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  •   Isotopic evidence of long-lived volcanism on Io
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Katherine de Kleer, Ery C. Hughes, Francis Nimmo, John Eiler, Amy E. Hofmann, Statia Luszcz-Cook, Kathy Mandt

    Jupiter’s moon Io hosts extensive volcanism, driven by tidal heating. The isotopic composition of Io’s inventory of volatile chemical elements, including sulfur and chlorine, reflects its outgassing and mass loss history, and thus records information about its evolution. We used millimeter observations of Io’s atmosphere to measure sulfur isotopes in gaseous SO 2 and SO, and chlorine isotopes in gaseous

  •   France needs a chief science adviser
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Patrick Lemaire, François Massol

    France is at a crossroads, facing environmental and social challenges that are profoundly altering its society. Yet, the French government keeps prioritizing short-term political gains over long-term evidence-based planning for major transitions that France, like most countries, will undergo over the next 20 years. There is an urgent need for France to implement long-term science-informed policy-making

  •   Mapping twist-tuned multiband topology in bilayer WSe 2
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Benjamin A. Foutty, Carlos R. Kometter, Trithep Devakul, Aidan P. Reddy, Kenji Watanabe, Takashi Taniguchi, Liang Fu, Benjamin E. Feldman

    Semiconductor moiré superlattices have been shown to host a wide array of interaction-driven ground states. However, twisted homobilayers have been difficult to study in the limit of large moiré wavelengths, where interactions are most dominant. In this study, we conducted local electronic compressibility measurements of twisted bilayer WSe 2 (tWSe 2 ) at small twist angles. We demonstrated multiple

  •   Interferon- γ and infectious diseases: Lessons and prospects
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Jean-Laurent Casanova, John D. MacMicking, Carl F. Nathan

    Infectious diseases continue to claim many lives. Prevention of morbidity and mortality from these diseases would benefit not just from new medicines and vaccines but also from a better understanding of what constitutes protective immunity. Among the major immune signals that mobilize host defense against infection is interferon- γ (IFN- γ ), a protein secreted by lymphocytes. Forty years ago, IFN-

  •   Directed and acyclic synaptic connectivity in the human layer 2-3 cortical microcircuit
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Yangfan Peng, Antje Bjelde, Pau Vilimelis Aceituno, Franz X. Mittermaier, Henrike Planert, Sabine Grosser, Julia Onken, Katharina Faust, Thilo Kalbhenn, Matthias Simon, Helena Radbruch, Pawel Fidzinski, Dietmar Schmitz, Henrik Alle, Martin Holtkamp, Imre Vida, Benjamin F. Grewe, Jörg R. P. Geiger

    The computational capabilities of neuronal networks are fundamentally constrained by their specific connectivity. Previous studies of cortical connectivity have mostly been carried out in rodents; whether the principles established therein also apply to the evolutionarily expanded human cortex is unclear. We studied network properties within the human temporal cortex using samples obtained from brain

  •   Phage predation, disease severity, and pathogen genetic diversity in cholera patients
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Naïma Madi, Emilee T. Cato, Md. Abu Sayeed, Ashton Creasy-Marrazzo, Aline Cuénod, Kamrul Islam, Md. Imam Ul Khabir, Md. Taufiqur R. Bhuiyan, Yasmin A. Begum, Emma Freeman, Anirudh Vustepalli, Lindsey Brinkley, Manasi Kamat, Laura S. Bailey, Kari B. Basso, Firdausi Qadri, Ashraful I. Khan, B. Jesse Shapiro, Eric J. Nelson

    Despite an increasingly detailed picture of the molecular mechanisms of bacteriophage (phage)–bacterial interactions, we lack an understanding of how these interactions evolve and impact disease within patients. In this work, we report a year-long, nationwide study of diarrheal disease patients in Bangladesh. Among cholera patients, we quantified Vibrio cholerae (prey) and its virulent phages (predators)

  •   Fusion of memristor and digital compute-in-memory processing for energy-efficient edge computing
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Tai-Hao Wen, Je-Min Hung, Wei-Hsing Huang, Chuan-Jia Jhang, Yun-Chen Lo, Hung-Hsi Hsu, Zhao-En Ke, Yu-Chiao Chen, Yu-Hsiang Chin, Chin-I Su, Win-San Khwa, Chung-Chuan Lo, Ren-Shuo Liu, Chih-Cheng Hsieh, Kea-Tiong Tang, Mon-Shu Ho, Chung-Cheng Chou, Yu-Der Chih, Tsung-Yung Jonathan Chang, Meng-Fan Chang

    Artificial intelligence (AI) edge devices prefer employing high-capacity nonvolatile compute-in-memory (CIM) to achieve high energy efficiency and rapid wakeup-to-response with sufficient accuracy. Most previous works are based on either memristor-based CIMs, which suffer from accuracy loss and do not support training as a result of limited endurance, or digital static random-access memory (SRAM)–based

