This week in Science: Researchers have fabricated MXene films at room temperature using bacterial cellulose and liquid metal to sequentially bridge the nanosheets. The results provide a path for assembling other 2D nanosheets into high-performance materials. https://scim.ag/7yW
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Founded in 1880 on $10,000 of seed money from the American inventor Thomas Edison, Science has grown to become the world's leading outlet for scientific news, commentary, and cutting-edge research, with the largest paid circulation of any peer-reviewed general-science journal. Through its print and online incarnations, Science reaches an estimated worldwide readership of more than one million. In content, too, the journal is truly international in scope; some 35 to 40 percent of the corresponding authors on its papers are based outside the United States. Its articles consistently rank among world's most cited research.
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Updates
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Don’t miss this week’s new issue of #ScienceSignaling! A new approach to targeting TGF-beta that straps the protein into a “straitjacket” could lead to safer therapies for fibrosis, our weekly Editors’ Choice selection explores gastric cell differentiation, and more: https://scim.ag/7C0
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In Science, researchers report the characterization of a previously unidentified route by which breast cancer cells metastasize to the leptomeninges in mice. The findings could inform future therapies. 📄: https://scim.ag/7BO #SciencePerspective: https://scim.ag/7BN
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Science Magazine reposted this
While the last two weeks of vacation were fun, it's time for me to get back to the joy of bringing you the latest in Science Magazine and science! In this edition of #ScienceAdviser, we get some good news about restored mangroves, and more: https://lnkd.in/g5hST-Kh
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Cellular senescence, when cells become irreversibly growth arrested after a period of in vitro cell proliferation or in response to sublethal stress or oncogene expression, plays a role in aging phenotypes and age-associated diseases. Increasing evidence shows that senescent cells also have essential physiological functions, such as in tumor suppression, development, wound healing, tissue remodeling, regeneration, and vasculature. This raises important questions about the similarities and differences between senescent cell types and how they function in homeostasis and pathology, and it creates additional challenges in targeting them therapeutically. Learn more in a new #SciencePerspective: https://scim.ag/7Bx
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Controlled experimental infections with Schistosoma mansoni reveal how the human immune response to schistosomiasis changes over time. Read this research and more in the July issue of #ScienceImmunology: https://scim.ag/7Bd
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Congratulations to Kazuki Nagashima, winner of this year’s NOSTER & Science Microbiome Prize for developing a method by which to zero in on individual gut bacterium’s impacts on T cells. Learn more about the work: https://scim.ag/7AM
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A new study on Eucalyptus forests adds to evidence that the global CO2-driven carbon sink may be overestimated by models. Learn more in this week’s issue of #ScienceAdvances: https://scim.ag/7zM
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Scientists construct an acoustic “window” from skull replacement materials to enable noninvasive ultrasound imaging of the brain. Learn more in #ScienceTranslationalMedicine: https://scim.ag/7zx
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