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Planet Neuroscience

An aggregation of RSS feeds from various neuroscience journals.

last updated by Pluto on 2025-11-22 08:15:45 UTC on behalf of the NeuroFedora SIG.

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    Addressing the specific roles of histone modifications in transcriptional repression

    Nature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41467-025-66426-z

    Hedehus et al. show that H3K9me3 and H3K36me3 can only partially compensate for loss of H3K27me3, supporting the concept of a combinatorial histone code.

    in Nature Communications on 2025-11-22 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Single-cell and spatially resolved omics reveal transcriptional and metabolic signatures of ovarian endometriomas

    Nature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41467-025-66706-8

    Ovarian endometriomas, with distinct microenvironment and heightened hormonal sensitivity, are recognized as precursors of ovarian carcinomas. This study decodes ovarian endometriomas by integrating single-cell and spatial transcriptomics with spatial metabolomics to reveal key markers and altered pathways, offering new avenues for diagnosis and therapy.

    in Nature Communications on 2025-11-22 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Strong metal-support interaction of Ru-NPs/WCx boosts alkaline hydrogen evolution and oxidation for alkaline fuel cells and electrolyzers

    Nature Communications, Published online: 22 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41467-025-65273-2

    High-performance anion exchange membrane fuel cells and electrolyzers relay on Pt based catalysts. Here, the authors design WCx supported Ru nanoparticles as electrocatalyst with strong metal-support interaction for efficient alkaline hydrogen oxidation and evolution.

    in Nature Communications on 2025-11-22 00:00:00 UTC.

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    A dataset of building surface defects collected by UAVs for machine learning-based detection

    Scientific Data, Published online: 22 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41597-025-06318-5

    A dataset of building surface defects collected by UAVs for machine learning-based detection

    in Nature scientific data on 2025-11-22 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Developing a Systemic Framework to Reduce the Bullwhip Effect in the Construction Industry: Empirical Insights and Practical Implications [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]

    Background The construction industry faces systemic inefficiencies and cost overrun. Many of these issues result from demand amplification, known as the Bullwhip Effect (BWE), within supply chains. Aim To investigate the root causes and impacts of the Bullwhip Effect during construction. Establish a foundation for mitigation strategies using a conceptual framework. This framework was validated using a real-world case study to support effective mitigation. Methods This study systematically identified and analyzed twenty-one underlying causes of the Bullwhip Effect in the supply chain. The effect was calculated for the selected construction materials using data from Mostashar United Company-Kuwait. Results The Bullwhip Effect in the construction industry emerges not from a single cause but from a complex interaction of factors that significantly influence the phenomenon and are deeply embedded within the industry’s structural and operational practices. These causes are grouped into three main dimensions: informational, operational, and behavioral factors. BWE can be quantitatively measured and directly escalates production costs and intensifies over time if mitigating strategies are not implemented. Research has identified several strategies that can effectively prevent the occurrence or reduce the bullwhip effect in the construction industry, such as collaboration and teamwork enhanced strategies between SCM partners, optimizing information exchange and communications among SCM partners, Building SCM Resilience Against Component Shortages, and Strategic Planning for Resource Utilization. Conclusion The causes of Bullwhip Effects and impacts are interconnected rather than segregated or isolated, creating a reinforcing feedback loop where informational opacity sparks behavioral reactions, further intensifying operational instability. A bullwhip mitigation policy should include addressing data transparency, supply chain process coordination, and contractual early incentives, instead of focusing on isolated symptom management, instead of systemic resolution.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 17:32:31 UTC.

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    Building Entrepreneurship Ecosystem:  A Systematic Review [version 2; peer review: 1 approved with reservations, 2 not approved]

    The primary objective of this study is to advance research by providing a conceptual framework for entrepreneurship ecosystem building and the growth of entrepreneurship intention among students in higher education institutions. The study conducted a comprehensive literature review, selecting peer-reviewed articles on entrepreneurial ecosystem building and entrepreneurial intention growth. A systematic review (SR) method was used to achieve he stated objectives. The PRISMA protocol, searching approach, inclusion and exclusion criteria, and data analysis technique were successfully applied. The research finding shows that developing a robust entrepreneurial ecosystem within universities can stimulate entrepreneurial activities, enhance self-efficacy, and cultivate an entrepreneurial culture. The findings also underscore the importance of creating environments that not only provide knowledge and skills but also practical experiences and support networks essential for nurturing future entrepreneurs. Finally, both empirical and practical implication was identified and a future research direction was suggested for future researchers.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 17:30:02 UTC.

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    Study Protocol: Intrafamily Communication on Mental Disorders (IFACOM) [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]

    Our study deals with intra-family communication on mental disorders. We plan to develop a questionnaire, which can be used to measure the functionality of intra-family communication. Previous studies have shown that certain forms of communication in families affected by mental disorders impact the further course of the disease. Derogatory or taboo communication content are known to be disease-promoting, while open and positive communication has a preventive effect on the occurrence of further mental disorders. The functionality of communication therefore describes the potential of a health-promoting effect of intra-family communication styles. On the other hand, dysfunctional communication styles might be associated with a higher risk of the new emergence or recurrence of mental health problems in other family members. Following a systematic literature search on data containing information on intra-family communication patterns on mental disorders we plan to collect further data suing qualitative interviews (n=10). Interviewees include family members of individuals affected by mental disorders. We then plan to create a questionnaire with approximately 30 factors and items. This questionnaire will be tested in a large cohort of family members of individuals affected by mental disorders (n=300) and consequently validated by a confirmatory factor analysis. With the help of the planned questionnaire, risk factors of patients could be recognized earlier and taken into account for therapeutic interventions.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 17:27:44 UTC.

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    Barriers and Strategies for Antiretroviral Therapy Appointment Adherence in Rural South Africa: A Narrative Review with a Focus on the Vhembe District [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]

    Background and Objective Antiretroviral therapy (ART) is the cornerstone of HIV treatment, but its effectiveness depends heavily on consistent patient adherence to scheduled appointments. Rural regions, such as the Vhembe district in South Africa, face persistent structural, economic, and psychosocial challenges that hinder ART adherence and continuity of care. This narrative review synthesizes evidence on the multifaceted barriers affecting ART appointment adherence in rural settings and evaluates intervention strategies that have demonstrated success across sub-Saharan Africa. It emphasizes the relevance of these findings to the Vhembe district context. Methods The review draws on three key evidence sources: a doctoral study evaluating home delivery models for ART, a systematic review on treatment supporter interventions (TSIs), and a meta-analysis on adherence among pregnant women using digital and educational tools. The selected studies were critically examined for their applicability to rural service delivery and adherence outcomes. Results The review identifies major adherence barriers, including poor transport infrastructure, high indirect costs, clinic overcrowding, limited refill durations, stigma, and the impact of public health emergencies. Strategies such as home delivery, multi-month dispensing (MMD), mHealth device reminders, and community-based support programs (TSIs) are shown to mitigate these challenges effectively. Combined socio-structural interventions yield the most substantial improvements in adherence outcomes. Conclusions Improving ART appointment adherence in Vhembe requires an integrated model tailored to local realities. Combining decentralized care, social support structures, mHealth solutions, and financial incentives offers a sustainable path forward. However, research gaps in implementation science, cost-effectiveness, and context-specific interventions must be addressed to scale these solutions effectively.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 16:24:36 UTC.

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    Urban Noise Pollution through Combined Analysis of Sound Levels [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]

    Introduction Noise pollution has become one of the most frequent urban environmental problems, with negative effects on public health, social well-being, and quality of life in high population density contexts. Within this framework, the present study was developed with the purpose of characterizing environmental noise levels in the Historic Center of Lima, integrating objective measurements and citizens’ perceptions. Methodology The research adopted a quantitative approach, applied type, with a non-experimental and cross-sectional design. Measurements were carried out at thirteen strategic points along Abancay Avenue using a type I integrating sound level meter, while population perception was collected through a structured survey applied to 392 participants selected by non-probabilistic sampling. Data were processed through descriptive and comparative analysis between instrumental records and population responses. Results The findings showed that equivalent noise levels consistently exceeded environmental quality standards for commercial zones, reaching maximum values above 90 dB(A). Vehicular traffic and informal commercial activity were identified as the main noise sources, and most respondents perceived noise as intense and disturbing, especially during the evening-nighttime period. Conclusion Noise pollution in the studied area constitutes a persistent problem that affects environmental quality and the daily lives of the population. Furthermore, the need to design urban management and acoustic control strategies is recognized, aiming to reduce exposure in heritage and commercial corridors

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 16:14:20 UTC.

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    The Genetic Association of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms of SERPINE1 (rs6092) and IFNAR2 (rs1051393, rs2229207) Genes Is Related to Post Covid-19 Respiratory Syndrome [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]

    Background Coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19) is a disease of the respiratory system caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The severity of Covid-19 can be affected by the presence of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in certain genes, such as IFNAR2 and SERPINE-1. This study aimed to identify and analyze the presence of SNP rs6092 in the SERPINE1 gene and rs1051393 and rs2229207 in the IFNAR2 gene relation in Covid-19 respiratory syndrome in Indonesia. Methods DNA was isolated from saliva samples of all patients, and a TaqMan Genotyping Assay with a real-time PCR instrument was used to run the samples. The output data were analyzed for demographic data, allele frequency, genotype frequency, and the association of all SNPs with the Covid-19 respiratory syndrome (case) and control subjects. We also analyzed blood laboratory results, blood gas analyses, coagulation factors, and inflammatory factors using SPSS. Results This study included 85 subjects comprise with Covid-19 respiratory syndrome and control subjects. Our study found no association between subjects with Covid-19 respiratory syndrome and any of the variants. However, based on the symptoms caused by rs1051393, we found that it had an effect on fever symptoms. In addition, a significant relationship between rs2229207 and chest pain symptoms was observed in patients with case group. Furthermore, our study found significant differences (p < 0.05) in several blood laboratory analyses, such as the level of basophils and eGFR for rs6092 and the potassium level for rs2229207. Furthermore, arterial blood gas analysis showed that pCO2 and pH levels were significantly different for rs2229207. Conclusion Our study found an association between rs1051393 and fever and between rs2229207 and chest pain in patients with post Covid-19 respiratory syndrome.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 16:12:21 UTC.

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    Are We Truly Preparing Students for Financial Success? Insights from Economic Education Curricula in Indonesia [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]

    Background Financial literacy is an essential competency for university students, especially those in economics education programs, as it supports effective money management and responsible decision-making. However, higher education curricula in Indonesia still emphasize theoretical aspects over practical financial skills, raising concerns about whether graduates are adequately prepared for financial challenges. Methods This study employed a qualitative content analysis to evaluate the integration of financial literacy within economics education curricula in Indonesia. Data were collected through curriculum document reviews, semi-structured interviews with economics educators, and student surveys. The analysis focused on identifying the extent of financial literacy integration and perceptions of curriculum effectiveness. Results The findings indicate that while fundamental topics such as budgeting and savings are covered, critical elements including investment diversification, risk management, and digital financial tools remain underdeveloped. Students expressed a strong demand for more experiential learning approaches, such as case studies, financial simulations, and collaboration with industry partners. The results highlight a gap between theoretical instruction and the practical competencies required for effective financial decision-making. Conclusions The study concludes that strengthening economics education curricula requires the integration of applied financial literacy training, digital financial education, and industry collaboration to better prepare students for personal and professional financial challenges. While this research provides valuable insights, its qualitative scope presents limitations. Future studies with broader institutional coverage and quantitative approaches are recommended to generate more generalizable findings.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 16:09:56 UTC.

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    A Systematic Literature Review and Bibliometric Analysis of Workplace Coaching [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]

    Workplace Coaching has evolved significantly over the last two decades and has become a mainstream global activity in business organizations. The concept has been recognized for its potential in enhancing the well-being and performance of individuals, groups, and leaders, making it a popular intervention in modern organizations. Therefore, this study provides a comprehensive understanding of workplace coaching research from 2000 to 2025 by examining global trends in terms of publications, contributors, keyword co-occurrences, and thematic clusters, utilizing a systematic literature review with bibliometric analysis. The review was conducted to synthesise the available literature on workplace coaching to suggest future trends. The Scopus and Web of Science databases were used to explore and analyze published works using the PRISMA framework and VOSviewer software. A total of 343 published journal articles were considered in the analysis, eliminating duplication and minimizing potential risks during the screening process. The findings reveal a significant growth in academic interest in coaching in workplace research, with four key thematic clusters emerging: Coaching for Workplace Learning and Development, Multifaceted advantages of Executive and Leadership Coaching, Dimensions of Workplace Coaching, and Employee Coaching for Human Resource Management and Development. The study findings serve as a foundation for future studies that explore under-researched areas, such as the application of artificial intelligence in coaching practices, ethical considerations, digital transformation, sustainability in leadership, and employee well-being practices. Moreover, this study reveals the potential of meta-analyses and systematic reviews that incorporate grey literature to provide a more comprehensive understanding of coaching effectiveness. Comparative studies across different sectors, countries, and regions can help consolidate the existing findings and uncover new insights. These limitations and opportunities present avenues for future research, motivating researchers to advance and refine existing literature.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 16:08:14 UTC.