  •   High energy density in artificial heterostructures through relaxation time modulation
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Sangmoon Han, Justin S. Kim, Eugene Park, Yuan Meng, Zhihao Xu, Alexandre C. Foucher, Gwan Yeong Jung, Ilpyo Roh, Sangho Lee, Sun Ok Kim, Ji-Yun Moon, Seung-Il Kim, Sanggeun Bae, Xinyuan Zhang, Bo-In Park, Seunghwan Seo, Yimeng Li, Heechang Shin, Kate Reidy, Anh Tuan Hoang, Suresh Sundaram, Phuong Vuong, Chansoo Kim, Junyi Zhao, Jinyeon Hwang, Chuan Wang, Hyungil Choi, Dong-Hwan Kim, Jimin Kwon, Jin-Hong

    Electrostatic capacitors are foundational components of advanced electronics and high-power electrical systems owing to their ultrafast charging-discharging capability. Ferroelectric materials offer high maximum polarization, but high remnant polarization has hindered their effective deployment in energy storage applications. Previous methodologies have encountered problems because of the deteriorated

  •   More resilient polyester membranes for high-performance reverse osmosis desalination
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Yujian Yao, Pingxia Zhang, Fei Sun, Wen Zhang, Meng Li, Gang Sha, Long Teng, Xianze Wang, Mingxin Huo, Ryan M. DuChanois, Tianchi Cao, Chanhee Boo, Xuan Zhang, Menachem Elimelech

    Thin-film composite reverse osmosis membranes have remained the gold standard technology for desalination and water purification for nearly half a century. Polyamide films offer excellent water permeability and salt rejection but also suffer from poor chlorine resistance, high fouling propensity, and low boron rejection. We addressed these issues by molecularly designing a polyester thin-film composite

  •   Fast current-induced skyrmion motion in synthetic antiferromagnets
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Van Tuong Pham, Naveen Sisodia, Ilaria Di Manici, Joseba Urrestarazu-Larrañaga, Kaushik Bairagi, Johan Pelloux-Prayer, Rodrigo Guedas, Liliana D. Buda-Prejbeanu, Stéphane Auffret, Andrea Locatelli, Tevfik Onur Menteş, Stefania Pizzini, Pawan Kumar, Aurore Finco, Vincent Jacques, Gilles Gaudin, Olivier Boulle

    Magnetic skyrmions are topological magnetic textures that hold great promise as nanoscale bits of information in memory and logic devices. Although room-temperature ferromagnetic skyrmions and their current-induced manipulation have been demonstrated, their velocity has been limited to about 100 meters per second. In addition, their dynamics are perturbed by the skyrmion Hall effect, a motion transverse

  •   Technological risks are not the end of the world
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Jack Stilgoe

    There’s a scene in the movie Oppenheimer in which the protagonist is trying to explain to General Groves, his military overseer, the hazards of their endeavor. Groves asks Oppenheimer, “Are you saying there’s a chance that when we push that button, we destroy the world?“ The physicist says, “The chances are near zero.” When Groves, understandably alarmed, asks for clarification, Oppenheimer responds

  •   A naturally isolated symbiotic bacterium suppresses flavivirus transmission by Aedes mosquitoes
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Liming Zhang, Daxi Wang, Peibo Shi, Juzhen Li, Jichen Niu, Jielong Chen, Gang Wang, Linjuan Wu, Lu Chen, Zhenxing Yang, Susheng Li, Jinxin Meng, Fangchao Ruan, Yuwen He, Hailong Zhao, Zirui Ren, Yibaina Wang, Yang Liu, Xiaolu Shi, Yunfu Wang, Qiyong Liu, Junhua Li, Penghua Wang, Jinglin Wang, Yibin Zhu, Gong Cheng

    The commensal microbiota of the mosquito gut plays a complex role in determining the vector competence for arboviruses. In this study, we identified a bacterium from the gut of field Aedes albopictus mosquitoes named Rosenbergiella sp. YN46 ( Rosenbergiella_ YN46) that rendered mosquitoes refractory to infection with dengue and Zika viruses. Inoculation of 1.6 × 10 3 colony forming units (CFUs) of

  •   Structural disorder determines capacitance in nanoporous carbons
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Xinyu Liu, Dongxun Lyu, Céline Merlet, Matthew J. A. Leesmith, Xiao Hua, Zhen Xu, Clare P. Grey, Alexander C. Forse

    The difficulty in characterizing the complex structures of nanoporous carbon electrodes has led to a lack of clear design principles with which to improve supercapacitors. Pore size has long been considered the main lever to improve capacitance. However, our evaluation of a large series of commercial nanoporous carbons finds a lack of correlation between pore size and capacitance. Instead, nuclear

  •   A national-scale assessment of land subsidence in China’s major cities
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Zurui Ao, Xiaomei Hu, Shengli Tao, Xie Hu, Guoquan Wang, Mingjia Li, Fang Wang, Litang Hu, Xiuyu Liang, Jingfeng Xiao, Asadilla Yusup, Wenhua Qi, Qinwei Ran, Jiayi Fang, Jinfeng Chang, Zhenzhong Zeng, Yongshuo Fu, Baolin Xue, Ping Wang, Kefei Zhao, Le Li, Wenkai Li, Yumei Li, Mi Jiang, Yuanhe Yang, Haihua Shen, Xia Zhao, Yue Shi, Bo Wu, Zhengbing Yan, Mengjia Wang, Yanjun Su, Tianyu Hu, Qin Ma, Hao

