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Rectification of the intraseasonal SST variability by the diurnal cycle of SST revealed by the global tropical moored buoy array 期刊论文
Geophysical Research Letters, 2020
作者:  Yunwei Yan;  Lei Zhang;  Yi Yu;  Changlin Chen;  Jingyuan Xi;  Fei Chai
收藏  |  浏览/下载:12/0  |  提交时间:2020/12/07
Comparative host-coronavirus protein interaction networks reveal pan-viral disease mechanisms 期刊论文
Science, 2020
作者:  David E. Gordon;  Joseph Hiatt;  Mehdi Bouhaddou;  Veronica V. Rezelj;  Svenja Ulferts;  Hannes Braberg;  Alexander S. Jureka;  Kirsten Obernier;  Jeffrey Z. Guo;  Jyoti Batra;  Robyn M. Kaake;  Andrew R. Weckstein;  Tristan W. Owens;  Meghna Gupta;  Sergei Pourmal;  Erron W. Titus;  Merve Cakir;  Margaret Soucheray;  Michael McGregor;  Zeynep Cakir;  Gwendolyn Jang;  Matthew J. O’Meara;  Tia A. Tummino;  Ziyang Zhang;  Helene Foussard;  Ajda Rojc;  Yuan Zhou;  Dmitry Kuchenov;  Ruth Hüttenhain;  Jiewei Xu;  Manon Eckhardt;  Danielle L. Swaney;  Jacqueline M. Fabius;  Manisha Ummadi;  Beril Tutuncuoglu;  Ujjwal Rathore;  Maya Modak;  Paige Haas;  Kelsey M. Haas;  Zun Zar Chi Naing;  Ernst H. Pulido;  Ying Shi;  Inigo Barrio-Hernandez;  Danish Memon;  Eirini Petsalaki;  Alistair Dunham;  Miguel Correa Marrero;  David Burke;  Cassandra Koh;  Thomas Vallet;  Jesus A. Silvas;  Caleigh M. Azumaya;  Christian Billesbølle;  Axel F. Brilot;  Melody G. Campbell;  Amy Diallo;  Miles Sasha Dickinson;  Devan Diwanji;  Nadia Herrera;  Nick Hoppe;  Huong T. Kratochvil;  Yanxin Liu;  Gregory E. Merz;  Michelle Moritz;  Henry C. Nguyen;  Carlos Nowotny;  Cristina Puchades;  Alexandrea N. Rizo;  Ursula Schulze-Gahmen;  Amber M. Smith;  Ming Sun;  Iris D. Young;  Jianhua Zhao;  Daniel Asarnow;  Justin Biel;  Alisa Bowen;  Julian R. Braxton;  Jen Chen;  Cynthia M. Chio;  Un Seng Chio;  Ishan Deshpande;  Loan Doan;  Bryan Faust;  Sebastian Flores;  Mingliang Jin;  Kate Kim;  Victor L. Lam;  Fei Li;  Junrui Li;  Yen-Li Li;  Yang Li;  Xi Liu;  Megan Lo;  Kyle E. Lopez;  Arthur A. Melo;  Frank R. Moss;  Phuong Nguyen;  Joana Paulino;  Komal Ishwar Pawar;  Jessica K. Peters;  Thomas H. Pospiech;  Maliheh Safari;  Smriti Sangwan;  Kaitlin Schaefer;  Paul V. Thomas;  Aye C. Thwin;  Raphael Trenker;  Eric Tse;  Tsz Kin Martin Tsui;  Feng Wang;  Natalie Whitis;  Zanlin Yu;  Kaihua Zhang;  Yang Zhang;  Fengbo Zhou;  Daniel Saltzberg;  QCRG Structural Biology Consortium12†;  Anthony J. Hodder;  Amber S. Shun-Shion;  Daniel M. Williams;  Kris M. White;  Romel Rosales;  Thomas Kehrer;  Lisa Miorin;  Elena Moreno;  Arvind H. Patel;  Suzannah Rihn;  Mir M. Khalid;  Albert Vallejo-Gracia;  Parinaz Fozouni;  Camille R. Simoneau;  Theodore L. Roth;  David Wu;  Mohd Anisul Karim;  Maya Ghoussaini;  Ian Dunham;  Francesco Berardi;  Sebastian Weigang;  Maxime Chazal;  Jisoo Park;  James Logue;  Marisa McGrath;  Stuart Weston;  Robert Haupt;  C. James