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Intergenerational transmission of the proteome?

April 9, 2026

Intergenerational transmission of the proteome?

Cells adjust their proteome to environmental conditions, but it remains unclear whether the proteome can be transmitted from parents to offspring. Sigma Pradhan, Benjamin Towbin and colleagues analyze the intergenerational effects of dietary restriction in C. elegans and show that maternal mTORC1 activity governs the transfer of ribosomes, thereby modulating early growth and development. Don't miss the Primer by Elif Cenik

Image credit: pbio.3003692

PLOS Biologue

Community blog for PLOS Biology, PLOS Genetics and PLOS Computational Biology.

PLOS BIOLOGUE

04/10/2026

Research Article

Bacterial bioplastic kills nematodes

Some bacteria polymerize excess carbon into polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB), a biodegradable storage polymer, but its role in host–microbe interactions remains unclear. Gabrielle Giese, Daniel Richards, Albertha Walhout and co-workers reveal that PHB-producing bacteria kill the nematode C. elegans by disrupting pharyngeal and intestinal function, partially rescued by mutations in the DNase II gene nuc-1.

Image credit: Gregory Hendricks

Bacterial bioplastic kills nematodes

Recently Published Articles

Current Issue

Current Issue March 2026

04/10/2026

Research Article

Agonist selectivity of sphingosine-1-phosphate receptors

Sphingosine-1-phosphate receptors (S1PRs) play complex roles in several pathological processes, which has led to the development of pharmacological modulators. Leiye Yu, Haizhan Jiao, Bin Pang, Rujuan Ti and co-authors solve the cryo-EM structures of four agonist-bound S1PR1-Gi1 complexes and reveal the structural determinants underlying agonist selectivity among different subtypes.

Image credit: pbio.3003381

Agonist selectivity of sphingosine-1-phosphate receptors

04/08/2026

Research Article

c-di-GMP control in cyanobacteria

Cyclic‑di‑GMP regulates diverse bacterial functions, but how the many enzymes involved in its synthesis or degradation coordinate its homeostasis and physiological thresholds is unclear. Qing-Xue Sun, Xiaoli Zeng, Cheng-Cai Zhang and colleagues show that the 16 enzymes involved in c-di-GMP turnover in Anabaena function as an electromechanical-like dual relay to control c-di-GMP dynamics that mediate Anabaena cell size and viability.

Image credit: pbio.3003750

c-di-GMP control in cyanobacteria

04/07/2026

Research Article

Sleep strengthens sequence learning

The neural dynamics of how experiences reshape our internal representations of the world are largely unknown. Xianhui He, Bernhard Staresina and co-workers reveal that learning sequential experiences reshapes how the brain represents what we see, and that a post-learning nap strengthens these predictive changes.

Sleep strengthens sequence learning

Image credit: pbio.3003740

04/06/2026

Research Article

m6Am modifications and bone maintenance

Emerging research has highlighted the regulatory roles of m6A RNA modifications on bone homeostasis, but what about m6Am modifications? Wei Song, Kuan-Jui Su, Hong-Wen Deng, Quan Yuan and co-authors show that the PCIF1 m6Am methyltransferase supports bone mass maintenance by stabilizing Wnt pathway transcripts and promoting osteogenic differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells.

m6Am modifications and bone maintenance

Image credit: pbio.3003739

04/06/2026

Research Article

GRAMD1C is a pan-coronavirus antiviral target

Coronaviruses remodel host membranes for replication, but the lipid transport pathways involved are poorly understood. Zhelin Su, Limeng Sun, Guiqing Peng and colleagues identify the cholesterol transporter GRAMD1C as a host factor that promotes replication organelle formation and supports replication across multiple coronaviruses, revealing a broad-spectrum antiviral target.

GRAMD1C is a pan-coronavirus antiviral target

Image credit: pbio.3003736

04/06/2026

Perspective

Improving research funding

The competitive research funding system is at breaking point. Peter Kolarz argues that innovations to address this are needed on a grander scale than ever before, but this will not suffice; whole system transformation is required.

Improving research funding

Image credit: Unsplash user Alexander Grey

03/26/2026

Formal Comment

A responsible authorship culture is needed

In this Formal Comment, representatives from PLOS, Nature and JAMA call for action on adopting a principle-based approach for a responsible authorship culture.

A responsible authorship culture is needed

Image credit: Roli Roberts

03/23/2026

Unsolved Mystery

The cerebellum and cognition

The role of the cerebellum in motor functions is well understood, but why is it involved in working memory, language, social cognition, etc.? This Unsolved Mystery looks at the problems that have made it so difficult to answer this question.

The cerebellum and cognition

Image credit: pbio.3003688

03/18/2026

Perspective

Strengthening biosafety and biosecurity practices

What concrete steps can we take to reinforce biorisk management? This Perspective advocates for robust gatekeeping of funding and publication using a new formal reporting standard for pathogen research.

Strengthening biosafety and biosecurity practices

Image credit: NIAID via Wikimedia Commons

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