    China’s massive wave of urbanization may be threatened by land subsidence. Using a spaceborne synthetic aperture radar interferometry technique, we provided a systematic assessment of land subsidence in all of China’s major cities from 2015 to 2022. Of the examined urban lands, 45% are subsiding faster than 3 millimeters per year, and 16% are subsiding faster than 10 millimeters per year, affecting

  •   Neuroendocrine cells initiate protective upper airway reflexes
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Laura F. Seeholzer, David Julius

    Airway neuroendocrine (NE) cells have been proposed to serve as specialized sensory epithelial cells that modulate respiratory behavior by communicating with nearby nerve endings. However, their functional properties and physiological roles in the healthy lung, trachea, and larynx remain largely unknown. In this work, we show that murine NE cells in these compartments have distinct biophysical properties

  •   Drugs of abuse hijack a mesolimbic pathway that processes homeostatic need
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Bowen Tan, Caleb J. Browne, Tobias Nöbauer, Alipasha Vaziri, Jeffrey M. Friedman, Eric J. Nestler

    Drugs of abuse are thought to promote addiction in part by “hijacking” brain reward systems, but the underlying mechanisms remain undefined. Using whole-brain FOS mapping and in vivo single-neuron calcium imaging, we found that drugs of abuse augment dopaminoceptive ensemble activity in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) and disorganize overlapping ensemble responses to natural rewards in a cell type–specific

  •   Reversal of quantized Hall drifts at noninteracting and interacting topological boundaries
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-18
    Zijie Zhu, Marius Gächter, Anne-Sophie Walter, Konrad Viebahn, Tilman Esslinger

    The transport properties of gapless edge modes at boundaries between topologically distinct domains are of fundamental and technological importance. We experimentally studied long-distance quantized Hall drifts in a harmonically confined topological pump of ultracold fermionic atoms. We found that quantized drifts halt and reverse their direction when the atoms reach a critical slope of the confining

  •   Large-scale photonic chiplet Taichi empowers 160-TOPS/W artificial general intelligence
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-12
    Zhihao Xu, Tiankuang Zhou, Muzhou Ma, ChenChen Deng, Qionghai Dai, Lu Fang

    The pursuit of artificial general intelligence (AGI) continuously demands higher computing performance. Despite the superior processing speed and efficiency of integrated photonic circuits, their capacity and scalability are restricted by unavoidable errors, such that only simple tasks and shallow models are realized. To support modern AGIs, we designed Taichi—large-scale photonic chiplets based on

  •   Improved charge extraction in inverted perovskite solar cells with dual-site-binding ligands
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-12
    Hao Chen, Cheng Liu, Jian Xu, Aidan Maxwell, Wei Zhou, Yi Yang, Qilin Zhou, Abdulaziz S. R. Bati, Haoyue Wan, Zaiwei Wang, Lewei Zeng, Junke Wang, Peter Serles, Yuan Liu, Sam Teale, Yanjiang Liu, Makhsud I. Saidaminov, Muzhi Li, Nicholas Rolston, Sjoerd Hoogland, Tobin Filleter, Mercouri G. Kanatzidis, Bin Chen, Zhijun Ning, Edward H. Sargent

    Inverted (pin) perovskite solar cells (PSCs) afford improved operating stability in comparison to their nip counterparts but have lagged in power conversion efficiency (PCE). The energetic losses responsible for this PCE deficit in pin PSCs occur primarily at the interfaces between the perovskite and the charge-transport layers. Additive and surface treatments that use passivating ligands usually bind

  •   Ultrahigh energy storage in high-entropy ceramic capacitors with polymorphic relaxor phase
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-12
    Min Zhang, Shun Lan, Bing B. Yang, Hao Pan, Yi Q. Liu, Qing H. Zhang, Jun L. Qi, Di Chen, Hang Su, Di Yi, Yue Y. Yang, Rui Wei, Hong D. Cai, Hao J. Han, Lin Gu, Ce-Wen Nan, Yuan-Hua Lin

    Ultrahigh–power-density multilayer ceramic capacitors (MLCCs) are critical components in electrical and electronic systems. However, the realization of a high energy density combined with a high efficiency is a major challenge for practical applications. We propose a high-entropy design in barium titanate (BaTiO3)–based lead-free MLCCs with polymorphic relaxor phase. This strategy effectively minimizes

  •   Closed-loop recyclability of a biomass-derived epoxy-amine thermoset by methanolysis
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-12
    Xianyuan Wu, Peter Hartmann, Dimitri Berne, Mario De bruyn, Florian Cuminet, Zhiwen Wang, Johannes Matthias Zechner, Adrian Daniel Boese, Vincent Placet, Sylvain Caillol, Katalin Barta

    Epoxy resin thermosets (ERTs) are an important class of polymeric materials. However, owing to their highly cross-linked nature, they suffer from poor recyclability, which contributes to an unacceptable level of environmental pollution. There is a clear need for the design of inherently recyclable ERTs that are based on renewable resources. We present the synthesis and closed-loop recycling of a fully

