Review Article |
Featured
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Letter |
Moving beyond microbiome-wide associations to causal microbe identification
Triangulation of microbe–phenotype relationships is an effective method for reducing the noise inherent in microbiota studies and enabling identification of causal microbes of disease, which may be applicable to human microbiome studies.
- Neeraj K. Surana
- & Dennis L. Kasper
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News |
Testing magnesium's brain-boosting effects
Simple ion therapy faces human trials after ten years of preparation.
- David Cyranoski
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News Explainer |
Can bacteria fight brain cancer?
The thinking behind an approach that has caused trouble in California.
- Monya Baker
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Letter |
Inhibition of BET recruitment to chromatin as an effective treatment for MLL-fusion leukaemia
- Mark A. Dawson
- , Rab K. Prinjha
- & Tony Kouzarides
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Article |
Functional regeneration of respiratory pathways after spinal cord injury
- Warren J. Alilain
- , Kevin P. Horn
- & Jerry Silver
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Books & Arts |
Medicine: Blood feud
A history of early transfusions mixes experiment and ethics with Anglo-French rivalry, finds W. F. Bynum
- W. F. Bynum
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News |
Bone-disease drug could treat breast cancer
Hormone therapy causes cancer through a molecule already implicated in osteoporosis.
- Ewen Callaway
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News & Views |
Big roles for small RNAs
Embryonic stem cells can create copies of themselves, but can also mature into almost any type of cell in the body. Tiny gene regulators called microRNAs are now shown to have a role in directing these properties.
- Frank J. Slack