CONTENTS

February 2008

In 2005, Susan Lolle found that a mutant Arabidopsis plant could "fix itself" back to the wild-type, and take on the genetics of its grandparents.This result, as ANDREA GAWRYLEWSKI reports, seemed to contradict the laws of Mendelian inheritance. Have the results held up?

RELATED:

Surprising observations

Slideshow: Images from the lab of Susan Lolle

Every year, more than two million healthy volunteers are poked and prodded in the name of research, and some get thousands of dollars for their time and effort. Payments continue to grow, costing companies more each year. ALLA KATSNELSON asks: Is there such thing as a "fair" price to pay clinical trial subjects? And if so, what is it?

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The international picture

How do trials pay? Play the game

If the number of useful and unique lymphocytes is so small, how are these critical immune cells replenished? STEVEN REINER describes the step-by-step logic and experiments that showed that lymphocytes accomplish this through asymmetric cell division, a process that may play an as-yet undiscovered role in a variety of biologic settings.

RELATED:

Symmetric and asymmetric division models

Video: Asymmetric cell division at work in the T-cell

CONTRIBUTORS

MAIL

EDITORIAL

Cool Heads and Hothead Model behavior on a model organism
RICHARD GALLAGHER

COLUMNS

Think Like a Cockroach How I survived an extinction event in biological research
STEVEN WILEY

How to Teach Research Ethics Two scientists - neither bioethicists - describe the best course they've ever taught.
C. NEAL STEWART, Jr., and J. LANNETT EDWARDS

Notebook

The Agenda; Evolution, over easy; Needling into addiction; Calling charlatans; Tunisian trailblazer

FOUNDATIONS

E.R. Squibb, 1854

PROFILES

Writing on the Fly The Drosophila community has benefited greatly from Michael Ashburner's efforts to annotate the organism's genome - and from his contributions as an author.
KAREN HOPKIN

Scientist to Watch: Eran Segal Computing expression

BIOBUSINESS: Tradition Mixes with Technology At Taiwan's TCM Biotech, Ya-Chun Wang converts ancient Chinese secrets into modern pharmaceuticals - and gets the FDA to pay attention.
BOB GRANT

THE LITERATURE

Hot paper: Demystifying Histone Demethylases Identification of a demethylation protein domain brings on a flood of enzyme discoveries.
KERRY GRENS

Hot paper in Genetics: Broken break repair

Hot paper in Immunology: Inflammasome activator

Hot paper in Genetics: A diabetes variant

Citation Classic: 50 Years Ago in Biochemistry The discovery of transfer RNA
View other Citation Classics

LAB TOOLS

Fine Control With siRNA experiments, you need the right combination of controls before you can trust your results. Here's how to make sure your siRNA ducks are in a row. Plus, profiles of RNAi users: Triple up and rescue; Negative controls; Order in the house and mRNA versus protein. And tips for perfect controls.
MELISSA LEE PHILLIPS

CAREERS

Minding your $ and ¢ How to manage personal finances and plan for retirement on a scientist's budget.
BOB GRANT