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  • Plant pathogens encode effector proteins that trigger immunity in plants carrying appropriate resistance genes. Here Qutob et al. show non-Mendelian interactions between naturally occurring Phytophthora sojaealleles that result in transgenerational gene silencing and gain of virulence in soybean plants.

    • Dinah Qutob
    • B. Patrick Chapman
    • Mark Gijzen
    ArticleOpen Access
  • In outwardly rectifying potassium channels, depolarization initiates conformational changes in voltage-sensing domains. Goldschen-Ohmet al. find that movement of three specific domains correlates with conductance levels, and rearrangements of a fourth domain results in preinactivation subconductance states.

    • Marcel P. Goldschen-Ohm
    • Deborah L. Capes
    • Baron Chanda
    ArticleOpen Access
  • RNase P is a key enzyme implicated in transfer RNA maturation that removes the 5′-leader sequences from transfer RNA precursors. In this study, a biophysical characterization of a novel protein-only variant of RNase P, known as PRORP (PROteinaceous RNase P), reveals that transfer RNA recognition by PRORP is similar to that by ribonucleoprotein RNase P.

    • Anthony Gobert
    • Franziska Pinker
    • Philippe Giegé
    ArticleOpen Access
  • For future optical information processing applications, including quantum computing, ever more complex quantum photonic devices are needed. Metcalf et al. present an integrated photonic device capable of three-photon quantum operation, including Hong-Ou-Mandel-type interference between three photons.

    • Benjamin J. Metcalf
    • Nicholas Thomas-Peter
    • Ian A. Walmsley
    Article
  • Natural populations are complex systems where interactions can lead to chaotic dynamics. This study tests how cyclic and chaotic microbial predator–prey communities synchronize, showing different phase-locking responses for cyclic and chaotic systems.

    • Lutz Becks
    • Hartmut Arndt
    Article
  • Atomic force microscopy provides surface topography images with atomic resolution, but a quantitative measurement of the force while imaging has been missing. Now, Platzet al. present a method based on modulating the cantilever oscillation amplitude to rapidly measure the interaction between tip and surface.

    • Daniel Platz
    • Daniel Forchheimer
    • David B. Haviland
    Article
  • The antibiotic streptomycin increases errors in protein translation, but it is unclear how streptomycin exerts its effect on the ribosome. Demirci et al. present X-ray crystal structures that reveal conformational changes induced by streptomycin, which may inspire future efforts in antibiotics design.

    • Hasan Demirci
    • Frank Murphy IV
    • Gerwald Jogl
    Article
  • Optical frequency combs are vital tools for precision measurements, and extending them further into the mid-infrared 'molecular fingerprint' range will open new avenues for spectroscopy. Using crystalline microresonators, Wang et al. demonstrate Kerr combs at 2.5 μm as a promising route into the mid-infrared.

    • C. Y. Wang
    • T. Herr
    • T. J. Kippenberg
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Iron-based superconductors have the potential to carry higher currents and withstand higher magnetic fields than present-day superconducting cables. Using an approach developed for cuprates, Si et al. improve the high-field performance of iron-based superconductors well beyond that of conventional superconductors.

    • Weidong Si
    • Su Jung Han
    • Qiang Li
    Article
  • Blood clotting is caused by biopolymer-mediated aggregation of platelets and is enhanced by fast shear flows. Chen et al. find a similar process that arises during the self-assembly of polymer–colloid composites—a process that can be controlled and even reversed by flow rate and interparticle interaction.

    • Hsieh Chen
    • Mohammad A. Fallah
    • Alfredo Alexander-Katz
    Article
  • The ability to control the magnetic order in a material with an electric field will enable low-power non-volatile memories and new types of computer logic. Ryanet al. demonstrate that europium titanate under moderate strain exhibits strong magnetoelectric coupling that could be valuable to this endeavour.

    • P. J. Ryan
    • J-W Kim
    • D. G. Schlom
    Article