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    Automated and modular protein binder design with BinderFlow

    by Nayim González-Rodríguez, Carlos Chacón-Sánchez, Oscar Llorca, Rafael Fernández-Leiro

    Deep learning has revolutionised de novo protein design, with new models achieving unprecedented success in creating novel proteins with specific functions, including artificial protein binders. However, current workflows remain computationally demanding and challenging to operate without dedicated infrastructure and expertise. To overcome these limitations, we present BinderFlow, an open, structured, and parallelised pipeline that automates end-to-end protein binder design. Its batch-based architecture enables live monitoring of design campaigns, seamless coexistence with other GPU-intensive processes, and minimal user intervention. BinderFlow’s modular design facilitates the integration of new tools, allowing rapid adaptation to emerging methods. We demonstrate its utility by running automated design campaigns that rapidly generate diverse, high-confidence candidates suitable for experimental validation. To complement the pipeline, we developed BFmonitor, a web-based dashboard for real-time campaign monitoring, design evaluation, and hit selection. Together, BinderFlow and BFmonitor make generative protein design more accessible, scalable, and reproducible, streamlining both exploratory and production-level research. The software is freely available at https://github.com/cryoEM-CNIO/BinderFlow under the GNU LGPL v3.0 license.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Ten simple rules for maximizing summer research experiences for students, mentors, and research groups

    by Miriam B. Goodman

    Whether hosted by colleges, universities, stand-alone research institutions, federal research labs, or private companies, immersive summer (6–12 weeks) research experiences build students’ confidence in their scientific capabilities and help to refine their professional trajectories. Such internships are an important tool to introduce students to STEM careers and energize participants, each of whom realizes a powerful benefit. The student gains hands-on research experience, insight into the research process, and clarity regarding their educational and career aspirations. The bench mentor, typically an advanced graduate student, postdoctoral researcher, or staff scientist, acquires essential skills in training and mentoring while incorporating fresh perspectives from an inquisitive novice into their research project. The principal investigator (PI) promotes the professional development of the bench mentor, expands interest in STEM careers, while exploring a focused and compact research question. This set of Ten Simple Rules is a guide for PIs, bench mentors, and research groups and seeks to foster excellence in the design of short-term research experiences for students. They emphasize projects co-created by PIs and bench mentors, accessible techniques that can be mastered in a few weeks, and strategies enabling interns to develop their own mental model of the research question and approach. Although tailored primarily to full-time summer internships for individual students in an academic research setting, this advice may be applicable to short-term, mentored research experiences in multiple settings.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Nash equilibrium of attack and defense behaviors between predators and prey

    by Hiroyuki Ichijo, Yuichiro Kawamura, Tomoya Nakamura

    How animals process information, compute, and execute behaviors is a central question in neuroscience and computational biology. Predators attack prey by chasing or ambushing them, while prey respond with escaping or freezing. These behaviors are fundamental for survival. Uncovering functions of such behaviors requires an understanding not only of the implementation of neuronal circuits but also of the underlying algorithms and computation. However, how animals respond to predators or prey depending on whether they can detect them from a distance remains unclear. Here, we modeled and analyzed attack and defense behaviors with game theory. Using encounter probabilities to construct payoff matrices under a sensory–motor algorithm that lacked directional information, we identified the corresponding equilibrium behaviors for the agents (predators and prey). Different detection distances yielded distinct Nash equilibrium behaviors, representing a computational mechanism that can account for diverse attack and defense behaviors. The games based on interactions among multiple predators and prey were, in most cases, non-constant-sum and positive-sum games. Measured payoffs of Nash equilibrium behaviors indicated that the predators were able to increase their payoffs by attacking, and the prey were also able to increase their payoffs even in the presence of predators. These results suggest that each of the agents initiates attack and defense behaviors. Moreover, Nash equilibrium behaviors were also identified under a simpler non-sensory motor algorithm. Despite the similarity, the non-sensory motor algorithm and the sensory–motor algorithm had distinct adaptive significance. The sensory–motor algorithm produced substantially greater prey payoffs. By implementing these algorithms, agents interact in ways that give rise to payoff matrices from which various Nash equilibrium behaviors can be mathematically derived under different conditions. Furthermore, this approach offers an experimental framework for understanding behavioral evolution and suggests a possible difference in evolutionary mechanisms of attack and defense behaviors.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Parameterization of cell-free systems with time-series data using KETCHUP

    by Mengqi Hu, Syed Bilal Jilani, Daniel G. Olson, Costas D. Maranas

    Kinetic models mechanistically link enzyme levels, metabolite concentrations, and allosteric regulation to metabolic reaction fluxes. This coupling allows for the quantitative elucidation of the dynamics of the evolution of metabolite concentrations and metabolic fluxes as a function of time. So far, most large-scale kinetic model parameterizations are carried out using mostly steady-state flux measurements supplemented with metabolomics and/or proteomics data when available. Even though the parameterized kinetic model can trace a temporal evolution of the system, lack of anchoring to temporal data reduces confidence in the dynamics predictions. Notably, the simulation of enzymatic cascade reactions requires a full description of the dynamics of the system as a steady-state is not applicable given that all measured metabolite concentrations vary with time. Here we describe how kinetic parameters fitted to the dynamics of single-enzyme assays remain accurate for the simulation of multi-enzyme cell-free systems. Herein, we demonstrate two extensions for the Kinetic Estimation Tool Capturing Heterogeneous datasets Using Pyomo (KETCHUP) software tool for parameterizing a kinetic model of the cell-free kinetics of formate dehydrogenase (FDH) and 2,3-butanediol dehydrogenase (BDH) through the use of time-course data across various initial conditions. An implemented extension of KETCHUP allowing for the reconciliation of measurement time-lag errors present in datasets was used to parameterize kinetic models using multiple datasets. By combining the kinetic parameters identified by the FDH and BDH assays, accurate simulation of the binary FDH-BDH system was achieved.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Universal scale-free representations in human visual cortex

    by Raj Magesh Gauthaman, Brice Ménard, Michael F. Bonner

    How does the human brain encode complex visual information? While previous research has characterized individual dimensions of visual representation in cortex, we still lack a comprehensive understanding of how visual information is organized across the full range of neural population activity. Here, analyzing fMRI responses to natural scenes across multiple individuals, we discover that neural representations in human visual cortex follow a remarkably consistent scale-free organization—their variance decay is consistent with a power-law distribution, detected across four orders of magnitude of latent dimensions. This scale-free structure appears consistently across multiple visual regions and across individuals, suggesting it reflects a fundamental organizing principle of visual processing. Critically, when we align neural responses across individuals using hyperalignment, we find that these representational dimensions are largely shared between people, revealing a universal high-dimensional spectrum of visual information that emerges despite individual differences in brain anatomy and visual experience. Traditional analysis approaches in cognitive neuroscience have focused primarily on a small number of high-variance dimensions, potentially missing crucial aspects of visual representation. Our results demonstrate that visual information is distributed across the full dimensionality of cortical activity in a systematic way, thus revealing a key property of neural coding in visual cortex. These findings suggest that we need to move beyond low-dimensional characterizations to fully understand how the brain represents the visual world.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Protein drift-diffusion in membranes with non-equilibrium fluctuations arising from gradients in concentration or temperature

    by Dev Jasuja, Paul J. Atzberger

    We investigate proteins within heterogeneous cell membranes where non-equilibrium phenomena arises from spatial variations in concentration and temperature. We develop simulation methods building on non-equilibrium statistical mechanics to obtain stochastic hybrid continuum-discrete descriptions which track individual protein dynamics, spatially varying concentration fluctuations, and thermal exchanges. We investigate biological mechanisms for protein positioning and patterning within membranes and factors in thermal gradient sensing. We also study the kinetics of Brownian motion of particles with temperature variations within energy landscapes arising from heterogeneous microstructures within membranes. The introduced approaches provide self-consistent models for studying biophysical mechanisms involving the drift-diffusion dynamics of individual proteins and energy exchanges and fluctuations between the thermal and mechanical parts of the system. The methods also can be used for studying related non-equilibrium effects in other biological systems and soft materials.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Emergence of sparse coding, balance and decorrelation from a biologically-grounded spiking neural network model of learning in the primary visual cortex

    by Marko A. Ruslim, Martin J. Spencer, Hinze Hogendoorn, Hamish Meffin, Yanbo Lian, Anthony N. Burkitt

    Many experimental and computational studies deal with sparseness, balance, and decorrelation in neural networks and explain the presence of these properties as fulfilling requirements related to optimum energy efficiency, network stability, and information representation. These studies leave the question of how these properties arise in the brain unanswered. The present study attempts to address this question using a model built upon the experimentally observed properties of neural responses, homeostasis, and synaptic plasticity. The experimentally observed properties of sparseness, balance, and decorrelation are then expected to emerge from this substrate. A spiking neural model of the primary visual cortex (V1) was investigated. Populations of both inhibitory and excitatory leaky integrate-and-fire neurons with recurrent connections were provided with spiking input from simulated ON and OFF neurons of the lateral geniculate nucleus. This network was provided with natural image stimuli as input. All synapses underwent learning using spike-timing-dependent plasticity learning rules. A homeostatic rule adjusted the weights and thresholds of each neuron based on target homeostatic spiking rates and mean synaptic input values. These experimentally grounded rules resulted in a number of the expected properties of information representation. The network showed a temporally sparse spike response to inputs and this was associated with a sparse code with Gabor-like receptive fields. The network was balanced at both slow and fast time scales; increased excitatory input was balanced by increased inhibition. This balance was associated with decorrelated firing that was observed as population sparseness. This population sparseness was both the cause and result of the decorrelation of receptive fields. These observed emergent properties (balance, temporal sparseness, population sparseness, and decorrelation) indicate that the network is implementing expected principles of information processing: efficient coding, information maximization (’infomax’), and a lateral or single-layer form of predictive coding. These emergent features of the network were shown to be robust to randomized jitter of the values of key simulation parameters.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    The efficacy of longevity interventions in Caenorhabditis elegans is determined by the early life activity of RNA splicing factors

    by Sneha Dutta, Maria Camila Perez Matos, Caroline Heintz, Ayse Sena Mutlu, Mary Piper, Meeta Mistry, Arpit Sharma, Christopher S. Morrow, Hannah Smith, Porsha Howell, Rohan Sehgal, Anne Lanjuin, Meng C. Wang, William B. Mair

    Geroscience aims to target the aging process to extend healthspan. However, even isogenic individuals show heterogeneity in natural aging rate and responsiveness to pro-longevity interventions, limiting translational potential. Using RNAseq analysis of young, isogenic, subpopulations of Caenorhabditis elegans selected solely on the basis of the splicing pattern of an in vivo minigene reporter that is predictive of future life expectancy, we find a strong correlation in young animals between predicted life span and alternative splicing of mRNAs related to lipid metabolism. The activity of two RNA splicing factors, Reversed Polarity-1 (REPO-1) and Splicing Factor 1 (SFA-1), early in life is necessary for C. elegans response to specific longevity interventions and leads to context-specific changes to fat content that is mirrored by knockdown of their direct target POD-2/ACC1. Moreover, POD-2/ACC1 is required for the same longevity interventions as REPO-1/SFA-1. In addition, early inhibition of REPO-1 renders animals refractory to late onset suppression of the TORC1 pathway. Together, we propose that splicing factor activity establishes a cellular landscape early in life that enables responsiveness to specific longevity interventions and may explain variance in efficacy between individuals.

    in PLoS Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Cardiometabolic health and physical robustness map onto distinct patterns of brain structure and neurotransmitter systems

    by Eliana Nicolaisen-Sobesky, Somayeh Maleki Balajoo, Mostafa Mahdipour, Agoston Mihalik, Mahnaz Olfati, Felix Hoffstaedter, Janaina Mourao-Miranda, Masoud Tahmasian, Simon B. Eickhoff, Sarah Genon

    The link between brain health and risk/protective factors for non-communicable diseases (such as high blood pressure, high body mass index, diet, smoking, physical activity, etc.) is increasingly acknowledged. However, the specific effects that these factors have on brain health are still poorly understood, delaying their implementation in precision brain health. Here, we studied the multivariate relationships between risk factors for non-communicable diseases and brain structure, including cortical thickness (CT) and gray matter volume (GMV). Furthermore, we adopted a systems-level perspective to understand such relationships, by characterizing the cortical patterns (yielded in association to risk factors) with regards to brain morphological and functional features, as well as with neurotransmitter systems. Similarly, we related the pattern of risk/protective factors dimensions with a peripheral marker of inflammation. First, we identified latent dimensions linking a broad set of risk factors for non-communicable diseases to parcel-wise CT and GMV across the whole cortex. Data was obtained from the UK Biobank (n = 7,370, age range = 46–81 years). We used regularized canonical correlation analysis (RCCA) embedded in a machine learning framework. This approach allows us to capture inter-individual variability in a multivariate association and to assess the generalizability of the model. The brain patterns (captured in association with risk/protective factors) were characterized from a multi-level perspective, by performing correlations (spin tests) between them and different brain patterns of structure, function, and neurotransmitter systems. The association between the risk/protective factors pattern and C-reactive protein (CRP, a marker of inflammation) was examined using Spearman correlation. We found two significant and partly replicable latent dimensions. One latent dimension linked cardiometabolic health to brain patterns of CT and GMV and was consistent across sexes. The other latent dimension linked physical robustness (including non-fat mass and strength) to patterns of CT and GMV, with the association to GMV being consistent across sexes and the association to CT appearing only in men. The CT and GMV patterns of both latent dimensions were associated to the binding potentials of several neurotransmitter systems. Finally, the cardiometabolic health dimension was correlated to CRP, while physical robustness was only very weakly associated to it. We observed robust, multi-level and multivariate links between both cardiometabolic health and physical robustness with respect to CT, GMV, and neurotransmitter systems. Interestingly, we found that cardiometabolic health and physical robustness are associated with not only increases in CT or GMV, but also with decreases of CT or GMV in some brain regions. Our results also suggested a role for low-grade chronic inflammation in the association between cardiometabolic health and brain structural health. These findings support the relevance of adopting a holistic perspective in health, by integrating neurocognitive and physical health. Moreover, our findings contribute to the challenge to the classical conceptualization of neuropsychiatric and physical illnesses as categorical entities. In this perspective, future studies should further examine the effects of risk/protective factors on different brain regions in order to deepen our understanding of the clinical significance of such increased and decreased CT and GMV.

    in PLoS Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Nanobody-drug conjugates for targeting specific GPCR pairs

    by Xianglin Huang, Bryan L. Roth

    Bitopic ligands that engage two distinct binding sites offer exciting opportunities for finely tuned control of G protein-coupled receptor signaling. A recent study in PLOS Biology employed click chemistry to generate novel nanobody-small molecule conjugates and demonstrated their logic-gated activity at co-expressed receptor pairs with improved signaling profiles. Bitopic ligands that engage two distinct binding sites offer exciting opportunities for finely tuned control of G protein-coupled receptor signaling. This Primer explores a recent study in PLOS Biology that reports novel nanobody-small molecule conjugates and demonstrates their logic-gated activity at co-expressed receptor pairs with improved signaling profiles.

    in PLoS Biology on 2025-11-21 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Effect of Canal Size on Isthmus Cleaning Efficiency and Safety of High-Frequency Sonic Agitation: An In Vitro Study [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]

    Objective This study aimed to evaluate the effect of root canal preparation size on isthmus cleaning efficiency and periapical extrusion using high-frequency sonic agitation with the EDDY irrigation system. Materials and Methods Thirty custom-made epoxy split models were used to simulate a root canal system with two curved canals merging at the apical 1 mm and an isthmus extending along their length. A periapical lesion was simulated to assess the extrusion tendency. Canals were prepared using the WaveOne Gold system in small, primary, and medium sizes. The isthmuses were filled with bovine dentin debris, while dyed gelatin was used in the periapical lesion to quantify extruded irrigant volume. EDDY irrigation efficiency was evaluated based on the total cleared surface area (mm2) using ImageJ software. Statistical analysis was performed using one-way ANOVA and post hoc multiple comparisons, with a significance level of P ≤ 0.05. Results Isthmus cleaning efficiency remained consistent across all canal sizes, with no significant differences among groups (P > 0.05). However, periapical extrusion increased significantly with larger canal preparation sizes, with medium-sized preparations showing significantly higher extrusion than small (P = 0.001) and primary (P = 0.026) sizes. Conclusion EDDY irrigation was effective in achieving isthmus cleanliness regardless of canal preparation size. However, larger instrumentation increased the risk of apical extrusion, underscoring the need for careful irrigation management in clinical applications.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 11:25:21 UTC.

