Contact: Ruth Institution: Nature Publishing Group
Porous material has huge, handed holes; Understanding antibodies; The Dune thing; Diatoms delve deep for nutrients to stay alive; Human protein interactions go large scale; Corrupting the bacterial quorum; Quicksand won't suck you right in
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VOL.437 NO.7059 DATED 29 SEPTEMBER 2005
* Animal
behaviour: How water-walking insects defy gravity
* Robotics:
Replicating machines, DNA style
* Astrophysics: Lost (and found) in
space
* Botany: First potential receptor for plant hormone gibberellin
* Oceanography: Malnutrition at sea
* Climate: Acidifying oceans
could doom seashells and corals sooner
than expected
* Materials:
Porous material has huge, handed holes
* Virology: Understanding
antibodies
* Physical sciences: The Dune thing
* Ecology: Diatoms
delve deep for nutrients to stay alive
* Cell biology: Human protein
interactions go large scale
* Microbiology: Corrupting the bacterial
quorum
* And finally... Quicksand won't suck you right in
* Mention
of papers to be published at the same time with the same
embargo
*
Geographical listing of authors
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[1] Animal behaviour: How
water-walking insects defy gravity (pp733-736)
Ponds and puddles
might appear flat to the human eye, but to a tiny insect
they can be a
rugged and treacherous terrain. Researchers have now shown
that
water-walking insects use a unique mode of propulsion to climb
the
steeply sloping meniscus at the edge of a puddle, despite it being
a steep,
slippery wall of water.
Using high-speed video, David
Hu and John Bush captured the
meniscus-climbing action of three
water-walking insect species. As the
researchers report in this week's
Nature, the two-millimetre-long insects
adopt a special posture to
create capillary forces that drive them up the
slope at almost thirty
body lengths per second , without any need to move
their legs during
the journey.
They do this by virtue of their 'wetting' front and
rear legs, which can
pull at the surface of the water and raise it into
a tiny peak. Meanwhile,
the central pair of legs presses down on the
water, forming dimples in its
surface. Because the insects are so
small, these perturbations create
capillary forces that suck them up
the slope, similar to the way in which
water is sucked up a thin tube
by the force of its own surface tension.
CONTACT
John Bush
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA)
Tel: +1 857
991 9280; E-mail: bush@math.mit.edu
[2] Robotics: Replicating
machines, DNA style (p636)
Welcome the robots that can copy
themselves - and fix any mistakes they
might make. Electromechanical
engineers have created a set of machines that
can fashion copies of
themselves from randomly circulating components, much
as DNA copies
itself from the chemical building blocks floating around in
biological
cells.
The system starts with a single template string made up of
two different
colours in a certain sequence, explain its creators
Joseph M. Jacobson and
colleagues in a Brief Communication in this
week's Nature. The string floats
around on a cushion of air - along the
same lines as an air-hockey table -
surrounded by loose, randomly
moving building blocks of the two colours.
When two blocks come
into contact, they can latch together. But the strings
are also fitted
with an electronics package that checks the colour of the
neighbouring
block, and can trigger them to unlatch if the sequence is not
correct.
Thus, over time, the number of strings matching the original
template
can grow exponentially, limited only by the supply of building
blocks.
If the process can be sufficiently miniaturized, the authors hope
it
could prove valuable in automating industrial assembly
processes.
CONTACT
Joseph M. Jacobson (Massachusetts Inst of
Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA)
Tel: +1 617 253 7209; E-mail:
jacobson@media.mit.edu
[3] Astrophysics: Lost (and found) in
space (pp707-710)
Dark matter - the mysterious stuff that seems to
comprise most of the matter
in the Universe - was recently suggested to
be even more mysterious, because
of its apparent absence from some
galaxies. But it may be there after all,
say Avishai Dekel and
colleagues in this week's Nature. They have
investigated the claim,
made a few years ago, that the slow speeds of
outlying stars in
elliptical galaxies are inconsistent with the presence
there of dark
matter. The researchers show that these stars can have low
velocities
even if the galaxies contain large amounts of dark matter.
Dark
matter is so-called because it can't be seen directly. But
astronomers
have inferred that it permeates galaxies because the
motions of stars seem
to show that they are being gravitationally
attracted by something more than
all the other visible stars and dust.
Over four-fifths of the mass in the
Universe seems to be made of this
stuff. No one knows what it consists of,
but it doesn't seem to be any
of the known forms of matter.