  •   Kink bands promote exceptional fracture resistance in a NbTaTiHf refractory medium-entropy alloy
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-12
    David H. Cook, Punit Kumar, Madelyn I. Payne, Calvin H. Belcher, Pedro Borges, Wenqing Wang, Flynn Walsh, Zehao Li, Arun Devaraj, Mingwei Zhang, Mark Asta, Andrew M. Minor, Enrique J. Lavernia, Diran Apelian, Robert O. Ritchie

    Single-phase body-centered cubic (bcc) refractory medium- or high-entropy alloys can retain compressive strength at elevated temperatures but suffer from extremely low tensile ductility and fracture toughness. We examined the strength and fracture toughness of a bcc refractory alloy, NbTaTiHf, from 77 to 1473 kelvin. This alloy’s behavior differed from that of comparable systems by having fracture

  •   Dating the Solar System’s giant planet orbital instability using enstatite meteorites
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-16
    Chrysa Avdellidou, Marco Delbo’, David Nesvorný, Kevin J. Walsh, Alessandro Morbidelli

    The giant planets of the Solar System formed on initially compact orbits, which transitioned to the current wider configuration by means of an orbital instability. The timing of that instability is poorly constrained. In this work, we use dynamical simulations to demonstrate that the instability implanted planetesimal fragments from the terrestrial planet region into the asteroid main belt. We use

  •   Sex differences in tissue immunity
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-12
    Franz Puttur, Clare M. Lloyd

    There are differences in the prevalence of inflammatory diseases between the sexes (sexual dimorphism), but the underlying mechanisms that regulate tissue immunity remain unclear. The interplay between multiple immune cells, structural cells, and tissue matrix proteins determines the outcome of tissue immunity. These interactions are regulated by intrinsic and extrinsic factors that calibrate the tone

  •   The nitroplast: A nitrogen-fixing organelle
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-12
    Ramon Massana

    Eukaryotic cells are notably complex—for example, they have various organelles, which are membrane-bound structures with specific functions. Two of these organelles, mitochondria and chloroplasts, which function in respiration and photosynthesis, evolved from the integration of endosymbiotic bacteria to the eukaryotic cell (1). In marine systems, some nitrogen-fixing bacteria are endosymbionts of microalgae

  •   Designs where disorder prevails
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-12
    Zibin Chen

    High-performance dielectric capacitors (which include insulating materials) play a crucial role in advanced electrical and electronic systems (1). In pulsed power systems, dielectric capacitors exhibit exceptionally high power density (rapid charging and discharging capabilities) and a prolonged operational lifetime, features that distinguish them from batteries and electrochemical capacitors (2).

  •   Closing the loop on thermoset plastic recycling
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-12
    Bryce T. Nicholls, Brett P. Fors

    Globally, only 9% of plastics are recycled, and because of polymer degradation and mixed waste streams, their properties decline with each reuse cycle (1). Thermosets, a widely used class of plastics that maintain a permanent shape upon curing, are not recycled at all (2). In closed-loop recycling, a polymer can be processed into a new material without sacrificing properties, retaining the value of

  •   Molecular mechanism of actin filament elongation by formins
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    Wout Oosterheert, Micaela Boiero Sanders, Johanna Funk, Daniel Prumbaum, Stefan Raunser, Peter Bieling

    Formins control the assembly of actin filaments (F-actin) that drive cell morphogenesis and motility in eukaryotes. However, their molecular interaction with F-actin and their mechanism of action remain unclear. In this work, we present high-resolution cryo–electron microscopy structures of F-actin barbed ends bound by three distinct formins, revealing a common asymmetric formin conformation imposed

  •   Two inhibitory neuronal classes govern acquisition and recall of spinal sensorimotor adaptation
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    Simon Lavaud, Charlotte Bichara, Mattia D’Andola, Shu-Hao Yeh, Aya Takeoka

    Spinal circuits are central to movement adaptation, yet the mechanisms within the spinal cord responsible for acquiring and retaining behavior upon experience remain unclear. Using a simple conditioning paradigm, we found that dorsal inhibitory neurons are indispensable for adapting protective limb-withdrawal behavior by regulating the transmission of a specific set of somatosensory information to

  •   Thin adhesive oil films lead to anomalously stable mixtures of water in oil
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    Claire Nannette, Jean Baudry, Anqi Chen, Yiqiao Song, Abdulwahed Shglabow, Nicolas Bremond, Damien Démoulin, Jamie Walters, David A. Weitz, Jérôme Bibette

    Oil and water can only be mixed by dispersing droplets of one fluid in the other. When two droplets approach one another, the thin film that separates them invariably becomes unstable, causing the droplets to coalesce. The only known way to avoid this instability is through addition of a third component, typically a surfactant, which stabilizes the thin film at its equilibrium thickness. We report

  •   Realization of an atomic quantum Hall system in four dimensions
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    Jean-Baptiste Bouhiron, Aurélien Fabre, Qi Liu, Quentin Redon, Nehal Mittal, Tanish Satoor, Raphael Lopes, Sylvain Nascimbene