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    Association of cancer and outcomes of patients hospitalized for COVID-19 between 2020 and 2023 [version 3; peer review: 1 approved, 2 approved with reservations, 1 not approved]

    Background The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has caused substantial morbidity and mortality on a global scale. A strong correlation has been found between COVID-19 treatment outcomes and noncommunicable diseases such as cancers. However, there is limited information on the outcomes of cancer patients who were hospitalised for COVID-19. Methods We conducted an analysis on data collected in a large prospective cohort study set-up by the World Health Organisation (WHO) International Severe Acute Respiratory and Emerging Infection Consortium (ISARIC). All patients with laboratory-confirmed or clinically-diagnosed SARS-CoV-2 infection were included. Cancer was defined as having a current solid organ or haematological malignancy. The following outcomes were assessed; The hazard ratio of 30-day in-hospital mortality, intensive care unit (ICU) admission, length of hospitalization and receipt of higher-level care. Results Of the 560,547 hospitalised individuals who were analysed, 27,243 (4.9%) had cancer. Overall, cancer patients were older and had more comorbidities than non-cancer patients. Patients with cancer had a higher hazard ratio of 30-day in-hospital mortality than non-cancer patients (29.1.3% vs 18.0%) and longer hospital stays (median of 12 days vs 8 days). However, patients with cancer were admitted less often to intensive care units than non-cancer patients (12.6% vs 17.1%) and received less invasive mechanical ventilation than non-cancer patients (4.5% vs 7.6%). The hazard ratio of dying from cancer, adjusted for age, sex and country income level was 1.18 (95%CI: 1.15-1.2). Conclusions This study’s findings underscore the heightened vulnerability of hospitalized COVID-19 patients with cancer, revealing a higher mortality rate, longer hospital stays, and an unstructured pattern of care that reflects the complexity of managing severely ill patients during a public health crisis like the COVID-19 pandemic.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 10:43:08 UTC.

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    The complete chloroplast genome of Phyllanthus acidus (L.) Skeels (Phyllanthaceae) [version 3; peer review: 3 approved with reservations]

    Phyllanthus acidus (L.) Skeels (Phyllanthaceae) is a potential medicinal plant recognized for its sour and tart-tasting fruits. In this study, the chloroplast genome of P. acidus was sequenced, assembled, and characterized. The chloroplast genome size was 156,331 bp, and the overall GC content was 36.9%. Additionally, the chloroplast genome had a quadripartite structure consisting of a large single copy (LSC; 85,807 bp in length; GC content: 34.6%), a small single copy (SSC; 19,262 bp in length; GC content: 30.6%), and two inverted repeat regions (IR; 25,631 bp in length; GC content: 43.1%). A total of 113 unique genes were annotated in the chloroplast genome, including 79 protein-coding genes, 30 tRNAs, and four rRNAs. The phylogenetic analysis based on 79 protein-coding genes revealed the paraphyly of the Phyllanthus genus. These findings provided additional genetic information for further research on P. acidus and the cp genome in the Phyllanthaceae family.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-21 10:39:01 UTC.

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    Boundary homogenization and numerical modeling of solute transport across the blood-brain barrier

    Author(s): Reza Yousofvand, Gregory Handy, and Jeffrey Tithof

    Effective clearance of amyloid-β (Aβ) from the brain is essential for preventing neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's. A significant portion of this clearance occurs through the blood-brain barrier (BBB) via receptor-mediated transport. However, current models fail to capture the complex k…


    [Phys. Rev. E 112, 054410] Published Fri Nov 21, 2025

    in Physical Review E: Biological physics on 2025-11-21 10:00:00 UTC.

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    High-capacity directional information processor using all-optical multilayered neural networks

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Antigen-specific B cell response regulation by IL-10–producing tolerogenic dendritic cells

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    High-entropy nanoalloys anchored on entropy-compensating two-dimensional oxides for enhanced nanomagnetism

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Critical windows of prenatal heat exposure and preterm birth: Metabolomic study in the Atlanta African American Maternal-Child Cohort

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Experimental characterization of complex atmospheric flows: A wind turbine wake case study

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Two-photon induced coherence without induced emission

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Proximity-induced chirality at the achiral conductive interface by electrical control of enantiopure ion adsorption

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    A striosomal accumbens pathway drives stereotyped behavior through an aversive Esr1+ hypothalamic-habenula circuit

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Nanofluidic-engineered carbon nanotube ion highways in hydrogels enable high-power aqueous zinc-ion batteries

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    3D bioprinted human-scale intestine models for physiological and microbial insights through fluid-driven heterogeneity

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Observation of proton tunneling correlated with phonons and electrons in Pd

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Double-sided annealing to reverse the crystallization direction for efficient and stable flexible FACs-perovskite solar modules

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Visualizing the strong field–induced molecular breakup of C60 via x-ray diffraction

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Sabatier principle in designing CO2-philic but blocking membranes

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    A universal 2D-on-SiC platform for heterogeneous integration of epitaxial III-N membranes

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Single atom–cluster synergy in Ag catalysts enables chiral glyceric acid from biomass

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Stable electron-irradiated [1-13C]alanine radicals for metabolic imaging with dynamic nuclear polarization

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Low-waste, single-step, sustainable extraction of critical metals from deep-sea polymetallic nodules

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Mitochondrial NAD+ gradient sustained by membrane potential and transport

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Benchmarking retrieval-augmented large language models in biomedical NLP: Application, robustness, and self-awareness

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    A ubiquitin-like protein controls assembly of a bacterial type VIIb secretion system

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Renal clearable CRISPR nanosensor targeting mitochondrial DNA mutation for noninvasive monitoring of tumor progression and metastasis

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    A rapid self-healing polymer mediated by ion aggregates achieves effective encapsulation of sustainable perovskite solar cells

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    miRNA-loaded biomimetic nanoparticles orchestrate gut microbe to ameliorate inflammatory bowel disease

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Electrochemical C4 alkylation of pyridine derivatives: Enhanced regioselectivity via silane assistance

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Mapping structures and dynamics with frequency-correlated diffusion exchange

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    An acyclic nucleoside phosphonate effectively blocks the egress of the malaria parasite by inhibiting the synthesis of cyclic GMP

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Rapid cancer diagnosis using deep learning–powered label-free subcellular-resolution photoacoustic histology

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Conserved CD8 T cell vaccines without B cell epitopes drive robust protection against SARS-CoV-2 that is enhanced by intranasal boost

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Erratum for the Research Article “Heterochronic parabiosis uncovers AdipoR1 as a critical player in retinal rejuvenation” by Y. Liu et al.

    Science Advances, Volume 11, Issue 47, November 2025.

    in Science Advances on 2025-11-21 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Sensory Enrichment and Deprivation During Development: Limited Effects on the Volumes of CNS Neuropils in Two Spiders With Different Ecology

    Sensory Enrichment and Deprivation During Development: Limited Effects on the Volumes of CNS Neuropils in Two Spiders With Different Ecology

    Sensory enrichment did not increase modality-specific brain region volumes in either Parasteatoda tepidariorum or Marpissa muscosa; variation was largely explained by shared maternal origin, suggesting that genetic or developmental factors may outweigh environmental sensory input in shaping spider brain structure.


    ABSTRACT

    Neuroplasticity is a core property of animal nervous systems, enabling structural changes in the brain in response to environmental stimuli or internal processes such as learning. Among spiders—a diverse group of predators—neuroanatomy varies with hunting strategy: stationary species that build capture webs differ from cursorial species that hunt without webs, reflecting reliance on distinct sensory modalities. While neuroplasticity has been documented in cursorial jumping spiders, its direct drivers remain unclear. In this study, we tested how sensory input influences the central nervous system (CNS) and whether stationary and cursorial hunters differ in their plastic responses. Using sensory deprivation and enrichment, we reared spiders under four treatments: control (CON), vibratory enrichment (VIB), visual enrichment (VIS), and combined enrichment (VISVIB). We examined the stationary hunter Parasteatoda tepidariorum and the cursorial hunter Marpissa muscosa. We predicted that enrichment would enlarge neuropil volumes in modality-specific brain regions, with stronger vibratory effects in P. tepidariorum and stronger visual effects in M. muscosa. Contrary to our expectations, sensory enrichment did not increase the volume of the corresponding CNS neuropils in either species. Although certain neuropils showed significant differences in specific groups, no clear causal link to sensory input emerged. Instead, a substantial proportion of the variation in neuropil volume was explained by family effects (shared maternal origin). We discuss these findings in the context of potential mechanisms underlying environmental plasticity in the spider brain.

    in Journal of Comparative Neurology on 2025-11-21 07:25:54 UTC.

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    ATHENA: Automatically Tracking Hands Expertly with No Annotations

    Journal of Neurophysiology, Ahead of Print.

    in Journal of Neurophysiology on 2025-11-21 04:29:56 UTC.

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    Activity of protein kinase C controls the efficacy of cannabinoid receptor type 1 in the medial prefrontal cortex after neuropathic pain

    Journal of Neurophysiology, Ahead of Print.

    in Journal of Neurophysiology on 2025-11-21 04:21:50 UTC.

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    MYC inhibition by Omomyc causes DNA damage and overcomes PARPi resistance in breast cancer

    Giuntini et al. demonstrate that Omomyc, the only direct MYC inhibitor currently in phase 2 clinical trials, causes DNA damage and synergizes with PARPis in triple-negative breast cancer. Their findings provide compelling evidence for clinical exploration of this combination to overcome PARPi resistance.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Maturation of human intestinal epithelial cell layers fortifies the apical surface against Salmonella attack

    van Rijn and Lopes et al. present a resource for live-cell imaging of bacterial infection dynamics atop human enteroid- and colonoid-derived intestinal epithelia, exhibiting varying maturation levels and in the presence or absence of soluble mucus production. Application of this resource reveals how absorptive epithelium maturation fortifies the surface against enterobacterial attack.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    MITF, TFEB, and TFE3 drive distinct adaptive gene expression programs and immune infiltration in melanoma

    Dias et al. reveal that in melanoma, the transcription factors MITF, TFE3, and TFEB share common binding sites but impose distinct transcriptional programs. Stresses promoting an MITF-to-TFEB-to-TFE3 switch will lead cells to suppress proliferation, reprogram metabolism, and impact tumor immune cell infiltration quantitatively and qualitatively.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Genetic determinants of gene expression noise and its role in complex trait variation

    Long et al. mapped expression noise QTLs (enQTLs) across immune cell types in an atlas of 1.23 million cells. These enQTLs are largely independent of eQTLs, exhibit cell-type-specific regulatory mechanisms, and colocalize with GWAS loci for hematopoietic traits and diseases, implicating noise as an underappreciated molecular mediator of complex traits.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Sensory-neuron-derived CGRPα controls white adipocyte differentiation and tissue plasticity

    Sensory-neuron-derived CGRPα inhibits subcutaneous white adipocyte differentiation and alters adipogenic gene programs. Ectopic CGRPα expression in iWAT increases adipocyte size, and anti-CGRPα migraine therapy is linked to positive metabolic changes, revealing a neuron-adipose pathway that regulates fat homeostasis and systemic metabolism.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Infection-induced elevation of gut glycosaminoglycans fosters microbiota expansion in Drosophila melanogaster

    Arias-Rojas et al. performed a genome-wide association study in Drosophila melanogaster and identified host genetic variants, particularly in heparan sulfate synthesis genes, associated with increased commensal Lactiplantibacillus plantarum abundance. Heparan sulfate enhances bacterial adhesion, biofilm formation, and modulates intestinal homeostasis, microbiota composition, and immune response, thus preventing dysplasia.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Liquid-liquid phase separation of ATXN2L enhances mRNA translation in hepatocellular carcinoma

    Wang et al. find that ATXN2L is a novel RBP highly expressed in HCC. LLPS of ATXN2L promotes mRNA translation by recruiting eIFs and their target mRNAs, thereby facilitating HCC progression, and this process is modulated through interactions with SGs.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Pathological tau alters head direction signaling and induces spatial disorientation

    Jiang and Hijazi et al. show that an early cognitive biomarker of dementia, spatial disorientation, can be induced in mice by expressing pathological tau in the anterodorsal nucleus of the thalamus. This alters the activity of head direction cells in this nucleus, affecting the animal’s sense of direction during spatial learning.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Bacterial modification of the root cell wall facilitates rice aluminum resistance in acidic soils

    Root cell walls integrate microbial cues to shape crop stress resilience. Zhang et al. show that a synthetic microbial community (SynCom) mitigates aluminum toxicity in rice by reducing aluminum binding and promoting brassinosteroid biosynthesis. These coordinated actions reestablish hormonal homeostasis and direct cell-wall remodeling, enhancing root tolerance in acidic soils.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Of masks and Mayans: Books in brief

    Nature, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03868-x

    Andrew Robinson reviews five of the best science picks.

    in Nature on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Synthetic tongue rates chillies’ heat — and spares human tasters

    Nature, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03767-1

    Gel-based device inspired by the cooling powers of milk assesses peppers whose burn ranges from mild to dangerous.

    in Nature on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    How to defuse a time bomb

    Nature, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03788-w

    Career progression.

    in Nature on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Psychedelics and immortality: Nature went to a health summit starring RFK and JD Vance

    Nature, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03790-2

    The Make America Healthy Again summit, attended by health secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr and vice-president JD Vance, gave a sense of what’s driving US health policy.

    in Nature on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Cyberattacks' harm to universities is growing — and so are their effects on research

    Nature, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03484-9

    Hackers are ramping up attacks on academic institutions to access valuable data and to demand ransoms.

    in Nature on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    I encourage women to claim their space in astrophysics and beyond

    Nature, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03400-1

    Debarati Chatterjee’s mission is to make science in India more welcoming towards women.

    in Nature on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Astrocytic Sox9 overexpression in Alzheimer’s disease mouse models promotes Aβ plaque phagocytosis and preserves cognitive function

    Nature Neuroscience, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41593-025-02115-w

    Astrocytes are associated with Alzheimer’s disease pathogenesis. We found that the transcription factor Sox9 functions to enhance astrocytic phagocytosis of Aβ plaques via MEGF10, and this clearance of plaques is associated with the preservation of cognitive function in mouse models.

    in Nature Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Progress in quantum structured light

    Nature Photonics, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41566-025-01795-x

    This Review provides an overview of the progress in quantum structured light, both as single and entangled photon states, with an emphasis on prospective applications in quantum information science such as quantum communication and quantum imaging.

    in Nature Photomics on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Author Correction: Regulating triacylglycerol cycling for high-efficiency production of polyunsaturated fatty acids and derivatives

    Nature Communications, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41467-025-66665-0

    Author Correction: Regulating triacylglycerol cycling for high-efficiency production of polyunsaturated fatty acids and derivatives

    in Nature Communications on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Author Correction: Ketamine activates adult-born immature granule neurons to rapidly alleviate depression-like behaviors in mice

    Nature Communications, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41467-025-66663-2