Hastie;  Matthew Elliott;  Fiona Brown;  Kerry A. Burness;  Elaine Reid;  Mark Dorward;  Clare Johnson;  Stuart G. Wilkinson;  Anna Geyer;  Daniel M. Giesel;  Carla Baillie;  Samantha Raggett;  Hannah Leech;  Rachel Toth;  Nicola Goodman;  Kathleen C. Keough;  Abigail L. Lind;  Zoonomia Consortium‡;  Reyna J. Klesh;  Kafi R. Hemphill;  Jared Carlson-Stevermer;  Jennifer Oki;  Kevin Holden;  Travis Maures;  Katherine S. Pollard;  Andrej Sali;  David A. Agard;  Yifan Cheng;  James S. Fraser;  Adam Frost;  Natalia Jura;  Tanja Kortemme;  Aashish Manglik;  Daniel R. Southworth;  Robert M. Stroud;  Dario R. Alessi;  Paul Davies;  Matthew B. Frieman;  Trey Ideker;  Carmen Abate;  Nolwenn Jouvenet;  Georg Kochs;  Brian Shoichet;  Melanie Ott;  Massimo Palmarini;  Kevan M. Shokat;  Adolfo García-Sastre;  Jeremy A. Rassen;  Robert Grosse;  Oren S. Rosenberg;  Kliment A. Verba;  Christopher F. Basler;  Marco Vignuzzi;  Andrew A. Peden;  Pedro Beltrao;  Nevan J. Krogan
收藏  |  浏览/下载:25/0  |  提交时间:2020/12/07
Proton-assisted growth of ultra-flat graphene films 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7789) : 204-+
作者:  Yuan, Guowen;  Lin, Dongjing;  Wang, Yong;  Huang, Xianlei;  Chen, Wang;  Xie, Xuedong;  Zong, Junyu;  Yuan, Qian-Qian;  Zheng, Hang;  Wang, Di;  Xu, Jie;  Li, Shao-Chun;  Zhang, Yi;  Sun, Jian;  Xi, Xiaoxiang;  Gao, Libo
收藏  |  浏览/下载:8/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Graphene films grown by chemical vapour deposition have unusual physical and chemical properties that offer promise for applications such as flexible electronics and high-frequency transistors(1-10). However, wrinkles invariably form during growth because of the strong coupling to the substrate, and these limit the large-scale homogeneity of the film(1-4,11,12). Here we develop a proton-assisted method of chemical vapour deposition to grow ultra-flat graphene films that are wrinkle-free. Our method of proton penetration(13-17) and recombination to form hydrogen can also reduce the wrinkles formed during traditional chemical vapour deposition of graphene. Some of the wrinkles disappear entirely, owing to the decoupling of van der Waals interactions and possibly an increase in distance from the growth surface. The electronic band structure of the as-grown graphene films shows a V-shaped Dirac cone and a linear dispersion relation within the atomic plane or across an atomic step, confirming the decoupling from the substrate. The ultra-flat nature of the graphene films ensures that their surfaces are easy to clean after a wet transfer process. A robust quantum Hall effect appears even at room temperature in a device with a linewidth of 100 micrometres. Graphene films grown by proton-assisted chemical vapour deposition should largely retain their intrinsic performance, and our method should be easily generalizable to other nanomaterials for strain and doping engineering.


