in driving thrombus formation. Rapid changes in blood shear rates lead to dynamic restructuring of membranous structures, called 'tethers', on the platelet surface, facilitating stable platelet deposition onto a growing thrombus (pages 607–608).

See also: News and Views by Brass


Impaired gastric acidification negatively affects calcium homeostasis and bone mass pp674 - 681

Thorsten Schinke, Arndt F Schilling, Anke Baranowsky, Sebastian Seitz, Robert P Marshall, Tilman Linn, Michael Blaeker, Antje K Huebner, Ansgar Schulz, Ronald Simon, Matthias Gebauer, Matthias Priemel, Uwe Kornak, Sandra Perkovic, Florian Barvencik, F Timo Beil, Andrea Del Fattore, Annalisa Frattini, Thomas Streichert, Klaus Pueschel, Anna Villa, Klaus-Michael Debatin, Johannes M Rueger, Anna Teti, Jozef Zustin, Guido Sauter & Michael Amling

doi:10.1038/nm.1963

Proper calcium levels are needed to maintain healthy bones. Michael Amling and his colleagues now show that gastric acidification is a key part of in this process. These findings have possible important clinical implications for patients with osteoporosis and/or those on proton-pump inhibitors, as well as those with a rare genetic disease that causes excess bone mass.

See also: News and Views by Boyce


Inhibition of osteoblastic bone formation by nuclear factor-kappaB pp682 - 689

Jia Chang, Zhuo Wang, Eric Tang, Zhipeng Fan, Laurie McCauley, Renny Franceschi, Kunliang Guan, Paul H Krebsbach & Cun-Yu Wang

doi:10.1038/nm.1954

It has been well shown that NF-kappaB has a crucial role in promoting the maturation of bone-resorbing osteoclasts. Now, Cun-Yu Wang and his colleagues show that it also has a role in inhibiting the function of mature bone-forming osteoblasts. They go on to show that deficiency of NF-kappaB specifically in osteoblasts increases bone formation and protects against bone loss in experimentally-induced osteoporosis in mice.


Top

Letters

Prophylactic treatment with sialic acid metabolites precludes the development of the myopathic phenotype in the DMRV-hIBM mouse model pp690 - 695

May Christine V Malicdan, Satoru Noguchi, Yukiko K Hayashi, Ikuya Nonaka & Ichizo Nishino

doi:10.1038/nm.1956

In a new report, Satoru Noguchi and his colleagues have shown that oral administration of various sialic acid compounds helps improve the behavior of skeletal muscles in a mouse model of a severely debilitating human muscle disease—one with no current treatment option. Given the simplicity of their approach, it is possible these findings could have immediate clinical impact.


Interferon regulatory factor-2 protects quiescent hematopoietic stem cells from type I interferon–dependent exhaustion pp696 - 700

Taku Sato, Nobuyuki Onai, Hiroki Yoshihara, Fumio Arai, Toshio Suda & Toshiaki Ohteki

doi:10.1038/nm.1973

Although type I interferons such as interferon-alpha are well known to protect against viral infection, they may have other physiological effects in the uninfected state. Taku Sato et al. now show that type I interferon signaling in hematopoietic stem cells promotes their proliferation and impairs their ability to reconstitute the hematopoietic system (pages 696–700).

See also: News and Views by Passegué & Ernst


Top

Technical Report

Sustained in vitro intestinal epithelial culture within a Wnt-dependent stem cell niche pp701 - 706

Akifumi Ootani, Xingnan Li, Eugenio Sangiorgi, Quoc T Ho, Hiroo Ueno, Shuji Toda, Hajime Sugihara, Kazuma Fujimoto, Irving L Weissman, Mario R Capecchi & Calvin J Kuo

doi:10.1038/nm.1951

The development of a long-term intestinal culture system has, until recently, eluded researchers. Here the authors describe a method allowing long-term culture of both small intestine and colon that incorporates an air-liquid interface coupled with a three-dimensional matrix scaffold. The cultures show epithelial cell proliferation and multilineage differentiation to the major cell types and accurately recapitulate the Wnt- and Notch-dependent intestinal stem cell niche.


Top

Extra navigation

Subscribe to Nature Medicine

Subscribe

Open Innovation Challenges

ADVERTISEMENT