    Author Correction: Ketamine activates adult-born immature granule neurons to rapidly alleviate depression-like behaviors in mice

    in Nature Communications on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Author Correction: Intensification of extreme cold events in East Asia in response to global mean sea-level rise

    Nature Communications, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41467-025-66661-4

    Author Correction: Intensification of extreme cold events in East Asia in response to global mean sea-level rise

    in Nature Communications on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Strong yet superelastic ceramic aerogel enabled by synergistic soft-hard inter-nanowire nodes

    Nature Communications, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41467-025-66339-x

    This study reports ceramic nanowire aerogels with dual SiO2/PyC nodes that combine high strength and elasticity, overcoming the typical strength–elasticity trade-off through a synergistic soft–hard structural design.

    in Nature Communications on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Domestication shaped the chromatin landscape of grain amaranth

    Nature Communications, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41467-025-66445-w

    The interplay between the chromatin landscape and plant domestication remains unclear. Here, the authors report the genome assembly and chromatin landscape map of amaranth and reveal the association between domestication and species-specific changes in chromatin accessibility, with a bias toward opening chromatin regions.

    in Nature Communications on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Hybrid excitons span two worlds

    Nature Physics, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41567-025-03097-z

    Excitons are bound electron–hole pairs that are usually either tightly bound or spread across a material. Signatures of hybrid excitons that mix both characters have now been observed at organic–semiconductor interfaces.

    in Nature Physics on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Dataset on Gait Analysis of Parkinsonian Subjects: Effect of Nordic Walking

    Scientific Data, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41597-025-06209-9

    Dataset on Gait Analysis of Parkinsonian Subjects: Effect of Nordic Walking

    in Nature scientific data on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Southern Spitsbergen coastal permafrost - repeated seismic survey supported by GPR

    Scientific Data, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41597-025-06327-4

    Southern Spitsbergen coastal permafrost - repeated seismic survey supported by GPR

    in Nature scientific data on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Adaptive immune response to West Nile virus infection in the Collaborative Cross mouse model: A database of cellular phenotypes and Quantitative Trait Loci

    Scientific Data, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41597-025-06293-x

    Adaptive immune response to West Nile virus infection in the Collaborative Cross mouse model: A database of cellular phenotypes and Quantitative Trait Loci

    in Nature scientific data on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Comparative transcriptomic profiling of field-grown cassava genotypes across season transitions

    Scientific Data, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41597-025-06119-w

    Comparative transcriptomic profiling of field-grown cassava genotypes across season transitions

    in Nature scientific data on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    A Question Answering Dataset for Temporal-Sensitive Retrieval-Augmented Generation

    Scientific Data, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41597-025-06098-y

    A Question Answering Dataset for Temporal-Sensitive Retrieval-Augmented Generation

    in Nature scientific data on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Chromosome-Level Genome Assembly and Annotation of the Japanese Cutlassfish (Trichiurus japonicus): A High-Quality Genomic Resource Featuring Nuclear and Mitochondrial Completeness for Future Studies

    Scientific Data, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41597-025-06112-3

    Chromosome-Level Genome Assembly and Annotation of the Japanese Cutlassfish (Trichiurus japonicus): A High-Quality Genomic Resource Featuring Nuclear and Mitochondrial Completeness for Future Studies

    in Nature scientific data on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Phosphoproteomic profiling of lipopolysaccharide stimulated toll-like receptor pathways in macrophages

    Scientific Data, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41597-025-06108-z

    Phosphoproteomic profiling of lipopolysaccharide stimulated toll-like receptor pathways in macrophages

    in Nature scientific data on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Author Correction: On the replicability of diffusion weighted MRI-based brain-behavior models

    Communications Biology, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s42003-025-09178-2

    Author Correction: On the replicability of diffusion weighted MRI-based brain-behavior models

    in Nature communications biology on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    The anterior paraventricular thalamus counteracts fear expression during retrieval through both amygdala and subiculum circuits

    Communications Biology, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s42003-025-09204-3

    Using activity-dependent mapping and circuit manipulation, this study reveals that the anterior paraventricular thalamus controls fear expression and exploratory behavior during recall through distinct neural circuits.

    in Nature communications biology on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Network-specific corpus callosum aging and age-moderated cognitive associations using tract-to-region analysis

    Communications Biology, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s42003-025-09219-w

    Network-specific corpus callosum connections show distinct aging patterns, with accelerated decline in association networks. Brain-behavior links strengthen with age, indicating callosal integrity becomes critical for cognition in later life.

    in Nature communications biology on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Imputation disparities driven by recent selection and their impact on disease risk estimation in East and Southeast Asian populations

    Communications Biology, Published online: 21 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s42003-025-09214-1

    Asian-specific reference panels enhance imputation accuracy in East and Southeast Asians, refining disease risk scores. These findings show that recent selection drives imputation disparities, highlighting the need for diverse reference panels.

    in Nature communications biology on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Progressive remote memory decline coincides with parvalbumin interneuron hyperexcitability and enhanced inhibition of cortical engram cells in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease

    Patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) initially show temporally graded retrograde amnesia, which gradually progresses into more severe retrograde amnesia. Although mouse models of AD have provided insight into neurobiological mechanisms contributing to impaired formation and retrieval of new memories, the process underlying the progressive loss of remote memories in AD has remained elusive. Here, we demonstrate age-dependent remote memory decline in APP/PS1 mice, which coincides with progressive hyperexcitability of parvalbumin (PV) interneurons in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Analysis of Fos expression showed that the remote memory deficit is not mirrored by changes in reactivation of memory-encoding neurons, so-called engram cells, nor PV interneuron (re)activation, in the mPFC. However, inhibitory input is enhanced onto engram cells compared to non-engram cells specifically in APP/PS1 mice. Our data indicate that age-dependent remote memory impairment in APP/PS1 mice is due to increased innervation of cortical engram cells by hyperexcitable PV interneurons, suggesting that dysfunctional inhibitory microcircuits in the neocortex mediate progressive retrograde amnesia in AD.

    in eLife on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    PTBP1 depletion in mature astrocytes reveals distinct splicing alterations without neuronal features

    Astrocyte-to-neuron reprogramming via depletion of PTBP1, a potent repressor of neuronal splicing, has been proposed as a therapeutic strategy, but its efficacy remains debated. While some reported successful conversion, others disputed this, citing a lack of neuronal gene expression as evidence of failed reprogramming. This interpretation was further challenged, attributed to incomplete PTBP1 inactivation, fueling ongoing controversy. Mechanistic understanding of the conversion, or the lack thereof, requires investigating, in conjunction with lineage tracing, the effect of Ptbp1 loss of function in mature astrocytes on RNA splicing, which has not yet been examined. Here, we genetically ablated PTBP1 in adult Aldh1l1-Cre/ERT2 Ai14 mice to determine whether lineage-traced Ptbp1 knockout astrocytes exhibited RNA splicing alterations congruent with neuronal differentiation. We found no widespread induction of neurons, despite a minuscule fraction of knockout cells showing neuron-like transcriptomic signatures. Importantly, PTBP1 loss in mature astrocytes induced splicing alterations unlike neuronal splicing patterns. These findings suggest that targeting PTBP1 alone is ineffective to drive neuronal reprogramming and highlight the need for combining splicing and lineage analyses. Loss of astrocytic PTBP1 is insufficient to induce neuronal splicing, contrasting with its well-known role in other non-neuronal cells, and instead affects a distinct astrocytic splicing program.

    in eLife on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Functional characterization of neuropeptides that act as ligands for both calcitonin-type and pigment-dispersing factor-type receptors in a deuterostome

    The calcitonin (CT) family of related peptides exerts diverse physiological effects in mammals via two G-protein-coupled receptors: CTR and the CTR-like receptor CLR. Phylogenetic analysis of CT-type signaling has revealed the presence of CT-type peptides and CTR/CLR-type proteins in both deuterostome and protostome invertebrates. Furthermore, experimental studies have demonstrated that in the protostome Drosophila melanogaster, the CT-like peptide DH31 can act as a ligand for a CTR/CLR-type receptor and a pigment-dispersing factor (PDF) receptor. Here, we investigated the signaling mechanisms and functions of CT-type neuropeptides in a deuterostome invertebrate, the sea cucumber Apostichopus japonicus (phylum Echinodermata). In A. japonicus, a single gene encodes two CT-type peptides (AjCT1 and AjCT2), and both peptides act as ligands for a CTR/CLR-type receptor (AjCTR) and two PDF-type receptors (AjPDFR1, AjPDFR2), but with differential activation of downstream cAMP/PKA, Gαq/Ca2+/PKC, and ERK1/2 signaling pathways. AjCT1/AjCT2-encoding transcripts were detected in the central nervous system and a variety of organ systems, and neuropeptide expression was visualized immunohistochemically using an antiserum to a starfish CT-type peptide (ArCT). In vitro pharmacological experiments demonstrated that AjCT1 and/or AjCT2 cause dose-dependent relaxation of longitudinal muscle and intestine preparations. Furthermore, in vivo pharmacological experiments, combined with gain- and loss-of-function experiments, revealed a potential physiological role for AjCT2/AjPDFR2 signaling in promoting feeding and growth in A. japonicus. To our knowledge, this is the first study to obtain evidence that CT-type peptides can act as ligands for both CTR/CLR-type and PDF-type receptors in a deuterostome. Moreover, it provides the first evidence for appetite-stimulating and growth-promoting effects of CT-type neuropeptides in bilaterians. Given the economic importance of A. japonicus as a foodstuff, the discovery of CT-type peptides as potential regulators of feeding and growth in this species may offer novel strategies for aquaculture applications.

    in eLife on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    HoxB-derived hoxba and hoxbb clusters are essential for the anterior–posterior positioning of zebrafish pectoral fins

    Vertebrate paired appendages, such as the pectoral fins in fish and the forelimbs in tetrapods, arise at specific regions along the anterior–posterior axis of the body. Hox genes have long been considered prime candidates for determining the anteroposterior positioning of these paired appendages during development. Evidence from various model organisms, including mouse and chick, supports a role for Hox genes in limb positioning. However, despite extensive phenotypic analyses of numerous single and compound Hox knockout mice, clear genetic evidence for substantial defects in limb positioning has been limited, leaving questions unresolved. In a previous study, we generated seven distinct hox cluster-deficient mutants in zebrafish. Here, we provide genetic evidence that zebrafish hoxba;hoxbb cluster-deleted mutants specifically exhibit a complete lack of pectoral fins, accompanied by the absence of tbx5a expression in pectoral fin buds. In these mutants, tbx5a expression in the pectoral fin field of the lateral plate mesoderm fails to be induced at an early stage, suggesting a loss of pectoral fin precursor cells. Furthermore, the competence to respond to retinoic acid is lost in hoxba;hoxbb cluster mutants, indicating that tbx5a expression cannot be induced in the pectoral fin buds. We further identify hoxb4a, hoxb5a, and hoxb5b as pivotal genes underlying this process. Although the frameshift mutations in these hox genes do not recapitulate the absence of pectoral fins, we demonstrate that deletion mutants at these genomic loci show the absence of pectoral fins with low penetrance. Our results suggest that, by establishing the expression domains along the anteroposterior axis, hoxb4a, hoxb5a, and hoxb5b within hoxba and hoxbb clusters cooperatively determine the positioning of zebrafish pectoral fins through the induction of tbx5a expression in the restricted pectoral fin field. Our findings also provide insights into the evolutionary origin of paired appendages in vertebrates.

    in eLife on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Hierarchical Bayesian modeling of multiregion brain cell count data

    We can now collect cell-count data across whole animal brains quantifying recent neuronal activity, gene expression, or anatomical connectivity. This is a powerful approach since it is a multiregion measurement, but because the imaging is done postmortem, each animal only provides one set of counts. Experiments are expensive, and since cells are counted by imaging and aligning a large number of brain sections, they are time-intensive. The resulting datasets tend to be undersampled with fewer animals than brain regions. As a consequence, these data are a challenge for traditional statistical approaches. We present a ‘standard’ partially pooled Bayesian model for multiregion cell-count data and apply it to two example datasets. These examples demonstrate that hierarchical Bayesian methods are well suited to these data. In both cases, the Bayesian model outperformed standard parallel t-tests. Overall, inference for cell-count data is substantially improved by the ability of the Bayesian approach to capture nested data and by its rigorous handling of uncertainty in undersampled data.

    in eLife on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Peripheral glia and neurons jointly regulate activity-induced synaptic remodeling at the Drosophila neuromuscular junction

    In the nervous system, reliable communication depends on the ability of neurons to adaptively remodel their synaptic structure and function in response to changes in neuronal activity. While neurons are the main drivers of synaptic plasticity, glial cells are increasingly recognized for their roles as active modulators. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Here, using Drosophila neuromuscular junction (NMJ) as a model system for a tripartite synapse, we show that peripheral glial cells collaborate with neurons at the NMJ to regulate activity-induced synaptic remodeling, in part through a protein called shriveled (Shv). Shv is an activator of integrin signaling previously shown to be released by neurons during intense stimulation at the fly NMJ to regulate activity-induced synaptic remodeling. We demonstrate that Shv is also present in peripheral glia, and glial Shv is both necessary and sufficient for synaptic remodeling. However, unlike neuronal Shv, glial Shv does not activate integrin signaling at the NMJ. Instead, it regulates synaptic plasticity in two ways: (1) maintaining the extracellular balance of neuronal Shv proteins to regulate integrin signaling, and (2) controlling ambient extracellular glutamate concentration to regulate postsynaptic glutamate receptor abundance. Loss of glial cells showed the same phenotype as loss of Shv in glia. Together, these results reveal that neurons and glial cells homeostatically regulate extracellular Shv protein levels to control activity-induced synaptic remodeling. Additionally, peripheral glia maintain postsynaptic glutamate receptor abundance and contribute to activity-induced synaptic remodeling by regulating ambient glutamate concentration at the fly NMJ.

    in eLife on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Neural Sensitivity to Word Frequency Modulated by Morphological Structure: Univariate and Multivariate fMRI Evidence from Korean

    A fundamental question in psycholinguistics concerns whether morphological decomposition is obligatory during visual word recognition or whether whole-word access can occur under conditions of high frequency and familiarity. The present study aimed to examine how morphological complexity and lexical frequency jointly influence neural representations during visual word recognition. We addressed this question using rapid event-related fMRI with both univariate and multivariate analyses. Twenty-five native Korean speakers performed lexical decisions on simple and inflected nouns that varied parametrically in surface frequency (token frequency of the full word form) and base frequency (cumulative stem frequency). Korean's transparent agglutinative morphology enabled a principled dissociation of these frequency measures. MVPA failed to decode morphological condition from activation patterns in any region, suggesting that simple and inflected forms are not represented as discrete neural categories. Crucially, RSA demonstrated robust encoding of surface frequency-but not base frequency-in inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) pars opercularis and supramarginal gyrus (SMG), with significantly stronger correlations for inflected than simple nouns. Univariate analyses confirmed this pattern: surface frequency interacted with morphological condition in inferior parietal lobule (IPL), such that higher surface frequency increased activation selectively for inflected forms, while base frequency showed no reliable effects. These results challenge obligatory decomposition and support a distributional framework in which lexical statistics guide the processing of morphologically complex words. Taken together, our findings suggest that morphological complexity modulates neural sensitivity to whole-word rather than stem-level statistics, underscoring how structural and statistical factors interact to support morphological processing.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Most early-born subplate neurons persist as Layer 6b neurons in the adult mouse neocortex

    Subplate neurons (SpNs) are among the earliest-born neurons in the mammalian neocortex and play key roles in radial migration and transient circuit formation. It has long been assumed that most SpNs undergo extensive postnatal cell death, leaving only a small remnant population that contributes to layer 6b (L6b) in adulthood. However, the extent to which SpNs actually persist as L6b neurons has remained unresolved, partly because previous studies lacked quantitative, whole-cortex analyses that account for postnatal cortical expansion. Here, we performed a comprehensive birthdating analysis using multiple EdU injections spanning the entire neurogenic window of SpNs in mice, combined with whole-neocortex 3D tissue clearing to measure subplate and L6b volumes. This approach allowed us to directly estimate the total number and distribution of SpN-derived neurons in adulthood. We found that most early-born SpNs persist as L6b neurons, and that the apparent postnatal reduction in SpN density reflects tangential cortical expansion rather than neuronal loss. Moreover, surviving SpNs comprise diverse neuronal subtypes reminiscent of those present at early postnatal stages. Together, these findings demonstrate that, in rodents, the majority of adult L6b neurons originate from SpNs, revising the long-held view that the subplate is a largely transient neuronal population.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    O-GlcNAc Transferase Regulates GABAergic Synapse Organization and Receptor Composition.

