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  • Photochromic materials suffer from degradation when exposed to harsh chemical environments, but this can be overcome by providing chemical shielding via superomniphobicity. Here, the authors show the design rationale and careful materials selection for fabrication of color morphing surfaces that can simultaneously display excellent chemical resistance.

    • Adil Majeed Rather
    • Sravanthi Vallabhuneni
    • Arun Kumar Kota
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The fast-spinning primary of the Didymos near-earth asteroid binary system was found to have a degraded top shape by the DART (NASA) mission. Here, authors find that these surface features observed in the asteroid are more likely to have been caused by collisional effects than by the YORP effect.

    • Adriano Campo Bagatin
    • Aldo Dell’Oro
    • Jean-Baptiste Vincent
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Here, Dillard and Taft-Benz et al. show in a female mouse model how different adjuvants affect inactivated vaccine-mediated protection against homologous SARS-CoV-2 and heterologous SARS-CoV-1-like coronaviruses. They find that an aluminum hydroxide-adjuvanted vaccine can increase risk of adverse outcomes during heterologous infection.

    • Jacob A. Dillard
    • Sharon A. Taft-Benz
    • Mark T. Heise
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Zn batteries suffer from low voltage due to the high redox potential of the Zn anode and the low potential of traditional cathodes. Here, the authors develop a polymer hetero-electrolyte, which allows separated Zn and Li reversibility and achieves a 2.4 V-Zn battery based on the LiNi0.5Mn1.5O4 cathode.

    • Ze Chen
    • Tairan Wang
    • Chunyi Zhi
    ArticleOpen Access
  • CD74, the MHC class II invariant chain, was thought to be mainly expressed by antigen presenting cells. Here the authors report that CD74 is overexpressed by human tumor infiltrating regulatory T cells (Tregs) and that its loss affects Treg accumulation and function in tumors.

    • Elisa Bonnin
    • Maria Rodrigo Riestra
    • Eliane Piaggio
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Remaining drug-tolerant persistent (DTP) cancer cells limit the efficacy of targeted therapy in EGFR, ALK and KRAS mutant non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Here, the authors show that focal adhesion kinase (FAK)-YAP signalling supports DTP cells promoting residual disease and targeting this pathway improved tumour response in NSCLC preclinical models.

    • Franziska Haderk
    • Yu-Ting Chou
    • Trever G. Bivona
    ArticleOpen Access
  • EBV (Epstein-Barr virus)-targeted therapy is limited by efficient agents inducing lytic cycle in cancer cells. Here they report a transcriptional activator incorporated into lipid nanoparticles that could specifically activate endogenous BZLF1 and induce lytic reactivation in EBV-positive cancer cells thereby suppress tumor progression.

    • Man Wu
    • Pok Man Hau
    • Kwok-Wai Lo
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Bose-Einstein condensates (BEC) of ultracold atoms serve as low-entropy sources for a multitude of quantum-science applications. Here, the authors realize a non-ground-state caesium BEC with tunable interactions and tunable loss, opening up new possibilities for polaron and impurity physics.

    • Milena Horvath
    • Sudipta Dhar
    • Hanns-Christoph Nägerl
    ArticleOpen Access
  • A cure for diabetes could entail an effective cell replacement therapy through generation of new insulinproducing cells. In this study, we show that inhibition of focal adhesion kinase activity results in transdifferentiation of a subset of peri-islet acinar cells into functional insulin producing β-like cells.

    • Shakti Dahiya
    • Mohamed Saleh
    • Farzad Esni
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Annotation of cell types and quantification of their relative localization in tissues remain challenging. Here, the authors present AnnoSpat (Annotator and Spatial Pattern Finder), a computational tool that can automatically identify cell types and quantify cell-cell proximity relationships.

    • Aanchal Mongia
    • Fatema Tuz Zohora
    • Robert B. Faryabi
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Molecular recognition of proteins is essential for achieving their biological functions but it is challenging to prepare selective protein-binding materials. Here the authors report a method that combines dynamic covalent chemistry and double molecular imprinting to construct protein-recognizing nanoparticles capable of specific inhibition of protein–protein interactions.

    • Avijit Ghosh
    • Mansi Sharma
    • Yan Zhao
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Chiral antiferromagnets, such as Mn3Pt, host a variety of transport phenomena arising due to the chiral arrangement of the spins. Herein, the authors find two contributions to the anomalous hall effect in Mn3Pt, and through comparison with other chiral antiferromagnets develop a universal scaling law for the anomalous hall effect in chiral antiferromagnets.

    • Shijie Xu
    • Bingqian Dai
    • Weisheng Zhao
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Spin-momentum locking is a fundamental property of condensed matter systems. Here, the authors evidence parallel Weyl spin-momentum locking of multifold fermions in the chiral topological semimetal PtGa.

    • Jonas A. Krieger
    • Samuel Stolz
    • Niels B. M. Schröter
    ArticleOpen Access