  
Plastic pollution in croplands threatens long‐term food security 期刊论文
Global Change Biology, 2020
作者:  Dan Zhang;  Ee Ling Ng;  Wanli Hu;  Hongyuan Wang;  Pablo Galaviz;  Hude Yang;  Wentao Sun;  Chongxiao Li;  Xingwang Ma;  Bin Fu;  Peiyi Zhao;  Fulin Zhang;  Shuqin Jin;  Mingdong Zhou;  Lianfeng Du;  Chang Peng;  Xuejun Zhang;  Zhiyu Xu;  Bin Xi;  Xiaoxia Liu;  Shiyou Sun;  Zhenhua Cheng;  Lihua Jiang;  Yufeng Wang;  Liang Gong;  Changlin Kou;  Yan Li;  Youhua Ma;  Dongfeng Huang;  Jian Zhu;  Jianwu Yao;  Chaowen Lin;  Song Qin;  Liuqiang Zhou;  Binghui He;  Deli Chen;  Huanchun Li;  Limei Zhai;  Qiuliang Lei;  Shuxia Wu;  Yitao Zhang;  Junting Pan;  Baojing Gu;  Hongbin Liu
收藏  |  浏览/下载:13/0  |  提交时间:2020/05/13
Radiance-based NIRv as a proxy for GPP of corn and soybean 期刊论文
ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2020, 15 (3)
作者:  Wu, Genghong;  Guan, Kaiyu;  Jiang, Chongya;  Peng, Bin;  Kimm, Hyungsuk;  Chen, Min;  Yang, Xi;  Wang, Sheng;  Suyker, Andrew E.;  Bernacchi, Carl J.;  Moore, Caitlin E.;  Zeng, Yelu;  Berry, Joseph A.;  Pilar Cendrero-Mateo, M.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:15/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/02
photosynthesis  gross primary production  NIRv  near-infrared radiance of vegetation  
Mott and generalized Wigner crystal states in WSe2/WS2 moire superlattices 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 579 (7799) : 359-+
作者:  Yuan, Jie;  Chang, Si-Yuan;  Yin, Shi-Gang;  Liu, Zhi-Yang;  Cheng, Xiu;  Liu, Xi-Juan;  Jiang, Qiang;  Gao, Ge;  Lin, De-Ying;  Kang, Xin-Lei;  Ye, Shi-Wei;  Chen, Zheng;  Yin, Jiang-An;  Hao, Pei;  Jiang, Lubin;  Cai, Shi-Qing
收藏  |  浏览/下载:50/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Strongly correlated insulating Mott and generalized Wigner phases are detected in WSe2/WS2 moire superlattices, and their electrical properties and excited spin states are studied using an optical technique.