    Modern condensed matter physics relies on the concept of topology to classify matter, from quantum Hall systems to topological insulators. Engineered systems, benefiting from synthetic dimensions, can potentially give access to topological states predicted in dimensions D > 3. We report the realization of an atomic quantum Hall system evolving in four dimensions (4D), with two spatial dimensions and

  •   Teach philosophy of science
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    H. Holden Thorp

    Much is being made about the erosion of public trust in science. Surveys show a modest decline in the United States from a very high level of trust, but that is seen for other institutions as well. What is apparent from the surveys is that a better explanation of the nature of science—that it is revised as new data surface—would have a strong positive effect on public trust. Because scientists are

  •   Nitrogen-fixing organelle in a marine alga
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    Tyler H. Coale, Valentina Loconte, Kendra A. Turk-Kubo, Bieke Vanslembrouck, Wing Kwan Esther Mak, Shunyan Cheung, Axel Ekman, Jian-Hua Chen, Kyoko Hagino, Yoshihito Takano, Tomohiro Nishimura, Masao Adachi, Mark Le Gros, Carolyn Larabell, Jonathan P. Zehr

    Symbiotic interactions were key to the evolution of chloroplast and mitochondria organelles, which mediate carbon and energy metabolism in eukaryotes. Biological nitrogen fixation, the reduction of abundant atmospheric nitrogen gas (N 2 ) to biologically available ammonia, is a key metabolic process performed exclusively by prokaryotes. Candidatus Atelocyanobacterium thalassa, or UCYN-A, is a metabolically

  •   Human telomere length is chromosome end–specific and conserved across individuals
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    Kayarash Karimian, Aljona Groot, Vienna Huso, Ramin Kahidi, Kar-Tong Tan, Samantha Sholes, Rebecca Keener, John F. McDyer, Jonathan K. Alder, Heng Li, Andreas Rechtsteiner, Carol W. Greider

    Short telomeres cause age-related disease and long telomeres predispose to cancer; however, the mechanisms regulating telomere length are unclear. We developed a nanopore-based method, Telomere Profiling, to determine telomere length at nearly single nucleotide resolution. Mapping telomere reads to chromosome ends showed chromosome end–specific length distributions that could differ by more than six

  •   Modern approaches to therapeutic oligonucleotide manufacturing
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    R. Obexer, M. Nassir, E. R. Moody, P. S. Baran, S. L. Lovelock

    Therapeutic oligonucleotides are a powerful drug modality with the potential to treat many diseases. The rapidly growing number of therapies that have been approved and that are in advanced clinical trials will place unprecedented demands on our capacity to manufacture oligonucleotides at scale. Existing methods based on solid-phase phosphoramidite chemistry are limited by their scalability and sustainability

  •   The scientific importance of the lunar environment
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    Kathleen E. Mandt

    Many plans are in preparation to land robotic missions on the surface of the Moon, which will pave the way to return humans to the lunar surface and set the stage for an ongoing human presence. Artemis is a NASA-led international effort to return humans to the Moon. One of the goals of Artemis is to use innovative technologies to address priority science objectives. At the same time, the European Space

  •   Structural basis of DNA crossover capture by Escherichia coli DNA gyrase
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    Marlène Vayssières, Nils Marechal, Long Yun, Brian Lopez Duran, Naveen Kumar Murugasamy, Jonathan M. Fogg, Lynn Zechiedrich, Marc Nadal, Valérie Lamour

    DNA supercoiling must be precisely regulated by topoisomerases to prevent DNA entanglement. The interaction of type IIA DNA topoisomerases with two DNA molecules, enabling the transport of one duplex through the transient double-stranded break of the other, remains elusive owing to structures derived solely from single linear duplex DNAs lacking topological constraints. Using cryo–electron microscopy

  •   Size, distribution, and vulnerability of the global soil inorganic carbon
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    Yuanyuan Huang, Xiaodong Song, Ying-Ping Wang, Josep G. Canadell, Yiqi Luo, Philippe Ciais, Anping Chen, Songbai Hong, Yugang Wang, Feng Tao, Wei Li, Yiming Xu, Reza Mirzaeitalarposhti, Heba Elbasiouny, Igor Savin, Dmitry Shchepashchenko, Raphael A. Viscarra Rossel, Daniel S. Goll, Jinfeng Chang, Benjamin Z. Houlton, Huayong Wu, Fei Yang, Xiaoming Feng, Yongzhe Chen, Yu Liu, Shuli Niu, Gan-Lin Zhang

    Global estimates of the size, distribution, and vulnerability of soil inorganic carbon (SIC) remain largely unquantified. By compiling 223,593 field-based measurements and developing machine-learning models, we report that global soils store 2305 ± 636 (±1 SD) billion tonnes of carbon as SIC over the top 2-meter depth. Under future scenarios, soil acidification associated with nitrogen additions to

  •   A magnetic massive star has experienced a stellar merger
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-11
    A. J. Frost, H. Sana, L. Mahy, G. Wade, J. Barron, J.-B. Le Bouquin, A. Mérand, F. R. N. Schneider, T. Shenar, R. H. Barbá, D. M. Bowman, M. Fabry, A. Farhang, P. Marchant, N. I. Morrell, J. V. Smoker