Elliptical galaxies, some of which
are probably formed by the merging of
smaller galaxies, ought in this
picture to contain just as much dark matter
as any other galaxy. But
the paths of the slow-moving stars that have been
seen in elliptical
galaxies don't seem to bear the imprint of dark matter's
gravitational
tug, which was expected to speed them up. Dekel and colleagues
have now
performed computer simulations of the merging events in
which
elliptical galaxies are formed, and they find that these
processes can
produce stars in elongated orbits that move slowly even
when the merged
galaxies contain their usual complement of dark matter.
So it may still be
unexplained - but it does seem to be there after
all.
CONTACT
Avishai Dekel (Hebrew University, Jerusalem,
Israel)
Tel: +972 2 6584100; E-mail: dekel@astro.huji.ac.il
[4] Botany: First potential receptor for plant hormone
gibberellin
(pp693-698; N&V)
The plant hormone gibberellin
plays an essential role in plant germination,
stem elongation and
flower development. But until now, no one had isolated a
receptor for
this critical hormone. This week, Makoto Matsuoka and
colleagues
provide evidence that the GID1 gene in rice encodes an unknown
soluble
protein receptor for this hormone.
The researchers describe a
mutant variety of rice that cannot produce
fertile flowers, among other
abnormalities. By comparing its DNA with that
from other varieties of
rice, they show that abnormalities in the GID1 gene
disrupt the plant's
ability to sense gibberellin. In another part of the
experiment, they
show that overexpression of the gene product results in
long, spindly
plants - the expected result from oversensitivity to the
hormone. The
results of the study, which highlight the first soluble
gibberellin
receptor, appear this week in Nature.
"The successful hunt carried
out by [Ueguchi-Tanaka et al.] not only takes
the plant hormone debate
further, but the enhanced molecular understanding
of gibberellin
signalling may also presage a new green revolution," write
Dario
Bonetta and Peter McCourt in a related News and Views
article.
CONTACT
Makoto Matsuoka (Nagoya University, Aichi,
Japan)
Tel: +81 52 789 5218; E-mail: makoto@nuagr1.agr.nagoya-u.ac.jp
Peter McCourt (University of Toronto, Canada)
Tel: +1 416 978
0523; E-mail: mccourt@botany.utoronto.ca
[5] Oceanography:
Malnutrition at sea (pp687-692; N&V)
How does life in the
oceans get its nutrients? Conventional thinking on this
issue is
literally knocked sideways by findings reported this week in Nature
by
Jaime Palter and co-workers. They show that, while the availability
of
nutrients for plankton growth is normally considered to depend on
the
vertical circulation of water masses, horizontal water movements
can also
exert a crucial influence. Understanding the factors that
limit plankton
growth - and thus the base of the oceanic food web - is
vitally important
for predicting, for example, changes in fish
stocks.
Palter and colleagues find that water a few hundred metres
below the surface
of the subtropical North Atlantic Ocean (east of the
Gulf of Mexico) can
become depleted in nutrients because of an influx
of nutrient-poor water
from a region along the north edge of this part
of the ocean. The
subtropical North Atlantic contains a circulating
current called a gyre.
Nutrients, on which plankton growth depends, are
delivered to the gyre by
vertical, conveyor-belt circulation of water,
driven in part by winds at the
ocean surface. The upwelling water tends
to be rich in the chemical
compounds such as nitrate and phosphate that
organisms need for growth.
The new findings, however, reveal that
this nutrient supply can be
undermined by water penetrating into the
gyre from the north thanks to a
process called North Atlantic
Subtropical Mode Water (STMW) formation. From
January to around April
each year, there is a 'bloom' of plankton in the
region of STMW
formation, which eats up all the nutrients in that part of
the ocean.
This water, the researchers show, can consequently have much
lower
nutrient concentrations than those typical of the subtropical
North
Atlantic. The depleted water then gets carried southwards into
the
subtropical gyre, introducing low nutrient levels that can be seen
at least
2,000 kilometres to the south. A related News & Views
article by Marina Lévy
accompanies this
research.
CONTACT
Jaime Palter (Duke University, Durham, NC,
USA)
Tel: +1 919 684 6227; E-mail: jbp3@duke.edu
Marina Lévy
(Institut Pierre Simon LaPlace, Paris, France)
Tel: +33 1 44 27 2707;
E-mail: marina@lodyc.jussieu.fr
[6] Climate: Acidifying oceans
could doom seashells and corals sooner than
expected
(pp681-686)
As carbon dioxide in the atmosphere dissolves into the
Earth's oceans, the
water becomes more acidic and the concentration of
carbonate ions is
reduced, threatening to prevent certain marine life
and corals from growing
their chalky shells. Research in this week's
Nature predicts that if carbon
dioxide emission from burning fossil
fuels continues at its present rate,
oceanic ecosystems could be badly
hit within decades, not centuries as
previously suggested.