    Neural circuits must integrate metabolic information to maintain stable activity and appropriate behavioral responses. While metabolic regulation of excitatory synapses has been well studied, far less is known about how inhibitory synapses respond to changes in energy state. In this study, we show that O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT), a dynamic sensor of cellular nutrient flux, localizes to postsynaptic sites of the inhibitory synapses where it modulates synapse morphology and receptor composition. OGT over-expression reduced the size and intensity of vGAT and gephyrin puncta, whereas conditional OGT deletion produced a converse enlargement and redistribution of inhibitory scaffolds and vesicular proteins. Furthermore, OGT deletion accelerated inhibitory postsynaptic current decay kinetics and induced subunit-specific shifts in GABAA receptor surface expression: {beta}3 subunits decreased, whereas {gamma}2 subunit total and surface levels increased. Together, these findings identify OGT as a metabolic regulator that modulates inhibitory synapse structure and signaling, providing a mechanistic link between energy state and GABAergic circuit function in health and disease.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Hippocampal sequences traverse a memory space

    Highly reliable sequential dynamics organize neural activity in the hippocampus and progress with changes in physical, sensory, or cognitive variables, typified by place cells during active exploration. But sensory and behavioral variables are often confounded, and so it remains intensely debated whether hippocampal sequences are driven by sensory content directly or rather reflect the alignment of internally generated dynamics to external perception. Here we used mouse virtual reality to characterize hippocampal dynamics in environments of systematically different sensory complexity, and to test the robustness of neural sequences to manipulations of exact sensory content. The structure of neural sequences was perturbed by changes in both moment-to-moment sensation and ongoing behavior, in a pattern that was best explained by the different memory strategies employed by the animal in each context. Neural subsequences could be flexibly interrupted, inserted, and resumed wherever a memory of prior experience was violated, indicating that the propagation of hippocampal dynamics was not rigidly fixed by internal networks and initial conditions. Rather, we argue that hippocampal sequences explore an abstract memory space of selectively remembered experiences, which flexibly encompasses both sensory and internal factors in a context-dependent manner.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Lipid droplets promote the aberrant liquid-liquid phase separation of alpha-synuclein leading to impaired energy homeostasis

    Alpha-synuclein (Syn) inclusions, termed Lewy bodies, are the characteristic neuropathological feature of Parkinson's disease. Growing evidence points towards a role of aberrant liquid-liquid phase separation in the dysregulation of Syn and sequence of events that lead to the formation of Lewy bodies. However, the triggers leading to aberrant phase separation are unknown, as is the relevance of this phenomenon to the neurodegeneration process. In this study, we showed that Syn spontaneously phase separates into condensates in the presence of lipid droplets. These lipid droplet-rich condensates represent a toxic species of Syn that prevents the turnover of the entrapped lipid droplets; they are also toxic to neighboring mitochondria which are depolarized and undergo increased mitophagy. These findings underscore the increasing importance of lipid droplets in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases, and Parkinson's disease in particular. The lipid droplets are significantly enriched within the neuromelanin in midbrain dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra and could therefore uniquely facilitate the early Syn-associated neurodegeneration of this region in PD. Our findings reveal a novel pathway implicated in the dysregulation of Syn that connects aberrant liquid-liquid phase separation, lipid droplets and mitochondrial toxicity.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Deep White-Matter Pathways Mediate the Link Between Docosahexaenoic Acid (DHA) Status and Cognitive Performance in Adolescence

    Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is a polyunsaturated fatty acid enriched in neuronal membranes and myelin and associated with cognitive performance. However, nutritional interventions show inconsistent cognitive effects, partly due to limited knowledge of the neural pathways linking DHA status to human cognition during sensitive periods of white-matter maturation, such as adolescence. We addressed this gap by studying 99 adolescents drawn from both extremes of performance on a national scholastic examination. Participants completed assessments of scholastic achievement (SA) and intellectual ability (IA), provided erythrocyte DHA samples, and underwent multimodal MRI, including diffusion, T1-weighted, and T2-weighted imaging. Independent component analysis and Bayesian multivariate LASSO models identified brain components jointly associated with DHA and cognition. Across four MRI modalities, a single deep white-matter component consistently emerged as the strongest shared pathway linking DHA with cognition. Tract-resolved analyses highlighted predominant contributions from the fornix and thalamus - temporal fasciculus, with additional subcortical and cortical involvement. In joint models, these components predicted SA and IA after accounting for DHA and other fatty acids, consistent with an indirect, mediation-like pathway. These findings move beyond DHA - behavior correlations by identifying specific neuroanatomical pathways through which a modifiable dietary factor relates to adolescent learning and intellectual performance, offering mechanistic insight relevant to neuroscience, nutrition, and education.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Cognitive Performance and Brain-Predicted Age Difference in Bipolar Disorder

    Neuroimaging-derived brain-predicted age difference (brain-PAD) is a promising marker of advanced brain aging, but its link to cognitive function in bipolar disorder (BD) is not well understood, especially when comparing across publicly available algorithms trained on diverse, large sample datasets and to algorithms trained on local cohorts with rich multimodal imaging data. Our study compares algorithms used to estimate brain-PAD in terms of their clinical relevance to cognition in BD. We included 44 euthymic BD I individuals and 73 HCs who completed the Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System, and we selected nine scores from this battery for further analyses. Raw scores were log-transformed, scaled, and subjected to PCA; PC1 indexed overall executive function. Four brain-PAD algorithms (PHOTON, BrainageR, DenseNet, Multimodal) were applied to T1-weighted MRI data; the multimodal algorithm also included Diffussion Tensor Imaging (DTI), Arterial Spin Labeling (ASL), functional Magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and resting state Magnetic resonance imaging (rsMRI) data. For each algorithm, we regressed brain-PAD on age, sex, and their interaction to obtain residuals, then used those residualized brain-PADs (which we refer to subsequently as brain-PADs throughout the text) to predict PC1. We then directly assessed if there were group differences in the relationship of brain-PAD to cognitive function by including an interaction term between group x brain-PAD. We found no significant group x brain-PAD interaction across all four algorithms. Given that, we then combined BD and HC and explored whether brain-PAD was a meaningful predictor of cognitive performance. Multimodal brain-PAD emerged as a strong negative predictor of cognitive performance (Beta Estimate = -0.084, SE = 0.024, t = -3.50, p < 0.001), indicating that those with older-appearing brains, as indexed by the brain-PAD, scored lower on PC1. BrainageR brain-PAD also significantly predicted PC1 (Beta Estimate = -0.031, SE = 0.0116, t = -2.71, p < 0.01), and DenseNet brain-PAD showed a modest effect (Beta Estimate = -0.0355, SE = 0.0177, t = -2.00, p < 0.05). PHOTON brain-PAD demonstrated a negative trend with PC1 (Beta Estimate = -0.024, SE = 0.0127, t = -1.92, p = 0.06). Residualized brain-PAD, after accounting for age and sex, was inversely associated with a composite metric of executive functioning, particularly for an algorithm integrating a range of imaging modalities. Our findings demonstrate how brain aging patterns captured by a neuroimaging-based, ML-derived composite metric could be associated with cognitive performance across algorithms trained on a variety of data granularity and sample sizes.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Four new Duchenne muscular dystrophy mouse models with clinically relevant exon deletions in the human DMD gene

    Mutation specific therapeutic approaches, like exon skipping or gene-editing, hold promise for the treatment of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Translatability of preclinical studies investigating these approaches could greatly be improved through the use of humanized mouse models, as these allow preclinical testing of human specific sequences. We developed four novel humanized DMD mouse models with either a deletion of exon 44, 45, 51 or 53 in the human DMD gene, in a mouse dystrophin negative background (mdx mouse; exon 23 nonsense mutation). Our optimized prescreening pipeline allowed us to do so very efficiently with the CRISPR-Cas9 technology. We confirmed either complete lack of dystrophin, or expression of trace levels, which led to development of muscle pathology consisting of muscle fiber de-, and regeneration, inflammation and fibrosis in young adult mice. Intramuscular treatment with vivo-morpholinos targeting a flanking exon induced exon skipping in the DMD strains, which restored the disrupted open reading frame and subsequently dystrophin expression. This validates these models as valuable tools for preclinical studies investigating human sequence specific therapeutic approaches for DMD.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Comparison of Brain Age Algorithms in Bipolar Disorder

    Advances in computational methods have accelerated the application of machine learning to analyze large complex biological data. By applying machine learning algorithms to neuroimaging data, researchers have estimated the "biological age of the brain" i.e., brain age, and used it as a composite metric for indexing brain health, as opposed to using individual features of the brain extracted from neuroimaging data. These machine learning algorithms/models, often known as "brain age" algorithms/models, may take supervised or unsupervised approaches and may utilize one or many imaging modalities during training. We applied 3 regression-based algorithm and 1 neural network-based algorithm trained on varying sample sizes of healthy comparison (HC) participants to estimate the brain age of 73 HC and 44 individuals with bipolar disorder (BD) in our neuroimaging study. Out of the four, 3 were pre-trained off-the-shelf algorithms and 1 was developed and trained on multimodal neuroimaging data from a local cohort. The multimodal algorithm was trained on 51 age-matched HCs and tested on the remaining 22 HCs and 44 BDs. The brain predicted age difference (brain-PAD) score was calculated by subtracting the chronological age from the predicted age. Across four brain age prediction algorithms evaluated in HC, BrainageR and DenseNet demonstrated the highest predictive accuracy (r = 0.83; 0.89) and lowest mean absolute errors (MAE = 5.94; 7.26). However, PHOTON (r = 0.65, MAE = 7.71) showed greatest sensitivity to BD as demonstrated by our logistic regression model where the PHOTON brain-PAD was a significant predictor (beta = 0.064, p < 0.05) of BD. Analyses using ICC revealed that agreement levels varied, with PHOTON achieving the highest ICC with DenseNet (0.78) and BrainageR (0.73), which suggests they may pick up similar brain features as opposed to the multimodal algorithm (0.17- 0.43) These results suggest that regularized linear models trained on large samples that explicitly exclude individuals with psychiatric diagnoses (i.e., PHOTON in this case) may be most sensitive to case-control differences despite having lower predictive accuracy. Our findings can serve as a starting point and quantitative reference for future efforts for researchers working with datasets that are similarly constrained by sample size but include unique combinations of imaging modalities.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Constraining inference of across-region interactions using neural activity perturbations

    Functional interactions between brain regions are often inferred from multi-region models fit to neural activity recorded in behaving animals. Here, we show that inference of across-region interactions is hindered by the wide breadth of model fits consistent with naturally occurring neural activity. In contrast, models fit to activity that includes region-wide activity perturbations provide well-constrained estimates of across-region interactions; simulations suggest these estimates can be accurate.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Impact of chronic alcohol and stress on mid-life cognition and locus coeruleus integrity

    Background: Excessive alcohol consumption and stress are associated with structural and functional alterations in the brain and impaired cognition. However, the persistence of long-term neural impacts after alcohol and stress are less understood. This study investigated midlife cognition and neuropathological changes following a history of alcohol and stress exposure. Methods: C57BL/6J mice acclimated to ethanol drinking (15% v/v) before exposure to four cycles of alternating chronic intermittent ethanol (CIE) vapor exposure and repeated forced swim stress (FSS), with control groups exposed to air and no stress (AIR/NS). After three months of abstinence, mice were evaluated at midlife (11 months old) on volitional drinking and a final CIE/FSS challenge for stress induced drinking. Spatial learning and cognitive flexibility were assessed using the Barnes maze before brains were collected to evaluate locus coeruleus integrity at 12 months old. Results: CIE/FSS increased volitional alcohol intake, and this drinking phenotype persisted through to midlife despite extended abstinence. CIE/FSS mice showed intact spatial learning but impaired flexibility in the Barnes maze reversal phase. Flexibility impairments were driven by decreased time in the target quadrant and increased errors during the reversal test compared to AIR/NS. Furthermore, CIE/FSS mice showed pathological measures of reduced locus coeruleus integrity common to dementia related disorders, including elevated markers of oxidative stress, apoptosis and reduced autoinhibitory function. Conclusions: Our findings highlight the long-lasting impact of alcohol and stress exposure on cognition, with flexibility impairments persisting into midlife. In addition to cognitive changes, alcohol and stress history produced pathological changes in the locus coeruleus, an area known to mediate cognitive flexibility via its forebrain projections. Together, these results give an insight into the long-lasting impacts of chronic alcohol and stress and how they may accelerate age-related cognitive decline.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    The polypharmacological profiles of xanomeline and N-desmethylxanomeline

    The muscarinic agonist xanomeline in combination with the peripherally restricted muscarinic antagonist trospium has recently been approved for treatment of schizophrenia. Xanomeline represents the first approved antipsychotic drug without apparent activity at D2-dopamine receptors. In humans, xanomeline is reported to be metabolized to N-desmethylxanomeline, which has a similar pharmacokinetic profile to xanomeline, although its pharmacology has not been reported. We discovered that xanomeline and N-desmethylxanomeline have potent agonist and antagonist actions at many biogenic amine G protein coupled receptors. These results suggest that at least some of the actions of xanomeline and N-desmethylxanomeline could be mediated by off-target actions at serotonergic, dopaminergic, histaminergic, adrenergic and other receptors. We discuss the potential implications of these findings.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Aging reveals divergent responses of AgRP/NPY neurons to diet in male and female mice.

