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Immunological mechanisms of mRNA vaccines for infectious diseases
Small-molecule modulation of β-arrestins
Disparate privacy risks from medical AI
Global high-resolution mapping of seagrass to support conservation
Dietary cholesterol activates a Ral-dependent pathway driving LDLR turnover
Genetic technologies to enhance crop nutritional value under climate change
The mutational landscape of STING-induced immunity
Medical records could be revealed by AI training-data vulnerability
On the robustness of topological gap detection via transport
Addendum: Transmission of MPXV from fire-footed rope squirrels to sooty mangabeys
Reply to: On the robustness of topological gap detection via transport
Role of methanesulfonic acid in atmospheric particle nucleation and growth
Author Correction: cBAF complex components and MYC cooperate early in CD8<sup>+</sup> T cell fate
Why science needs the humanities more than ever
‘Us’ not ‘them’: scientists must use their skills to help stop polarization and division
Study challenges a common belief about vitamin D and sunlight
A study of nearly 300 people across northern Britain found that vitamin D levels often stay low all year in groups most at risk. Surprisingly, summer sunshine did not significantly boost vitamin D levels among older adults or people from minoritized ethnic backgrounds.
The universe is unexpectedly stringy, which could unravel the theory of the cosmos
Controversial claim challenges principle of cosmological sameness on which prevailing theory rests
Migrating sea turtles only sort of know where they’re going
An “approximate” sense of Earth’s magnetic fields means the animals must occasionally reorient during long ocean voyages
Medical students are using a popular research tool to pump out misleading studies
Critics say TriNetX’s easy analyses of electronic medical records fuel quick-and-dirty publications from inexperienced authors
One tiny mutation may explain how bat viruses become human threats
Scientists found that one tiny genetic change can completely alter how a coronavirus behaves in different species. Comparing SARS-CoV-2 with a closely related bat-only virus, they showed that a single amino-acid difference affects whether the immune system fights back or gets suppressed. This may help explain how some animal viruses make the leap to humans and become far more dangerous.