Moire superlattices can be used to engineer strongly correlated electronic states in two-dimensional van der Waals heterostructures, as recently demonstrated in the correlated insulating and superconducting states observed in magic-angle twisted-bilayer graphene and ABC trilayer graphene/boron nitride moire superlattices(1-4). Transition metal dichalcogenide moire heterostructures provide another model system for the study of correlated quantum phenomena(5) because of their strong light-matter interactions and large spin-orbit coupling. However, experimental observation of correlated insulating states in this system is challenging with traditional transport techniques. Here we report the optical detection of strongly correlated phases in semiconducting WSe2/WS2 moire superlattices. We use a sensitive optical detection technique and reveal a Mott insulator state at one hole per superlattice site and surprising insulating phases at 1/3 and 2/3 filling of the superlattice, which we assign to generalized Wigner crystallization on the underlying lattice(6-11). Furthermore, the spin-valley optical selection rules(12-14) of transition metal dichalcogenide heterostructures allow us to optically create and investigate low-energy excited spin states in the Mott insulator. We measure a very long spin relaxation lifetime of many microseconds in the Mott insulating state, orders of magnitude longer than that of charge excitations. Our studies highlight the value of using moire superlattices beyond graphene to explore correlated physics.


  
Mutational signature in colorectal cancer caused by genotoxic pks(+)E. coli 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 580 (7802) : 269-+
作者:  Lin, Xi;  Li, Mingyue;  Wang, Niandong;  Wu, Yiran;  Luo, Zhipu;  Guo, Shimeng;  Han, Gye-Won;  Li, Shaobai;  Yue, Yang;  Wei, Xiaohu;  Xie, Xin;  Chen, Yong;  Zhao, Suwen;  Wu, Jian;  Lei, Ming;  Xu, Fei
收藏  |  浏览/下载:23/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Various species of the intestinal microbiota have been associated with the development of colorectal cancer(1,2), but it has not been demonstrated that bacteria have a direct role in the occurrence of oncogenic mutations. Escherichia coli can carry the pathogenicity island pks, which encodes a set of enzymes that synthesize colibactin(3). This compound is believed to alkylate DNA on adenine residues(4,5) and induces double-strand breaks in cultured cells(3). Here we expose human intestinal organoids to genotoxic pks(+)E. coli by repeated luminal injection over five months. Whole-genome sequencing of clonal organoids before and after this exposure revealed a distinct mutational signature that was absent from organoids injected with isogenic pks-mutant bacteria. The same mutational signature was detected in a subset of 5,876 human cancer genomes from two independent cohorts, predominantly in colorectal cancer. Our study describes a distinct mutational signature in colorectal cancer and implies that the underlying mutational process results directly from past exposure to bacteria carrying the colibactin-producing pks pathogenicity island.


Organoids derived from human intestinal cells that are co-cultured with bacteria carrying the genotoxic pks(+) island develop a distinct mutational signature associated with colorectal cancer.


  
Nagaoka ferromagnetism observed in a quantum dot plaquette 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 579 (7800) : 528-533
作者:  Yu, Yong;  Ma, Fei;  Luo, Xi-Yu;  Jing, Bo;  Sun, Peng-Fei;  Fang, Ren-Zhou;  Yang, Chao-Wei;  Liu, Hui;  Zheng, Ming-Yang;  Xie, Xiu-Ping;  Zhang, Wei-Jun;  You, Li-Xing;  Wang, Zhen;  Chen, Teng-Yun;  Zhang, Qiang;  Bao, Xiao-Hui;  Pan, Jian-Wei
收藏  |  浏览/下载:31/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

A quantum dot device designed to host four electrons is used to demonstrate Nagaoka ferromagnetism-a model of itinerant magnetism that has so far been limited to theoretical investigation.


Engineered, highly controllable quantum systems are promising simulators of emergent physics beyond the simulation capabilities of classical computers(1). An important problem in many-body physics is itinerant magnetism, which originates purely from long-range interactions of free electrons and whose existence in real systems has been debated for decades(2,3). Here we use a quantum simulator consisting of a four-electron-site square plaquette of quantum dots(4) to demonstrate Nagaoka ferromagnetism(5). This form of itinerant magnetism has been rigorously studied theoretically(6-9) but has remained unattainable in experiments. We load the plaquette with three electrons and demonstrate the predicted emergence of spontaneous ferromagnetic correlations through pairwise measurements of spin. We find that the ferromagnetic ground state is remarkably robust to engineered disorder in the on-site potentials and we can induce a transition to the low-spin state by changing the plaquette topology to an open chain. This demonstration of Nagaoka ferromagnetism highlights that quantum simulators can be used to study physical phenomena that have not yet been observed in any experimental system. The work also constitutes an important step towards large-scale quantum dot simulators of correlated electron systems.


  
Structural basis of energy transfer in Porphyridium purpureum phycobilisome 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Long, Haizhen;  Zhang, Liwei;  Lv, Mengjie;  Wen, Zengqi;  Zhang, Wenhao;  Chen, Xiulan;  Zhang, Peitao;  Li, Tongqing;  Chang, Luyuan;  Jin, Caiwei;  Wu, Guozhao;  Wang, Xi;  Yang, Fuquan;  Pei, Jianfeng;  Chen, Ping;  Margueron, Raphael;  Deng, Haiteng;  Zhu, Mingzhao;  Li, Guohong
收藏  |  浏览/下载:26/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

The cryo-electron microscopy structure of a phycobilisome from the red alga Porphyridium purpureum reveals how aromatic interactions between the linker proteins and the chromophores drive a unidirectional transfer of energy.