    Objectives: Neurons coexpressing Agouti-related peptide (AgRP) and Neuropeptide Y (NPY) are an essential component of an interoceptive circuit regulating hunger and metabolism. Their activity is closely linked to metabolic state and their output is sensitive to diet-induced plasticity, which may influence the development of obesity and associated metabolic diseases. However, most studies use young male mice, even though obesity and its comorbidities are sensitive to both biological sex and aging, leaving a significant gap in our understanding of the role of these neurons in females and in older animals. Our goal was to begin to address this gap by investigating the effects of diet and age on AgRP/NPY neuronal activity in female mice in both early adulthood and midlife. Methods: Female transgenic NPY-GFP mice aged 8-32 weeks were fed either a standard control chow diet or a high-fat, high-sugar diet (HFD) for 8-24 weeks and brain slice patch clamp electrophysiology was used to measure the response of AgRP/NPY neurons. Results: We found that in young, lean female mice, the baseline firing rate of AgRP/NPY neurons is significantly elevated compared to age-matched males, thus the impact of HFD on the output of these neurons is blunted relative to control. However, in the baseline firing rate of neurons from lean middle-aged female mice is significantly lower, resulting in a greater relative impact of HFD on AgRP/NPY neuronal output, the development of neuronal leptin resistance, and significant weight gain. Conclusions: Both sex and age significantly impact the function and modulation of AgRP/NPY neurons, emphasizing the need to include these biological variables in experimental design.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Genetic dissection of microglia cannibalism reveals an IL10 signaling axis controls microglia lifespan

    The development of complex organs, like the brain, demands a robust system for tissue remodeling and cellular debris clearance. In the brain, this function is performed by microglia, which must clear diverse debris substrates, including that caused by cell death. Although the subsequent fate of these phagocytic microglia is a critical regulatory point that impacts whether the brain resolves a debris environment, the genetic mechanisms that control microglia fate after debris clearance remain mostly unknown. To address this, we conducted a large-scale CRISPR screen in zebrafish using a custom-built robotic confocal microscope. We selected candidate genes from a single-cell RNA sequencing dataset of embryonic mouse microglia. This screen identified several modulators of microglial lifespan and cannibalism that are enriched in mouse and zebrafish microglia, including interleukin-10 receptor beta (il10rb), a receptor subunit for the cytokine IL10. Perturbation of il10, il10rb, and downstream signaling molecules JAK/STAT in zebrafish reduced microglial death. Expression analysis in mouse and zebrafish confirmed that microglia express both il10 and il10rb. Given the established role of IL10 in lysosomal remodeling, we hypothesized that it regulates microglial survival through lysosomal acidification. While il10rb perturbation did not alter lysosome number or size, it caused a significant reduction in LysoTracker-positive lysosomes, indicating decreased lysosomal acidification. Inhibiting v-ATPase also reduced microglial death, reinforcing the link between lysosomal pH and cell fate. Our findings reveal a cytokine-regulated mechanism where lysosomal dynamics determine the survival of phagocytic microglia. We propose that a necroptosis-cannibalism process functions as a quality control mechanism for microglial turnover, which is critical for refining neuroimmune cell function in the brain.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Dissociation between physical reasoning and tool use in individuals with left hemisphere brain damage

    Many everyday tasks, from chopping vegetables to catching a ball, require understanding both how objects respond to physical forces and how to use them effectively. These capacities, tool use and physical reasoning, are often assumed to rely on shared cognitive and neural mechanisms. At some level, this correspondence is expected: using an object typically requires understanding its physical properties. However, both capacities are complex and multicomponential, so the relationship between them may vary across levels of representation and task demands. Here, we asked whether third-person physical reasoning about object dynamics can dissociate from tool use (i.e., performing a tool's typical action, such as using a hammer to drive a nail) in individuals with left-hemisphere stroke. We tested 11 patients, five of whom showed impairments in tool use. Physical reasoning was assessed using a novel collection of tasks probing judgments about mass, velocity, and timing across static and dynamic scenes. Tool use was evaluated using a classic gesture-to-sight task, a pantomime-based measure in which participants are shown pictures of familiar tools and asked to demonstrate how each would be used. We identified an individual-level dissociation: patient I.A. showed impairment in gesturing the use of objects despite preserved physical reasoning, often outperforming neurotypical controls. This pattern was complemented by patient N.P., who showed the reverse profile, with intact tool use gestures but difficulties in some physical reasoning tasks. These findings suggest that the ability to reason about the physical world and tool use can dissociate behaviorally and be independently disrupted by brain damage. This challenges the view that physical reasoning and tool use draw on the same underlying cognitive and neural mechanisms and suggests that at least some of their components are distinct.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Serum Exosomes from a Uniquely Defined Early-Adult Cohort Reprogram Endothelial Transcriptomes Linked to Alzheimer's Pathogenesis.

    Age related changes in circulating exosomes are implicated in cerebrovascular aging and the pathogenesis of Alzheimers disease (AD). Neurovascular dysfunction and blood brain barrier (BBB) breakdown are recognized as early events in AD, often preceding amyloid{beta} deposition. Primary human brain micro endothelial cells (HBMECs) from a 38 year-old male were treated with exosomes from young (18 to 25 years) and old (65 to 72 years) donors. Whole transcriptomic RNA sequencing analysis identified 5,432 differentially expressed genes, which were organized into five transcriptional clusters. Two principal clusters demonstrated reciprocal patterns: 1) exosomes derived from serum of older adult donors (65 to 72 years) downregulated genes essential for mitochondrial function (e.g., oxidative phosphorylation) and protein synthesis (e.g., ribosomal biogenesis) and 2) upregulating genes linked to inflammation, junctional remodeling, and proliferative signaling. Crucially, subsequent treatment with exosomes derived from serum of young adult donors (18 to 25 years) reversed these detrimental transcriptomic profiles via restoration of the expression of mitochondrial and ribosomal machinery toward baseline and suppressed the inflammatory and maladaptive proliferative signaling induced by exosomes derived from serum of older adult donors. These findings demonstrate that exosomes derived from serum of young adult donors can counteract detrimental signals of aging at the transcriptional level, reinforcing the cellular architecture underlying BBB integrity. This supports the therapeutic potential of using exosomes derived from serum of young adult donors to reverse endothelial aging and interrupt the early neurovascular dysfunction that contributes to the progression of AD.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Mithra: An Open-Source and Cross-Platform Visualization Toolbox for Human Intracranial Recordings

    Intracranial electrophysiological recordings, including electrocorticography (ECoG) and stereo-EEG (sEEG), are increasingly used across research programs to study human brain function due to their high spatiotemporal resolution. Numerous tools exist for electrode localization and visualization; however, most focus on subject-level visualization and provide only partial solutions for systematic within- and across-subject analyses. It is especially important to preserve subject-specific anatomical locations while mapping electrodes to standardized spaces for analysis across multiple subjects. To address these needs, we present Mithra: a toolkit for visualizing intracranial recordings, implemented in both Python and MATLAB. The toolbox enables visualization of electrodes alongside the brain's pial surface and anatomical annotations, supports localization in common average spaces such as the MNI and FreeSurfer average brains, and maintains alignment with individual anatomy. It further allows electrode projection onto the cortical surface to generate Gaussian heatmaps representing the spatial distribution of neural activity. By integrating these capabilities into a unified framework, our toolbox provides a flexible, cross-platform solution for systematic within- and across-subject electrode visualization and analysis.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Autism-like behavior induced by conditional ablation of the Bassoon gene in GABAergic interneurons

    Synaptic dysfunction and resulting imbalance of excitatory vs. inhibitory transmission are fundamental aspects of autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Here we addressed the role of inhibitory synapse disturbances in ASD employing mice with a conditional ablation in inhibitory forebrain interneurons of the presynaptic active zone scaffolding protein Bassoon (Bsn), a key factor in synaptic development, activity and maintenance. The conditional Bsn gene knock out resulted in a reduction of synaptic vesicles and reduced synaptic efficacy of affected inhibitory synapses as well as diminished GABAergic inhibition in hippocampal pyramidal neurons. Bsn mutants further displayed a reconfiguration of the hippocampal synaptic network in vivo, as seen in subfield-specific changes of inhibitory synaptic markers and reduced numbers of parvalbumin interneurons, culminating in disturbance of hippocampal network activity patterns and profound mitochondrial and metabolic dysregulation. Importantly, the mutant mice developed behavioral abnormalities reminiscent of ASD including widespread social behavioral deficits and novelty-induced hyperarousal with altered motor behavior, increased anxiety and epileptiform activity. Bsn conditional knock out mice thus provide strong evidence for a causal involvement of GABAergic synapses in the emergence of ASD-related behavioral and physiological phenotypes.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    "Awe-scillations": EEG spectral and complexity representations of awe

    Awe is a positive emotion often accompanied by sensations of vastness and unity, with known benefits for well-being and social behavior. However, its neural underpinnings remain poorly understood. We recorded EEG and autonomic physiology in 23 healthy older participants while they watched a nature-based audiovisual film, The Nature Journey, and subjective ratings of awe were recorded. Awe was associated with decreased alpha and theta spectral power, and increased Lempel Ziv complexity (LZC) - indicating heightened neural signal entropy and increased information processing. These effects partially converged across datasets and awe induction methods, supporting their generalizability. Notably, awe-related increases in LZC correlated with reduced sympathetic activity and greater self-reported awe intensity, but not self-reported joy, suggesting some level of specificity. These results suggest that awe evokes distinctive neurophysiological states linked to both autonomic changes and subjective experience.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    The fluctuation-based regime of thalamocortical circuitry

    Neocortical neurons in primary visual cortex (V1) integrate excitatory inputs from both thalamic and cortical sources to generate selectivity for orientation, direction and disparity. Feedforward models have posited that thalamocortical input can drive these selectivities, but the relative sparsity of thalamic synapses raises questions about the sufficiency of this input. To determine whether thalamic drive is sufficient to evoke cortical responses, we quantified the current threshold required to evoke action potentials in vivo using whole-cell recordings in mouse V1. We then isolated thalamic input via optogenetic cortical silencing and compared its strength to the measured spiking threshold. We find that although average thalamic input is below the threshold for action potential generation, trial-by-trial fluctuations in thalamic drive are sufficient to evoke visually driven action potentials. These results demonstrate that thalamic excitation alone can drive cortical spiking, but its effectiveness depends on fluctuations in synaptic input.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Phase precession of spindle-slow oscillation coupling across the human brain

    Spindles and slow oscillations (SO) are fundamental elements of the NREM sleep microarchitecture, often co-occurring in a phase-dependent manner, and this cross-frequency coupling is critical for the temporal coordination of neural activity in sleep. However, spindles and SO occur at different times in different regions, and it is unclear how the coupling of these oscillations is organized across the brain. Here, we provide evidence in humans for a novel spatiotemporal organization of spindle-SO coupling, characterized by a precession of the SO phase of spindles along the brain's anterior-posterior axis. We show that this phase precession relationship is a robust phenomenon and can be quantified across individual subjects. Moreover, the integrity of phase precession strength and slope declines with advancing age. These findings provide new insight into the temporal coordination of sleep rhythms across brain space, linking this coordination to a canonical principle of neural coding.

    in bioRxiv: Neuroscience on 2025-11-21 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Altered Dopamine Signaling in Extinction-Deficient Mice

    A central mechanism of exposure-based cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety and trauma-related disorders is fear extinction. However, the mechanisms underlying fear extinction are deficient in some individuals, leading to treatment resistance. Recent animal studies demonstrate that upon omission of the aversive, unconditioned stimulus (US) during fear extinction, dopamine (DA) neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) produce a prediction error (PE)-like signal. However, whether this VTA-DA neuronal PE-like signal is altered in animals exhibiting deficient fear extinction has not been studied. Here, we used a mouse model of impaired fear extinction [129S1/SvImJ (S1) inbred mouse strain] to monitor and manipulate VTA-DA neurons during extinction. Male DAT-Cre mice backcrossed onto an S1 background (S1-DAT-Cre) exhibited impaired extinction but normal VTA-DA neuron number, as compared with BL6-DAT-Cre mice. In vivo fiber photometry showed that impaired extinction in male S1-DAT-Cre mice was associated with abnormally sustained US omission-related VTA-DA neuronal calcium activity during extinction training and retrieval. Neither in vivo optogenetic photoexcitation of VTA-DA neuronal cell bodies nor their axons in the infralimbic cortex was sufficient to rescue deficient extinction in male S1-DAT-Cre mice, at least within the optogenetic and behavioral parameters used. These data suggest that alterations in the activity of VTA-DA neurons during extinction learning and retrieval may be associated with deficient fear extinction in male S1 mice and could potentially contribute to extinction impairments in patient populations.

    in eNeuro on 2025-11-20 17:30:20 UTC.

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    Open Data In Neurophysiology: Advancements, Solutions & Challenges

    Ongoing efforts over the last 50 years have made data and methods more reproducible and transparent across the life sciences. This openness has led to transformative insights and vastly accelerated scientific progress (Gražulis et al., 2012; Munafó et al., 2017). For example, structural biology (Bruno and Groom, 2014) and genomics (Benson et al., 2013; Porter and Hajibabaei, 2018) have undertaken systematic collection and publication of protein sequences and structures over the past half century. These data, in turn, have led to scientific breakthroughs that were unthinkable when data collection first began (Jumper et al., 2021). We believe that neuroscience is poised to follow the same path, and that principles of open data and open science will transform our understanding of the nervous system in ways that are impossible to predict at the moment. New social structures supporting an active and open scientific community are essential (Saunders, 2022) to facilitate and expand the still limited adoption of open science practices in our field (Schottdorf et al., 2024). Unified by shared values of openness, we set out to organize a symposium for open data in neurophysiology (ODIN) to strengthen our community and facilitate transformative open neuroscience research at large. In this report, we synthesize insights from this first ODIN event. We also lay out plans for how to grow this movement, document emerging conversations, and propose a path toward a better and more transparent science of tomorrow.

    in eNeuro on 2025-11-20 17:30:20 UTC.