James
C. Orr and colleagues used computer models to predict carbonate
ion
concentrations in the ocean over the next century. These carbonate
ions are
taken up by many sea creatures to form aragonite, a form of
calcium
carbonate used to make their shells and external skeletons. But
the
scientists' projections suggest that Southern Ocean waters, as well
as parts
of the subarctic Pacific Ocean, will be depleted of aragonite
by 2100
because of rising carbon dioxide levels.
The authors
assessed the biological impact of these predictions by exposing
a
species of swimming snail, known as a pteropod, to conditions
that
simulated Southern Ocean surface waters in 2100. They found that
the snails'
shells dissolved markedly within 48 hours of exposure to
these conditions.
The scientists say that these creatures may not be
able to adapt quickly
enough to survive in such conditions, and their
demise could affect the fish
and whales that feed on them. Similar
changes could also affect cold water
corals that provide an important
habitat for fish.
CONTACT
James C. Orr (Laboratoire des Sciences
du Climat et de l'Environnement,
Gif-sur-Yvette, France)
Tel: +33 1
69 08 77 23; E-mail: orr@cea.fr
[7] Materials: Porous material
has huge, handed holes (pp716-719; N&V)
Porous metal oxides are
widely used as catalysts to speed up chemical
reactions, and a family
of germanium oxides reported in this week's Nature
could prove to be
the most versatile yet.
Xiaodong Zou and colleagues found that
their germanium oxides contained
larger pores than other metal oxides,
potentially allowing chemicals to
sneak inside more easily to undergo
reactions. Unusually for a metal oxide,
the walls of the pores are
crystalline, which should boost its chemical
activity. It also allowed
the scientists to accurately work out the pores'
shapes.
This
revealed that the channels twisted either clockwise or
anticlockwise,
like the thread of a nut. By blocking off one set of
channels, the
scientists created a material where all the channels
spiralled in the same
direction. This could be a useful environment for
making chiral molecules,
such as those found in therapeutic drugs,
which can come in left- or
right-handed forms depending on the spatial
arrangement of their atoms. A
related News & Views article by
Hermann Gies accompanies this research.
CONTACT
Xiaodong Zou
(Stockholm University, Sweden)
Tel: +46 8 16 23 80; E-mail:
zou@struc.su.se
Hermann Gies (Ruhr-Universität Bochum,
Germany)
Tel: +49 234 322 3512; E-mail: Hermann.Gies@ruhr-uni-bochum.de
[8] Virology: Understanding antibodies
(pp764-768)
Researchers in this week's Nature report on an antibody
involved in stopping
West Nile virus at a cellular level before it has
a chance to take hold.
They study how the antibody binds to the virus
and inhibits infection, after
the virus has attached itself to the cell
surface. The findings could help
in the development of vaccines for
associated viruses such as Japanese
encephalitis, yellow fever and
dengue viruses - the latter infects about 50
million people each year
and currently has no authorised vaccine.
West Nile virus is a bird
pathogen, but since it was first reported in the
United States in 1999,
there have been more than 16,000 reported cases of
human infection,
with more than 650 deaths. As West Nile virus is a
flavivirus, the
findings should be useful for developing vaccine strategies
against
other members of this family - some of which are even more damaging
to
humans.
Daved Fremont and colleagues analysed the interaction of an
antibody, E16,
with amino acids belonging to one surface protein of the
virus. The team
found that E16 waits until the virus has attached
itself to the host cell's
surface, then sneakily prevents the fusion
process by blocking the
virus-triggered conformational changes in the
host cell. Until now,
researchers had assumed that protective
antibodies simply blocked the
initial attachment. This work shows E16
can block infection regardless of
the method of entry into the cell,
making it a key candidate for improved
vaccine design
strategies.
CONTACT
Daved Fremont (Washington University, St
Louis, MO, USA)
Tel: +1 314 747 6547; E-mail: fremont@wustl.edu
[9] Physical sciences: The Dune thing (pp720-723)
Moving
sand dunes - known as barchans - are fundamentally unstable,
according
to research published in Nature this week. Barchans are
crescent-shaped
dunes that move faster than most other dune types over
desert
surfaces.