    Massive stars (those ≥8 solar masses at formation) have radiative envelopes that cannot sustain a dynamo, the mechanism that produces magnetic fields in lower-mass stars. Despite this, approximately 7% of massive stars have observed magnetic fields, the origin of which is debated. We used multi-epoch interferometric and spectroscopic observations to characterize HD 148937, a binary system of two massive

  •   Molecularly thin, two-dimensional all-organic perovskites
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Hwa Seob Choi, Jun Lin, Gang Wang, Walter P. D. Wong, In-Hyeok Park, Fang Lin, Jun Yin, Kai Leng, Junhao Lin, Kian Ping Loh

    Recently, the emergence of all-organic perovskites with three-dimensional (3D) structures has expanded the potential applications of perovskite materials. However, the synthesis and utilization of all-organic perovskites in 2D form remain largely unexplored because the design principle has not been developed. We present the successful synthesis of a metal-free 2D layered perovskite, denoted as the

  •   Pseudo-nanostructure and trapped-hole release induce high thermoelectric performance in PbTe
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Baohai Jia, Di Wu, Lin Xie, Wu Wang, Tian Yu, Shangyang Li, Yan Wang, Yanjun Xu, Binbin Jiang, Zhiquan Chen, Yuxiang Weng, Jiaqing He

    Thermoelectric materials can realize direct and mutual conversion between electricity and heat. However, developing a strategy to improve high thermoelectric performance is challenging because of strongly entangled electrical and thermal transport properties. We demonstrate a case in which both pseudo-nanostructures of vacancy clusters and dynamic charge-carrier regulation of trapped-hole release have

  •   Epithelial cells crowded out in asthma
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Jeffrey M. Drazen, Jeffrey J. Fredberg

    Reports of what were known at that time as “asthmatic fits” can be traced back millennia (1, 2), but a mechanistic understanding of the basis for what are now called asthma exacerbations remains incomplete. Over the past 100 years, multiple mechanisms have been proposed, including constriction of the smooth muscle that encircles the airways (bronchoconstriction), persistent airway inflammation, and

  •   Exceptionally long-lived nuclear RNAs
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Jeanne Lawrence, Lisa Hall

    RNA has come a long way from a simple “messenger” or “translator” of canonical genic information during the production of proteins. A plethora of new types of noncoding RNAs have been discovered, including thousands of long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), many of which have no identified functions (1, 2). Throughout this “RNA revolution,” one property of RNA has been thought to be constant: RNAs are short-lived

  •   Dynamics of magnetization at infinite temperature in a Heisenberg spin chain
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    E. Rosenberg, T. I. Andersen, R. Samajdar, A. Petukhov, J. C. Hoke, D. Abanin, A. Bengtsson, I. K. Drozdov, C. Erickson, P. V. Klimov, X. Mi, A. Morvan, M. Neeley, C. Neill, R. Acharya, R. Allen, K. Anderson, M. Ansmann, F. Arute, K. Arya, A. Asfaw, J. Atalaya, J. C. Bardin, A. Bilmes, G. Bortoli, A. Bourassa, J. Bovaird, L. Brill, M. Broughton, B. B. Buckley, D. A. Buell, T. Burger, B. Burkett, N

    Understanding universal aspects of quantum dynamics is an unresolved problem in statistical mechanics. In particular, the spin dynamics of the one-dimensional Heisenberg model were conjectured as to belong to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) universality class based on the scaling of the infinite-temperature spin-spin correlation function. In a chain of 46 superconducting qubits, we studied the probability

  •   Carbon quaternization of redox active esters and olefins by decarboxylative coupling
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Xu-cheng Gan, Benxiang Zhang, Nathan Dao, Cheng Bi, Maithili Pokle, Liyan Kan, Michael R. Collins, Chet C. Tyrol, Philippe N. Bolduc, Michael Nicastri, Yu Kawamata, Phil S. Baran, Ryan Shenvi

    The synthesis of quaternary carbons often requires numerous steps and complex conditions or harsh reagents that act on heavily engineered substrates. This is largely a consequence of conventional polar-bond retrosynthetic disconnections that in turn require multiple functional group interconversions, redox manipulations, and protecting group chemistry. Here, we report a simple catalyst and reductant

  •   Prophage terminase with tRNase activity sensitizes Salmonella enterica to oxidative stress
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Siva Uppalapati, Sashi Kant, Lin Liu, Ju-Sim Kim, David Orlicky, Michael McClelland, Andres Vazquez-Torres

    Phage viruses shape the evolution and virulence of their bacterial hosts. The Salmonella enterica genome encodes several stress-inducible prophages. The Gifsy-1 prophage terminase protein, whose canonical function is to process phage DNA for packaging in the virus head, unexpectedly acts as a transfer ribonuclease (tRNase) under oxidative stress, cleaving the anticodon loop of tRNALeu. The ensuing

  •   HD-Zip proteins modify floral structures for self-pollination in tomato
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Minliang Wu, Xinxin Bian, Benben Huang, Yadi Du, Shourong Hu, Yanli Wang, Jingyuan Shen, Shuang Wu

    Cleistogamy is a type of self-pollination that relies on the formation of a stigma-enclosing floral structure. We identify three homeodomain-leucine zipper IV (HD-Zip IV) genes that coordinately promote the formation of interlocking trichomes at the anther margin to unite neighboring anthers, generating a closed anther cone and cleistogamy (flower morphology necessitating strict self-pollination).