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    Impact and diagnostic accuracy of 18F-FDG PET/CT in malignant melanoma staging and restaging: First Tunisian clinical report [version 1; peer review: awaiting peer review]

    Background Accurate staging guides melanoma treatment. Conventional imaging modalities like contrast-enhanced CT (CECT) is widely used but relies on morphology which may miss early spread. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/computed tomography (18F-FDG PET/CT) combines metabolic and anatomic data and may improve detection. Methods We conducted a single-centre retrospective diagnostic accuracy study at a tertiary university hospital in Tunisia (December 2019-February 2024). All adults with histologically confirmed melanoma undergoing whole body 18F-FDG PET/CT as well as CECT for initial staging or restaging were included. The reference standard was histopathology, otherwise composite verification with clinical/imaging follow-up ≥6 months. Outcomes were per-patient sensitivity, specificity, predictive values, and accuracy, inter-modality agreement (Cohen’s κ), and management change attributable to 18F-FDG PET/CT. Results Of 51 screened, 35 patients were included (23 staging and 12 restaging). Compared with CECT, 18F-FDG PET/CT reclassified stage in 22/35 (62.9%), upstaging 14 (40.0%) and downstaging 8 (22.9%). For nodal disease, 18F-FDG PET/CT showed higher specificity (95.2%, 95% CI [77.3-99.8] versus 66.7%, 95% CI [44.7–84.4]) and accuracy (88.6%, 95% CI [73.3-96.8], versus 65.7%, 95% CI [47.8-80.9]) with similar sensitivity (78.6%, 95% CI [49.2-95.3] versus 64.3%, 95% CI [35.1-87.2]). For distant metastases, 18F-FDG PET/CT achieved markedly higher sensitivity (92.9%, 95% CI [66.1–99.8] versus 50.0%, 95% CI [23.0-77.0]) and accuracy (91.4%, 95% CI [76.9-98.2] versus 68.6%, CI [50.7-83.1]), with high specificity for both (90.5%, 95% CI [69.6-98.8] versus 81.0%, 95% CI [58.1–94.6]). Agreement with CECT was fair for nodes (κ=0.27) and poor for distant sites (κ=0.16). Management decisions were available in 32/35. 18F-FDG PET/CT changed treatment in 15/32 (46.9%). No adverse events occurred. Conclusions In this first Tunisian series, 18F-FDG PET/CT improved diagnostic performance over CECT, especially for distant metastases, and frequently redirects management. Findings support integrating its integration into melanoma care pathways when results may influence therapy.

    in F1000Research on 2025-11-20 16:05:57 UTC.

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    Thalamic Stimulation Induced Changes in Network Connectivity and Excitability in Epilepsy

    Objective

    The effects of deep brain stimulation (DBS) manifest across multiple timescales, spanning seconds to months, and involve direct electrical effects, neuroplasticity, and network reorganization. In epilepsy, the delayed impact of DBS on seizures presents challenges for optimization. Single-pulse stimulation and resulting brain stimulation evoked potentials (BSEPs) provide a means to assess effective connectivity and network excitability. This study integrates BSEPs and short trials of DBS during stereoelectroencephalography (sEEG) to map seizure network engagement, modulate network dynamics, and monitor excitability and interictal abnormalities for biomarker informed neuromodulation.

    Methods

    Ten individuals with drug resistant epilepsy undergoing clinical sEEG were enrolled in this retrospective cohort study of epilepsy neuromodulation biomarkers. Each patient underwent a trial of high frequency (145Hz) thalamic DBS. BSEPs were acquired before and after DBS trials. Baseline BSEP amplitude assessed seizure network engagement, and modulation of amplitude (pre vs post DBS) assessed change in network excitability. Interictal epileptiform discharges were tracked by an automated classifier.

    Results

    Baseline BSEPs delineated distinct patterns of network engagement between thalamic subfields with maximal frontotemporal engagement achieved with stimulation of the anterior nucleus of the thalamus-ventral anterior nucleus junction. DBS delivered for >1.5 hours reduced BSEP amplitudes compared to baseline, and the degree of modulation correlated with baseline connectivity strength. Shorter DBS trials did not induce reliable BSEP amplitude suppression, but did immediately suppress interictal epileptiform discharge rates in well-connected seizure networks.

    Interpretation

    BSEPs and trials of DBS during sEEG provide novel network biomarkers to evaluate the modulation of large-scale networks across multiple timescales, advancing biomarker informed neuromodulation. ANN NEUROL 2025

    in Annals of Neurology on 2025-11-20 14:00:55 UTC.

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    How cortico-basal ganglia-thalamic subnetworks can shift decision policies to increase reward rate

    by Jyotika Bahuguna, Timothy Verstynen, Jonathan E. Rubin

    All mammals exhibit flexible decision policies that depend, at least in part, on the cortico-basal ganglia-thalamic (CBGT) pathways. Yet understanding how the complex connectivity, dynamics, and plasticity of CBGT circuits translate into experience-dependent shifts of decision policies represents a longstanding challenge in neuroscience. Here we present the results of a computational approach to address this problem. Specifically, we simulated decisions during the early learning process driven by CBGT circuits under baseline, unrewarded conditions using a spiking neural network, and fit an evidence accumulation model to the resulting behavior. Using canonical correlation analysis, we then replicated the identification of three control ensembles (responsiveness, pliancy and choice) within CBGT circuits, with each of these subnetworks mapping to a specific configuration of the evidence accumulation process. We subsequently simulated learning in a simple two-choice task with one optimal (i.e., rewarded) target and found that, during early stages of learning, feedback-driven dopaminergic plasticity on cortico-striatal synapses effectively increases reward rate over time. The learning-related changes in the decision policy can be decomposed in terms of the contributions of each control ensemble, whose influence is driven by sequential reward prediction errors on individual trials. Our results provide a clear and simple mechanism for how dopaminergic plasticity shifts subnetworks within CBGT circuits so as to increase reward rate by strategically modulating how evidence is used to drive decisions.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Real-time forecasting of data revisions in epidemic surveillance streams

    by Jingjing Tang, Aaron Rumack, Bryan Wilder, Roni Rosenfeld

    Epidemic data streams undergo frequent revisions due to reporting delays (“backfill”) and other factors. Relying on tentative surveillance values can seriously degrade the quality of situational awareness, forecasting accuracy and decision-making. We introduce Delphi Revision Forecast (Delphi-RF), a real-time data revision forecasting framework using nonparametric quantile regression, applicable to both counts and proportions (fractions) in public health reporting. By incorporating all available revisions up to a given estimation date, Delphi-RF models revision dynamics and generates distributional forecasts of finalized surveillance values. Applied to daily COVID-19 data (insurance claims, antigen tests, confirmed cases) and weekly dengue and influenza-like illness (ILI) case counts, Delphi-RF delivers accurate revision forecasts, particularly in early reporting stages. In addition, it improves computational efficiency by more than 10-100x compared to existing methods, making it a scalable solution for real-time public health surveillance.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    CrossLabFit: A novel framework for integrating qualitative and quantitative data across multiple labs for model calibration

    by Rodolfo Blanco-Rodriguez, Tanya A. Miura, Esteban Hernandez-Vargas

    The integration of computational models with experimental data is a cornerstone for gaining insight into biomedical applications. However, parameter fitting procedures often require a vast availability and frequency of data that are challenging to obtain from a single source. Here, we present a novel methodology called “CrossLabFit”, which is designed to integrate data from multiple laboratories, overcoming the constraints of single-lab data collection. Our approach harmonizes disparate qualitative assessments, ranging from different experimental labs to categorical observations, into a unified framework for parameter estimation. By using machine learning clustering, these qualitative constraints are represented as dynamic “feasible windows” that capture significant trends to which models must adhere. For numerical implementation, we developed a GPU-accelerated version of differential evolution to navigate the cost function that integrated quantitative and qualitative information. We validate our approach across a series of case studies, demonstrating significant improvements in model accuracy and parameter identifiability. This work opens a new paradigm for collaborative science, enabling a methodological roadmap to combine and compare findings between studies to improve our understanding of biological systems and beyond.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    PseudoknotVisualizer: Visualization of pseudoknots on three-dimensional RNA structures

    by Takumi Otagaki, Goro Terai, Kiyoshi Asai, Junichi Iwakiri

    Summary: We introduce the PseudoknotVisualizer, a specialized software designed to identify and visualize pseudoknots within RNA three-dimensional structures. Typically, RNA secondary structures containing pseudoknots can be decomposed into multiple pseudoknot-free layers. Our software colors the base pairs in each pseudoknot layer, enabling the visualization of pseudoknot distribution within three-dimensional structures. Specifically, users can utilize the PseudoknotVisualizer as a PyMOL extension, applying it directly to RNA molecules loaded in PyMOL. Additionally, a Command Line Interface (CLI) is provided, allowing users to generate coloring commands in Chimera or PyMOL formats, which can then be manually copied and pasted for visualization. By facilitating the clear depiction of pseudoknots in RNA tertiary structures, this tool addresses significant challenges in the identification and visualization of pseudoknots in RNA structural analysis, thereby enhancing research productivity and expanding potential applications in molecular biology. Availability and implementation: PseudoknotVisualizer is freely available at https://github.com/TakumiOtagaki/PseudoknotVisualizer.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Multi-physics modeling for ion homeostasis in multi-compartment plant cells using an energy function

    by Guillaume Mestdagh, Alexis De Angeli, Christophe Godin

    Plant cells control their volume by regulating the osmotic potential of their cytoplasm and vacuole. Water is attracted into the cell as the result of a cascade of solute exchanges between the cell subcompartments and the cell surroundings, which are governed by chemical, electrostatic and mechanical forces. Due to this multi-physics aspect and to couplings between volume changes and chemical effects, modeling these exchanges remains a challenge that has only been partially addressed. As interest for multi-compartment models grows in the plant cell community, this challenge calls for new modeling strategies. In this paper, we introduce an energy-based approach to couple chemical, electrical and mechanical processes taking place between several subcompartments of a plant cell. The contributions of all physical effects are gathered in an energy function, which allows us to derive the equations satisfied by each variable in a systematic way. We illustrate the properties of this modular, unified approach on the modeling of ion and water transport in a guard cell during stoma opening. We represent the stoma opening process as a quasi-static evolution driven by hydrogen pumps in the plasma and vacuolar membranes, and we show that the new formalism explains why the system varies in a particular direction in response to perturbations. Additional numerical simulations allow us to investigate the role of each hydrogen pump in this process. Altogether, we show that this energy-based approach highlights a hierarchy between the forces involved in the system, and to dissect the role of each physical effect in the complex behavior of the system.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Unlocking plant health survey data: An approach to quantify the sensitivity and specificity of visual inspections

    by Matt Combes, Nathan Brown, Robin N. Thompson, Alexander Mastin, Peter Crow, Stephen Parnell

    Invasive plant pests and pathogens cause substantial environmental and economic damage. Visual inspection remains a central tenet of plant health surveys, but its sensitivity (probability of correctly identifying the presence of a pest) and specificity (probability of correctly identifying the absence of a pest) are not routinely quantified. As knowing sensitivity and specificity of visual inspection is critical for effective contingency planning and outbreak management, we address this deficiency using empirical data and statistical analyses. Twenty-three citizen scientist surveyors assessed up to 175 labelled oak trees for three symptoms of acute oak decline. The same trees were also assessed by an expert who has monitored these individual trees annually for over a decade. The sensitivity and specificity of surveyors was calculated using the expert data as the ‘gold-standard’ (i.e., assuming perfect sensitivity and specificity). The utility of an approach using Bayesian modelling to estimate the sensitivity and specificity of visual inspection in the absence of a rarely available ‘gold-standard’ dataset was then examined with simulated plant health survey datasets. There was large variation in sensitivity and specificity between surveyors and between different symptoms, although the sensitivity of detecting a symptom was positively related to the frequency of the symptom on a tree. By leveraging surveyor observations of two symptoms from a minimum of 80 trees on two sites, with reliable prior knowledge of sites with a higher (~0.6) and lower (~0.3) true disease prevalence we show that sensitivity and specificity can be estimated without ‘gold-standard’ data using Bayesian modelling. We highlight that sensitivity and specificity will depend on the symptoms of a pest or disease, the individual surveyor, and the survey protocol. This has consequences for how surveys are designed to detect and monitor outbreaks, as well as the interpretation of survey data that is used to inform outbreak management.

    in PLoS Computational Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Benchmarking with synthetic communities provides a baseline for virus-host inferences from Hi-C proximity linking

    by Rokaiya Nurani Shatadru, Natalie E. Solonenko, Christine L. Sun, Matthew B. Sullivan

    Microbiomes influence diverse ecosystems, and viruses increasingly appear to impose key constraints. While viromics has expanded genomic catalogs, host identification for these viruses remains challenging due to the limitations in scaling cultivation-based approaches and the uncertain reliability and relative low resolution of in silico predictions – particularly for understudied viral taxa. Towards this, Hi-C proximity ligation uses sequenced, cross-linked virus and host genomic fragments to infer virus-host linkages and has now been applied in at least 10 studies. However, its accuracy remains unknown. Here we assess Hi-C performance in recovering virus-host interactions using synthetic communities (SynComs) composed of four marine bacterial strains and nine phages with known interactions and then apply optimized bioinformatic protocols to natural soil samples. In SynComs, standard Hi-C sample preparations and analyses showed poor normalized contact score performance (26% specificity, 100% sensitivity, incorrect matches up to class level) that could be dramatically improved by Z-score filtering (Z ≥ 0.5, 99% specificity), though at reduced sensitivity (62% down from 100%). Detection limits were established as reproducibility was poor below minimal phage abundances of 105 PFU/mL. Applying optimized bioinformatic protocols to natural soil samples, we compared virus-host linkages inferred from proximity-ligated Hi-C sequencing with predictions generated by in silico homology-based and machine learning-based bioinformatic approaches. Prior to Z-score thresholding, agreement was relatively high at the phylum to family levels (72%), but not at the genus (43%) or species (15%) levels. Z-score thresholding reduced sensitivity (only 34% of predictions were retained), with only modest improvements in congruence with bioinformatic methods (48% or 18% at genus or species levels, respectively). Regardless, this led to 79 genus-level-congruent virus-host linkages and 293 new ones revealed by Hi-C alone, i.e., providing many new virus-host interactions to explore in already well-studied climate-critical soils. Overall, these findings provide empirical benchmarks and methodological guidelines to improve the accuracy and reliability of Hi-C for virus-host linkage studies in complex microbial communities.

    in PLoS Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Editorial Note: Global Regulator SATB1 Recruits β-Catenin and Regulates TH2 Differentiation in Wnt-Dependent Manner

    by The PLOS Biology Editors

    in PLoS Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Sleep deprivation and sleep intensity exert distinct effects on cerebral vasomotion and brain pulsations driven by the respiratory and cardiac cycles

    by Sara Marie Ulv Larsen, Sebastian Camillo Holst, Anders Stevnhoved Olsen, Brice Ozenne, Dorte Bonde Zilstorff, Kristoffer Brendstrup-Brix, Pia Weikop, Simone Pleinert, Vesa Kiviniemi, Poul Jørgen Jennum, Maiken Nedergaard, Gitte Moos Knudsen