The dynamic processes responsible for the evolution of
barchan dune fields,
however, remain poorly understood. Using a
combination of data from a
three-year field study and a simple
theoretical model, Bruno Andreotti and
colleagues now show that that
dune collisions and changes in wind direction
destabilize the dunes,
generating surface waves that can produce new
barchans of a smaller
size by breaking the horns of the large dunes. The
creation of these
new dunes prevents dune fields from merging into a single
giant dune,
and therefore plays a fundamental role in the development of
barchan
dune patterns.
CONTACT
Bruno Andreotti (Ecole Supérieure de
Physique et Chimie Industrielles,
Paris, France)
Tel: +33 1 40 79 58
09; E-mail: andreotti@pmmh.espci.fr
[10] Ecology: Diatoms
delve deep for nutrients to stay alive (pp728-732)
During spring,
the North Atlantic Ocean teems with tiny diatoms -
unicellular
photosynthetic plankton that fashion cell walls from silicate
minerals
dissolved in the water. But researchers had been unsure how these
tiny
creatures keep thriving in such huge numbers during periods
when
silicate is not readily available at the ocean surface.
The
answer is that they 'mine' it from deeper waters, reports a team
led by
John Allen in this week's Nature. Silicate periodically rises from
the
deep at ocean 'fronts' such as the Iceland-Faeroes Front (IFF), one
of
the boundaries between Atlantic and Arctic waters. As long as there
are
enough other nutrients, such as nitrate, to sustain the diatoms,
this
replenishment enables them to keep growing, the team
reports.
This discovery, made by sampling and studying waters from
the IFF,
shows that the ocean fronts are more dynamic regions than
experts realized,
the authors add. This could potentially help to
explain how plankton supply
so much carbon to deep-water ecosystems
when they die off. Allen's team also
notes that similar frontal systems
could supply other nutrients, such as
phosphate or iron, from the
deep.
CONTACT
John Allen (National Oceanography Centre,
Southampton, UK)
No telephone number at present - please use the
following email address
while we try to find a contact phone number:
E-mail: jta@sea.soc.soton.ac.uk
[11] Cell biology: Human
protein interactions go large scale
(DOI:
10.1038/nature04209)
***This paper will be published
electronically on Nature's website on 28
September at 1800 London time
/ 1300 US Eastern time (which is also when the
embargo lifts) as part
of our AOP (ahead of print) programme. Although we
have included it on
this release to avoid multiple mailings it will not
appear in print on
29 September, but at a later date.***
Now that all of the 22,000
protein-coding human genes have been sequenced,
researchers want to
know which of these proteins interact with each other.
Marc Vidal and
colleagues have taken an initial step towards addressing this
issue and
report their findings in Nature this week.
They analysed the
interactions between 8,100 proteins and detected 2,800
interactions,
revealing more than 300 new connections to over 100
disease-associated
proteins. Seventy-eight per cent of the interactions
could be verified
using a second, different biochemical method.
The authors concluded
from a literature search that 85 per cent of the
identified
interactions are novel while comparison with curated databases
suggests
that 96% of the identified interactions are novel. The study may
also
yield insight into the way protein interactions change
throughout
evolution, the authors say. They found that proteins of the
same
evolutionary level are more likely to interact with each other.
For example,
human-specific proteins are more likely to interact with
each other than
with proteins found in all multicellular
animals.
There is still a long way to go towards establishing a
complete interaction
database of all human proteins. The study
identifies one per cent of the
entire human 'interactome,' the authors
estimate.
CONTACT: Marc Vidal (Dana Farber Cancer Institute, Boston,
MA, USA)
Tel: +1 617 632 5180; E-mail: marc_vidal@dfci.harvard.edu
[12] Microbiology: Corrupting the bacterial quorum
(pp750-753)
In a process known as quorum sensing, bacteria
communicate with each other
using chemical signalling molecules called
autoinducers. This type of
communication allows the microbes to
synchronize their behaviour and thus
respond as a multicellular
organism. One autoinducer, known as AI-2, is a
universal molecule that
many species of bacteria use to communicate for this
purpose.
But a paper appearing in Nature this week shows that some species
of
bacteria can interfere with AI-2-directed communication, thereby
hindering
other species' ability to respond to the chemical signal. The
authors,
Karina Xavier and Bonnie Bassler, say that the findings could
have
implications for human health relating to the maintenance of
beneficial
microorganisms in the gut and the prevention of bacterial
diseases.
CONTACT
Bonnie Bassler (Princeton University, NJ,
USA)
Tel: +1 609 258 2857; E-mail: bbassler@molbio.princeton.edu
[13] And finally... Quicksand won't suck you right in
(p635)
Paradoxically, quicksand is easy to sink into but very hard
to escape from.