  •   Lifelong persistence of nuclear RNAs in the mouse brain
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Sara Zocher, Asako McCloskey, Anne Karasinsky, Roberta Schulte, Ulrike Friedrich, Mathias Lesche, Nicole Rund, Fred H. Gage, Martin W. Hetzer, Tomohisa Toda

    Genomic DNA that resides in the nuclei of mammalian neurons can be as old as the organism itself. The life span of nuclear RNAs, which are critical for proper chromatin architecture and transcription regulation, has not been determined in adult tissues. In this work, we identified and characterized nuclear RNAs that do not turn over for at least 2 years in a subset of postnatally born cells in the

  •   Regulating advanced artificial agents
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Michael K. Cohen, Noam Kolt, Yoshua Bengio, Gillian K. Hadfield, Stuart Russell

    Technical experts and policy-makers have increasingly emphasized the need to address extinction risk from artificial intelligence (AI) systems that might circumvent safeguards and thwart attempts to control them (1). Reinforcement learning (RL) agents that plan over a long time horizon far more effectively than humans present particular risks. Giving an advanced AI system the objective to maximize

  •   Intelligent textiles are looking bright
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Yunzhu Li, Yiyue Luo

    Intelligent textiles are fabrics and garments with integrated functionalities that can sense, store, process, and communicate information in a seamless, scalable, and unobtrusive manner (1). They create vast opportunities, ranging from monitoring physiological signals (2, 3) and daily physical interactions (4, 5) to powering smart-home devices (6). Challenges to achieving such materials include incorporating

  •   De novo design of drug-binding proteins with predictable binding energy and specificity
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Lei Lu, Xuxu Gou, Sophia K. Tan, Samuel I. Mann, Hyunjun Yang, Xiaofang Zhong, Dimitrios Gazgalis, Jesús Valdiviezo, Hyunil Jo, Yibing Wu, Morgan E. Diolaiti, Alan Ashworth, Nicholas F. Polizzi, William F. DeGrado

    The de novo design of small molecule–binding proteins has seen exciting recent progress; however, high-affinity binding and tunable specificity typically require laborious screening and optimization after computational design. We developed a computational procedure to design a protein that recognizes a common pharmacophore in a series of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase–1 inhibitors. One of three designed

  •   Single body-coupled fiber enables chipless textile electronics
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Weifeng Yang, Shaomei Lin, Wei Gong, Rongzhou Lin, Chengmei Jiang, Xin Yang, Yunhao Hu, Jingjie Wang, Xiao Xiao, Kerui Li, Yaogang Li, Qinghong Zhang, John S. Ho, Yuxin Liu, Chengyi Hou, Hongzhi Wang

    Intelligent textiles provide an ideal platform for merging technology into daily routines. However, current textile electronic systems often rely on rigid silicon components, which limits seamless integration, energy efficiency, and comfort. Chipless electronic systems still face digital logic challenges owing to the lack of dynamic energy-switching carriers. We propose a chipless body-coupled energy

  •   Bronchoconstriction damages airway epithelia by crowding-induced excess cell extrusion
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Dustin C. Bagley, Tobias Russell, Elena Ortiz-Zapater, Sally Stinson, Kristina Fox, Polly F. Redd, Merry Joseph, Cassandra Deering-Rice, Christopher Reilly, Maddy Parsons, Christopher Brightling, Jody Rosenblatt

    Asthma is deemed an inflammatory disease, yet the defining diagnostic feature is mechanical bronchoconstriction. We previously discovered a conserved process called cell extrusion that drives homeostatic epithelial cell death when cells become too crowded. In this work, we show that the pathological crowding of a bronchoconstrictive attack causes so much epithelial cell extrusion that it damages the

  •   Apoptotic cell identity induces distinct functional responses to IL-4 in efferocytic macrophages
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-05
    Imke Liebold, Amirah Al Jawazneh, Christian Casar, Clarissa Lanzloth, Stephanie Leyk, Madeleine Hamley, Milagros N. Wong, Dominik Kylies, Stefanie K. Gräfe, Ilka Edenhofer, Irene Aranda-Pardos, Marie Kriwet, Helmuth Haas, Jenny Krause, Alexandros Hadjilaou, Andra B. Schromm, Ulricke Richardt, Petra Eggert, Dennis Tappe, Sören A. Weidemann, Sourav Ghosh, Christian F. Krebs, Noelia A-Gonzalez, Anna Worthmann

    Macrophages are functionally heterogeneous cells essential for apoptotic cell clearance. Apoptotic cells are defined by homogeneous characteristics, ignoring their original cell lineage identity. We found that in an interleukin-4 (IL-4)–enriched environment, the sensing of apoptotic neutrophils by macrophages triggered their tissue remodeling signature. Engulfment of apoptotic hepatocytes promoted