    The flow of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) through the brain is driven by cerebral vasomotion, along with respiratory and cardiac forces. Growing evidence suggests that sleep facilitates this flow, yet the role of homeostatic sleep mechanisms remains largely unknown. In a circadian-controlled sleep and sleep deprivation study in humans, we used accelerated neuroimaging to investigate how sleep pressure and slow-wave-rich sleep affect low-frequency brain pulsations (LFPs; 0.012–0.034 Hz) as well as brain pulsations originating from the respiratory and cardiac cycles. These pulsations cause movement of CSF and brain tissue which may facilitate waste clearance. We also examined the origin of LFPs through pharmacological vasodilation of the cerebral vasculature with the adrenergic antagonist carvedilol in a randomized, cross-over, double-blinded, placebo-controlled design (NCT03576664). We find that sleep deprivation increases LFPs more than nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep does, with LFPs during sleep correlating with cognitive measures of sleep pressure. Conversely, NREM sleep (combined stages N2 and N3) enhances brain pulsations driven by the respiration and cardiac cycles, with more pronounced effects in gray and white matter than in the ventricles. The strength of these brain pulsations escalates with sleep depth (N3 > N2) and correlates with EEG delta power, a measure of slow wave activity. Moreover, carvedilol dampens LFPs, supporting that these reflect cerebral vasomotion. In summary, our findings indicate that heightened sleep pressure promotes vasomotion, whereas slow-wave-rich sleep amplifies respiration- and cardiac-driven brain pulsations, possibly indicating increased CSF flow to the brain. Together, this suggests that homeostatic sleep mechanisms are integral to human brain fluid dynamics and potentially also waste clearance.

    in PLoS Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Development of bitopic nanobody-ligand conjugates targeting G protein-coupled receptors and exhibiting logic-gated signaling

    by Shivani Sachdev, Swarnali Roy, Ross W. Cheloha

    G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest family of plasma membrane-embedded signaling proteins. These receptors are involved in a wide array of physiological processes, marking them as attractive targets for drug development. Bitopic ligands, which are comprised of a pharmacophore that targets the receptor orthosteric site and a linked moiety that binds to a separate site, have considerable potential for addressing GPCR function. Here, we report the synthesis and evaluation of novel bitopic conjugates consisting of a small molecule pharmacophore that activates the adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) linked to antibody fragments (nanobodies, Nbs). This approach leverages the high-affinity and specificity binding of Nbs to non orthosteric sites on engineered A2AR variants to provide bitopic Nb-ligand conjugates that stimulate strong and enduring signaling responses. We further demonstrate that such bitopic conjugates can induce activation by spanning two distinct receptor protomers. This property enables the selective targeting of receptor pairs over either individual receptor, as a form of “logic-gated” activity. We showcase the broad applicability of bitopic conjugates in this context by demonstrating their activity in targeting several pairs of co-expressed receptors, including GPCR monomers from different classes. Furthermore, we demonstrate that this dual-targeting strategy initiates signaling responses that diverge from those induced by monovalent ligands. The ability to target receptor pairs using Nb-ligand conjugates offers a powerful strategy with potential for cell type-selective signaling and implications for GPCR drug discovery efforts more broadly.

    in PLoS Biology on 2025-11-20 14:00:00 UTC.

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    Online interference of declarative memory on fast and slow adaptive processes in force field motor learning

    Journal of Neurophysiology, Ahead of Print.

    in Journal of Neurophysiology on 2025-11-20 12:31:18 UTC.

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    Motor variability predicts motor learning of improved trunk postural control through repeated trunk perturbations during walking in children with cerebral palsy

    Journal of Neurophysiology, Ahead of Print.

    in Journal of Neurophysiology on 2025-11-20 12:21:15 UTC.

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    Autism-associated Scn2a haploinsufficiency disrupts in vivo dendritic signaling and impairs flexible decision-making

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Volume 122, Issue 47, November 2025.
    SignificanceSCN2Ais one of the strongest known genetic risk factors for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Previous studies using brain slices showed that losing this gene lowers the excitability in dendrites of pyramidal cells in the cortex. However, it ...

    in PNAS on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Rebalancing viral and immune damage versus repair prevents death from lethal influenza infection

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Noncanonical agonist-dependent and -independent arrestin recruitment of GPR1

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    An archaeal genetic code with all TAG codons as pyrrolysine

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    An Aeromonas variant that produces aerolysin promotes susceptibility to ulcerative colitis

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    The 2025 Santorini unrest unveiled: Rebounding magmatic dike intrusion with triggered seismicity

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Retinal calcium waves coordinate uniform tissue patterning of the Drosophila eye

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    The synaptic ectokinase VLK triggers the EphB2–NMDAR interaction to drive injury-induced pain

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    What enables human language? A biocultural framework

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Erratum for the Research Article “ER-mitochondria contacts couple mtDNA synthesis with mitochondrial division in human cells” by S. C. Lewis et al.

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    Erratum for the Research Article “Cdc48 and a ubiquitin ligase drive disassembly of the CMG helicase at the end of DNA replication” by M. Maric et al.

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    The demographic future that we do not know about

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 08:00:00 UTC.

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    In defense of the know-it-all

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 793-793, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    An ode to change

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 792-792, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    The Moon-forming impactor Theia originated from the inner Solar System

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 819-823, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Increasing the dimensionality of transistors with hydrogels

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 824-830, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Multigas adsorption with single-site cooperativity in a metal–organic framework

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 808-812, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    A cross-linked molecular contact for stable operation of perovskite/silicon tandem solar cells

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 837-842, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Atomic layer bonding contacts in two-dimensional semiconductors

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 813-818, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    An anion-binding approach to enantioselective photoredox catalysis

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 831-836, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Realization of a Rydberg-dressed extended Bose-Hubbard model

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 849-853, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    CRISPR-Cas–mediated heritable chromosome fusions in Arabidopsis

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 843-848, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Time to laugh

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 858-858, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    In Other Journals

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 800-800, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Engineering chromosome number in plants

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 786-787, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Tracking magma with earthquakes

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 790-791, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    The retina’s rhythm

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 787-788, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    A bacterial toxin disarms gut defenses against inflammation

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 789-790, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Brazil’s hypocrisy at COP30

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 794-795, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Bolivia’s political transition and COP30

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 795-795, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Brazil’s credibility at stake with drilling

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 794-794, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    A headless mystery

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 776-781, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    High-resolution climate model forecasts a wet future

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 768-769, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Make the census voluntary? Bad idea, say statisticians

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 769-770, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    ‘A sigh of relief’: New malaria drug succeeds in clinical trial as existing treatments falter

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 771-772, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    As neural organoids advance, ethics races to keep pace

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 773-774, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    Startup pioneers subscription service for space telescope

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 774-775, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    A megadam test for China and South Asia

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 767-767, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    In Science Journals

    Science, Volume 390, Issue 6775, Page 798-800, November 2025.

    in Science on 2025-11-20 07:00:09 UTC.

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    AQP4 in cerebrospinal fluid correlates with severity and prognosis in moderate to severe traumatic brain injury

    Journal of Neurophysiology, Volume 134, Issue 6, Page 1890-1896, December 2025.

    in Journal of Neurophysiology on 2025-11-20 06:51:27 UTC.

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    Increasing motor variability facilitates motor learning of trunk postural control during sitting in children with cerebral palsy

    Journal of Neurophysiology, Volume 134, Issue 6, Page 1877-1889, December 2025.

    in Journal of Neurophysiology on 2025-11-20 06:51:26 UTC.

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    A Novel Transcriptional Slippage Mechanism Rescues Dystrophin Expression from a DMD Frameshift Variant

    Pathogenic DMD variants usually follow the reading-frame rule: out-of-frame changes cause Duchenne muscular dystrophy, whereas in-frame ones produce Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD). We report a 23-year-old man with BMD-like weakness, calf hypertrophy, elevated creatine kinase, and dilated cardiomyopathy. A novel hemizygous c.2281delG variant converted an A₄GA₅ motif to A₉, predicting a frameshift; however, Western blot showed ~15% full-length dystrophin. cDNA and polymerse chain reaction (PCR)-free direct RNA sequencing demonstrated transcriptional slippage, adding 1 adenine (A₁₀) that restores the reading frame and dystrophin. This RNA-level rescue of an out-of-frame DMD variant explains the mild phenotype and highlights the importance of transcript-level analysis in dystrophinopathies. ANN NEUROL 2025

    in Annals of Neurology on 2025-11-20 05:50:32 UTC.

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    A transcriptomic atlas of astrocyte heterogeneity across space and time in mouse and marmoset

    In this NeuroResource, Schroeder et al. present a transcriptomic atlas across brain regions and developmental time points in mouse and marmoset. Detailed analysis focused on astrocytes revealed that their embryonically patterned regional heterogeneity changes significantly over the course of postnatal development, with both species conservation and divergence.

    in Neuron: In press on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Organoid-based precision cancer modeling: New frontier in lung cancer research

    This review outlines how patient-derived lung cancer organoids model tumor heterogeneity and integrate multi-omics, gene editing, immune co-culture, and drug screening. These systems offer robust platforms for dissecting tumor biology and advancing precision oncology, supporting the development of individualized therapeutic strategies.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    BDNF exerts an NRF2-dependent cytoprotective function via a receptor-independent pathway

    Fath et al. reveal that BDNF crosses cell membranes via a conserved C-terminal CPP sequence, independently of receptors or energy. Inside cells, BDNF binds KEAP1, promotes NRF2 nuclear translocation, and triggers a cytoprotective response. This evolutionarily conserved receptor-independent pathway enables extracellular BDNF to control cellular defenses beyond a classic neurotrophic role.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    MICU2 controls mitochondrial calcium signaling and migration in neurons during development

    Berezhnaya et al. showed that MICU2 is present in the brain during development but is replaced during maturation by MICU3. MICU2 loss during development results in neuronal overmigration in the cortex and anxiety-like behavior in mice that may contribute to the neurodevelopmental disorder observed in patients with the MICU2 null mutationreported previously.

    in Cell Reports: Current Issue on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Environmental exposure augments the abundance and transferability of antibiotic resistance genes in the respiratory tract

    Yi et al. show that environmental exposures such as smoking and biofuels elevate the abundance and mobility of human respiratory antibiotic resistance genes, which are associated with impaired lung function. These findings translate to a phenotypic resistance in mouse lung, highlighting the need for tackling pollution to combat antibiotic resistance.

    in Cell Reports: In press on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Author Correction: A pangenome and pantranscriptome of hexaploid oat

    Nature, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41586-025-09919-7

    Author Correction: A pangenome and pantranscriptome of hexaploid oat

    in Nature on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    The origin of male seahorses’ brood pouch

    Nature, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03696-z

    Similarities to the womb and placenta of female mammals indicate a response to common evolutionary challenges in pregnancy.

    in Nature on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Neanderthal DNA reveals how human faces form

    Nature, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03697-y

    Subtle genomic variations between humans and Neanderthals provide clues to how DNA shapes our facial features.

    in Nature on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Bacterial cooperative weaves sustainable rainbow materials

    Nature, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03698-x

    Several microbial strains working together in a ‘one pot’ production process could provide an environmentally friendly route to clothing.

    in Nature on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Daily briefing: What happens to science if the ‘AI bubble’ bursts?

    Nature, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03864-1

    An artificial-intelligence market crash could drive AI researchers back into academia, experts say. Plus, the ethics of brain implants that detect ‘preconscious’ thoughts and a gene-editing tool that could tackle multiple diseases.

    in Nature on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Has birds’ mysterious ‘compass’ organ been found at last?

    Nature, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03798-8

    Multiple lines of evidence suggest that pigeons sense magnetic fields by detecting electric currents in their inner ears.

    in Nature on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Waste not: how researchers harness pee and poo for science

    Nature, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03350-8

    It might seem gross, but these materials are treasure troves for research.

    in Nature on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    A brain implant that could rival Neuralink's enters clinical trials

    Nature, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/d41586-025-03849-0

    Neurotechnology company Paradromics will test its device in a trial aimed at safely restoring speech for people with severe motor impairments.

    in Nature on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Tau pathology in mouse spinal neurons underlies early touch loss and heralds cognitive decline

    Nature Neuroscience, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41593-025-02138-3

    Early tactile deficits in patients with Alzheimer disease (AD) and AD mouse models map to tau pathology in spinal cholecystokinin (CCK) neurons. In AD mice, reducing tau or c-Maf levels in spinal CCK neurons restores touch and benefits cognition, suggesting that these deficits are a noninvasive peripheral indication of early AD and offer a tractable target for intervention.

    in Nature Neuroscience on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Behavioral devaluation by local resistance to dopamine

    Nature Neuroscience, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41593-025-02079-x

    The dopamine motivating animals to perform a current behavior also desensitizes local D2 dopamine receptors. Dopamine signaling is less effective in subsequent rounds, resulting in repetition-induced devaluation of behavior.

    in Nature Neuroscience on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    NimbusImage: a cloud-computing platform for image analysis

    Nature Methods, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41592-025-02942-6

    NimbusImage: a cloud-computing platform for image analysis

    in Nature Methods on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    4Pi-SIMFLUX: 4Pi single-molecule localization microscopy with structured illumination

    Nature Methods, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41592-025-02908-8

    4Pi-SIMFLUX is a single-molecule localization microscopy approach that achieves a near-isotropic resolution below 10 nm in whole mammalian cells.

    in Nature Methods on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Photovoltage microscopy of symmetrically twisted trilayer graphene

    Nature Physics, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s41567-025-03071-9

    A proposed theoretical explanation for the electronic behaviour of moiré graphene is the coexistence of light and heavy electrons. Now local thermoelectric measurements hint that this model could be accurate.

    in Nature Physics on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Prefrontal oxytocin receptor positive cells mediate stress-induced anxiety in tuberous sclerosis complex

    Communications Biology, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s42003-025-09193-3

    Mechanistic studies in a mouse model of tuberous sclerosis complex reveal that heightened integrated stress response in oxytocin receptor positive neurons disrupts prefrontal cortex function and produces sex-specific anxiety behaviors under social isolation.

    in Nature communications biology on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Genomic characterization of host gene alterations in Theileria annulata-transformed leukocytes

    Communications Biology, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s42003-025-09005-8

    Genomic characterization of host gene alterations in Theileria annulata-transformed leukocytes sheds light on parasite-induced genomic changes that might drive the acquisition of cancer-like phenotypes in host cells.

    in Nature communications biology on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Mapping hippocampal-cerebellar functional connectivity across the human adult lifespan

    Communications Biology, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s42003-025-08972-2

    Seed-based connectivity analyses of a large lifespan dataset reveal strong functional connectivity between human hippocampal regions and widespread cerebellar areas, with age-related reductions observed in specific cerebellar subregions.

    in Nature communications biology on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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    Single cell long read whole genome sequencing reveals somatic transposon activity in human brain

    Communications Biology, Published online: 20 November 2025; doi:10.1038/s42003-025-08805-2

    Long read single cell whole genome sequencing after droplet multiple displacement amplification from human brain reveals somatic transposon activity.

    in Nature communications biology on 2025-11-20 00:00:00 UTC.

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  • Neural Computation
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  • arXiv: Quantitative Biology: Neurons and Cognition
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  • Current Opinion in Neurobiology
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  • Hippocampus
  • ReScience C
  • Physical Review E: Biological physics
  • The Journal of Mathematical Neuroscience
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  • Brain Sciences
  • F1000Research
  • The Neuroscientist

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