Researchers simulating the way this mixture of fine
sand, clay and salt
water behaves find that quicksand liquefies when
perturbed, explaining why
it is so easy to sink into.
The more
it moves, the more liquid it becomes, report Daniel Bonn and
his
colleagues in a Brief Communication in this week's Nature. This
explains why
moving too much only makes things worse, because it helps
you sink in
further.
Once the quicksand has liquefied, the sand
settles at the bottom, making it
so dense that it is impossible for
material of the same density as a human
to become completely submerged.
"Any unfortunate victim should sink halfway
into the quicksand," say
the authors, "but could then take solace from the
knowledge that there
would be no risk of being sucked beneath the surface."
But this
reassurance comes at a price: pulling out a foot takes a
force
equivalent to that needed to lift a medium-sized
car.
CONTACT
Daniel Bonn (University of Amsterdam, The
Netherlands)
No telephone number at present - please use the following
email address
while we try to find a contact phone number: E-mail:
bonn@science.uva.nl
ALSO IN THIS ISSUE...
[14]
Isotope-induced partial localization of core electrons in
the
homonuclear molecule N2 (pp711-715)
[15] Trace element
signature of subduction-zone fluids, melts and
supercritical liquids at
120-180 km depth pp724-727)
[16] Ca21/calmodulin is critical for
brassinosteroid biosynthesis and
plant growth (pp741-745)
[17]
Phosphatidylserine-dependent engulfment by macrophages of nuclei
from
erythroid precursor cells (pp754-758)
[18] A non-haem iron centre
in the transcription factor NorR senses
nitric oxide
(pp759-763)
GEOGRAPHICAL LISTING OF AUTHORS...
The following
list of places refers to the whereabouts of authors on the
papers
numbered in this release. For example, London: 4 - this means that
on
paper number four, there will be at least one author affiliated to
an
institute or company in London. The listing may be for an author's
main
affiliation, or for a place where they are working temporarily.
Please see
the PDF of the paper for full
details.
AUSTRALIA
Hobart, Tasmania: 6
BELGIUM
Liege:
6
Namur: 11
CANADA
Ottawa: 14
CHINA
Taichung,
Taiwan: 4
Taipei, Taiwan: 4
CROATIA
Rijeka:
14
FRANCE
Gif-sur-Yvette: 6
Meudon: 3
Paris: 3, 6, 9,
13
Plouzane: 6
Toulouse: 6
GERMANY
Berlin:
14
Bremerhaven: 6
Dresden: 14
Hamburg: 6
Wuerzburg:
14
ISRAEL
Jerusalem: 3, 15
ITALY
La Spezia:
10
JAPAN
Nagoya: 4
Osaka: 17
Sendai: 14
Tokyo: 4,
17
Tsukuba: 4
Yokohama: 6
MOROCCO
Agadir: 9
THE
NETHERLANDS
Amsterdam: 13
SWEDEN
Stockholm:
7
SWITZERLAND
Bern: 6
Zurich: 15
UNITED
KINGDOM
Exeter: 6
Fife: 10
Portaferry: 10
Southampton: 6,
10
Thurso: 10
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Arizona
Tempe:
7
California
Los Angeles: 6
Pasadena: 14
Sacramento: 11
San
Marcos: 6
Santa Cruz: 3
Colorado
Boulder:
6
Georgia
Atlanta: 18
Maryland
Rockville:
8
Massachusetts
Beverly: 11
Boston: 11
Cambridge: 1, 2,
3
Woburn: 11
Woods Hole: 6
Missouri
St. Louis: 8
New
Jersey
Princeton: 6, 12
New York
Mahopac: 7
North
Carolina
Beaufort: 5
Durham: 5
Pennsylvania
University Park:
6
Texas
Houston: 11
Washington
Pullman: 16
Seattle:
6
PRESS CONTACTS...
For North America and Canada
Katie
McGoldrick, Nature Washington
Tel: +1 202 737 2355; E-mail:
k.mcgoldrick@naturedc.com
For Japan, Korea, China, Singapore and
Taiwan
Rinoko Asami, Nature Tokyo
Tel: +81 3 3267 8751; E-mail:
r.asami@naturejpn.com
For the UK/Europe/other countries not listed
above
Ruth Francis, Nature London
Tel: +44 20 7843 4562; E-mail
r.francis@nature.com
Katharine Mansell, Nature London
Tel: +44
20 7843 4658; E-mail: k.mansell@nature.com
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