  •   Sexual dimorphism in skin immunity is mediated by an androgen-ILC2-dendritic cell axis
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-04
    Liang Chi, Can Liu, Inta Gribonika, Julia Gschwend, Dan Corral, Seong-Ji Han, Ai Ing Lim, Claudia A. Rivera, Verena M. Link, Alexandria C. Wells, Nicolas Bouladoux, Nicholas Collins, Djalma S. Lima-Junior, Michel Enamorado, Barbara Rehermann, Sophie Laffont, Jean-Charles Guéry, Roxane Tussiwand, Christoph Schneider, Yasmine Belkaid

    Males and females exhibit profound differences in immune responses and disease susceptibility. However, the factors responsible for sex differences in tissue immunity remain poorly understood. Here, we uncover a dominant role for type 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2) in shaping sexual immune dimorphism within the skin. Mechanistically, negative regulation of ILC2 by androgens leads to a reduction in

  •   Apoptotic cell identity induces distinct functional responses to IL-4 in efferocytic macrophages
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-04
    Imke Liebold, Amirah Al Jawazneh, Christian Casar, Clarissa Lanzloth, Stephanie Leyk, Madeleine Hamley, Milagros N. Wong, Dominik Kylies, Stefanie K. Gräfe, Ilka Edenhofer, Irene Aranda-Pardos, Marie Kriwet, Helmuth Haas, Jenny Krause, Alexandros Hadjilaou, Andra B. Schromm, Ulricke Richardt, Petra Eggert, Dennis Tappe, Sören A. Weidemann, Sourav Ghosh, Christian F. Krebs, Noelia A-Gonzalez, Anna Worthmann

    Macrophages are functionally heterogeneous cells essential for apoptotic cell clearance. Apoptotic cells are defined by homogeneous characteristics, ignoring their original cell lineage identity. We found that in an interleukin-4 (IL-4)–enriched environment, the sensing of apoptotic neutrophils by macrophages triggered their tissue remodeling signature. Engulfment of apoptotic hepatocytes promoted

  •   Sexual dimorphism in skin immunity is mediated by an androgen-ILC2-dendritic cell axis
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-04
    Liang Chi, Can Liu, Inta Gribonika, Julia Gschwend, Dan Corral, Seong-Ji Han, Ai Ing Lim, Claudia A. Rivera, Verena M. Link, Alexandria C. Wells, Nicolas Bouladoux, Nicholas Collins, Djalma S. Lima-Junior, Michel Enamorado, Barbara Rehermann, Sophie Laffont, Jean-Charles Guéry, Roxane Tussiwand, Christoph Schneider, Yasmine Belkaid

    Males and females exhibit profound differences in immune responses and disease susceptibility. However, the factors responsible for sex differences in tissue immunity remain poorly understood. Here, we uncover a dominant role for type 2 innate lymphoid cells (ILC2) in shaping sexual immune dimorphism within the skin. Mechanistically, negative regulation of ILC2 by androgens leads to a reduction in

  •   Lifelong persistence of nuclear RNAs in the mouse brain
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-04
    Sara Zocher, Asako McCloskey, Anne Karasinsky, Roberta Schulte, Ulrike Friedrich, Mathias Lesche, Nicole Rund, Fred H. Gage, Martin W. Hetzer, Tomohisa Toda

    Genomic DNA that resides in the nuclei of mammalian neurons can be as old as the organism itself. The life span of nuclear RNAs, which are critical for proper chromatin architecture and transcription regulation, has not been determined in adult tissues. In this work, we identified and characterized nuclear RNAs that do not turn over for at least 2 years in a subset of postnatally born cells in the

  •   How Indigenous communities in New Zealand are protecting their data
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-04
    Tahu Kukutai

    Concerns about the ethical use of data, privacy, and data harms are front of mind in many jurisdictions as regulators move to impose tighter controls on data privacy and protection, and the use of artificial intelligence (AI). Although efforts to hold corporations to account for their deployment of data and data-driven technologies have been largely welcomed by academics and civil society, there is

  •   Dynamics of magnetization at infinite temperature in a Heisenberg spin chain
    Science (IF 56.9) Pub Date : 2024-04-04
    E. Rosenberg, T. I. Andersen, R. Samajdar, A. Petukhov, J. C. Hoke, D. Abanin, A. Bengtsson, I. K. Drozdov, C. Erickson, P. V. Klimov, X. Mi, A. Morvan, M. Neeley, C. Neill, R. Acharya, R. Allen, K. Anderson, M. Ansmann, F. Arute, K. Arya, A. Asfaw, J. Atalaya, J. C. Bardin, A. Bilmes, G. Bortoli, A. Bourassa, J. Bovaird, L. Brill, M. Broughton, B. B. Buckley, D. A. Buell, T. Burger, B. Burkett, N

    Understanding universal aspects of quantum dynamics is an unresolved problem in statistical mechanics. In particular, the spin dynamics of the one-dimensional Heisenberg model were conjectured as to belong to the Kardar-Parisi-Zhang (KPZ) universality class based on the scaling of the infinite-temperature spin-spin correlation function. In a chain of 46 superconducting qubits, we studied the probability

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