Photosynthetic organisms have developed various light-harvesting systems to adapt to their environments(1). Phycobilisomes are large light-harvesting protein complexes found in cyanobacteria and red algae(2-4), although how the energies of the chromophores within these complexes are modulated by their environment is unclear. Here we report the cryo-electron microscopy structure of a 14.7-megadalton phycobilisome with a hemiellipsoidal shape from the red alga Porphyridium purpureum. Within this complex we determine the structures of 706 protein subunits, including 528 phycoerythrin, 72 phycocyanin, 46 allophycocyanin and 60 linker proteins. In addition, 1,598 chromophores are resolved comprising 1,430 phycoerythrobilin, 48 phycourobilin and 120 phycocyanobilin molecules. The markedly improved resolution of our structure compared with that of the phycobilisome of Griffithsia pacifica(5) enabled us to build an accurate atomic model of the P. purpureum phycobilisome system. The model reveals how the linker proteins affect the microenvironment of the chromophores, and suggests that interactions of the aromatic amino acids of the linker proteins with the chromophores may be a key factor in fine-tuning the energy states of the chromophores to ensure the efficient unidirectional transfer of energy.


  
Gram-scale bottom-up flash graphene synthesis 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 577 (7792) : 647-651
作者:  Long, Haizhen;  Zhang, Liwei;  Lv, Mengjie;  Wen, Zengqi;  Zhang, Wenhao;  Chen, Xiulan;  Zhang, Peitao;  Li, Tongqing;  Chang, Luyuan;  Jin, Caiwei;  Wu, Guozhao;  Wang, Xi;  Yang, Fuquan;  Pei, Jianfeng;  Chen, Ping;  Margueron, Raphael;  Deng, Haiteng;  Zhu, Mingzhao;  Li, Guohong
收藏  |  浏览/下载:13/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Most bulk-scale graphene is produced by a top-down approach, exfoliating graphite, which often requires large amounts of solvent with high-energy mixing, shearing, sonication or electrochemical treatment(1-3). Although chemical oxidation of graphite to graphene oxide promotes exfoliation, it requires harsh oxidants and leaves the graphene with a defective perforated structure after the subsequent reduction step(3,4). Bottom-up synthesis of high-quality graphene is often restricted to ultrasmall amounts if performed by chemical vapour deposition or advanced synthetic organic methods, or it provides a defect-ridden structure if carried out in bulk solution(4-6). Here we show that flash Joule heating of inexpensive carbon sources-such as coal, petroleum coke, biochar, carbon black, discarded food, rubber tyres and mixed plastic waste-can afford gram-scale quantities of graphene in less than one second. The product, named flash graphene (FG) after the process used to produce it, shows turbostratic arrangement (that is, little order) between the stacked graphene layers. FG synthesis uses no furnace and no solvents or reactive gases. Yields depend on the carbon content of the source  when using a high-carbon source, such as carbon black, anthracitic coal or calcined coke, yields can range from 80 to 90 per cent with carbon purity greater than 99 per cent. No purification steps are necessary. Raman spectroscopy analysis shows a low-intensity or absent D band for FG, indicating that FG has among the lowest defect concentrations reported so far for graphene, and confirms the turbostratic stacking of FG, which is clearly distinguished from turbostratic graphite. The disordered orientation of FG layers facilitates its rapid exfoliation upon mixing during composite formation. The electric energy cost for FG synthesis is only about 7.2 kilojoules per gram, which could render FG suitable for use in bulk composites of plastic, metals, plywood, concrete and other building materials.


Flash Joule heating of inexpensive carbon sources is used to produce gram-scale quantities of high-quality graphene in under a second, without the need for a furnace, solvents or reactive gases.