PLOS Biology (original) (raw)

The nighttime of the isolated cortex

October 16, 2025

The nighttime of the isolated cortex

Hemispherotomy is a neurosurgical procedure for treating refractory epilepsy by disconnecting a significant portion of the cortex. Michele Colombo, Jacopo Favaro, Marcello Massimini and colleagues show that the isolated cortex exhibits EEG patterns resembling deep sleep or anesthesia, with slow oscillations and reduced markers of consciousness.

Image credit: Michele A. Colombo

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PLOS BIOLOGUE

10/17/2025

Research Article

Expanded functional genomics for Candida albicans

Candida albicans is a leading opportunistic fungal pathogen of humans. Ci Fu, Leah Cowen and co-workers expand the GRACE library, the largest functional genomics resource in C. albicans, and identify genes important for temperature-dependent fitness, highlighting the transformative potential of functional genomics to uncover vulnerabilities in pathogenic fungi.

Image credit: pbio.3003409

Expanded functional genomics for Candida albicans

Recently Published Articles

10/16/2025

Research Article

Pikas remodel their gut microbiota to overwinter

Winter-active herbivores often experience difficulty obtaining sufficient nitrogen during winter months, when dietary protein becomes scarce. Fuyu Shi, Yanming Zhang, Dehua Wang and co-authors reveal that winter protein restriction drives gut microbiome remodeling in the non-hibernating plateau pika, increasing microbiome nitrogen recycling capacity and helping maintain host protein balance.

Image credit: Pixabay user makieni777

Pikas remodel their gut microbiota to overwinter

10/16/2025

Research Article

Detecting visual salience

Visual salience generation involves center-surround dynamics, but which components of the visual system perform these computations as opposed to inheriting them from other regions? Peng Cui, Kuisong Song, Andreas Kardamakis and colleagues show that the mouse superior colliculus encodes center-surround dynamics under isolated conditions, and provide insights into the circuit implementation.

Image credit: Peng Cui

Detecting visual salience

10/15/2025

Research Article

Repeat-induced point mutations across fungi

Fungal genome size variation is largely driven by transposable elements and shaped by lineage-specific genome defense mechanisms. Thomas Badet and Daniel Croll show that the presence or absence of repeat-induced point mutation systems influences genome architecture, with a zinc-finger protein emerging as a candidate for a novel defense mechanism across fungal lineages.

Repeat-induced point mutations across fungi

Image credit: pbio.3003433

10/14/2025

Research Article

Neophobia in birds

Neophobia (the aversive response to novelty) varies considerably across species and individuals, and can impact adaptability and survival. Rachel Miller and colleagues from the ManyBirds Project consortium assess neophobia in 1400 subjects from 136 bird species across 25 orders, identifying phylogenetic influences and broad ecological drivers of neophobia.

Neophobia in birds

Image credit: Kai Caspar

10/13/2025

Research Article

No route from the nucleus reuniens to the hippocampus

Excitatory input from the prefrontal cortex to hippocampus pyramidal cells is commonly believed to be mediated through the thalamic nucleus reuniens brain region. Lilya Andrianova, Michael Craig and co-authors show in rodents that this brain pathway is unexpectedly minor, contrary to assumptions in the field.

No route from the nucleus reuniens to the hippocampus

Image credit: pbio.3003419

10/16/2025

Essay

Exudates, microbes and sustainable agriculture

Intercropping and crop rotation are ancient agricultural practices. This Essay explores the role of plant-derived metabolites and plant-associated microbes in these agricultural systems and how they can help sustainable agriculture.

Exudates, microbes and sustainable agriculture

Image credit: pbio.3003416

09/30/2025

Perspective

Addressing biodiversity loss

Transformative change for a just and sustainable world often appears overwhelming. This Perspective highlights the key messages from the IPBES Transformative Change Assessment and how everyone can help to achieve transformative change.

Addressing biodiversity loss

Image credit: pbio.3003387

09/24/2025

Consensus View

Ending publication bias

Null and negative results are still underreported. This Consensus View discusses the problem of such publication bias and presents a roadmap to a solution that has a role for everyone in promoting knowledge sharing, research transparency and rigor.

Ending publication bias

Image credit: pbio.3003368

09/15/2025

Unsolved Mystery

The complexity of m6A writing

Post-transcriptional gene regulation via m6A deposition is catalyzed by a multi-protein writer complex. This Unsolved Mystery investigates why the complex requires multiple subunits and what roles its individual proteins might have in m6A regulation.

The complexity of m6A writing

Image credit: pbio.3003386

Recent technological advancements in omics have unveiled the mechanisms governing tumor progression across spatial and temporal scales. This collection reveals the complexities of the crosstalk between cancer cells and the tumor microenvironment.

Neurotechnology offers unprecedented opportunities to treat neural disorders, restore brain function and enhance cognitive abilities. This collection explores the present and possible futures of neurotechnology to improve human health and cognition.

Translating conservation and biodiversity research from the field into the real world is a complex problem. This collection discusses issues around economics, policy, and how to do research that answers questions that decision makers have.

Symbiosis research has become a holistic and pervasive field with a mature theoretical basis. This collection showcases symbiotic relationships across the tree of life, exploring their evolutionary basis and underlying mechanisms.

PLOS Biology is 20 and we are celebrating with a collection that contains articles that look back at landmark studies that we published, others that look past and future, and others discussing how publishing and open science have evolved and what is to come.
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