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Divergent Roles of PI3K Isoforms in PTEN-Deficient Glioblastomas

(Cell Reports 32, 108196; September 29, 2020)

As this paper was originally published on September 29, 2020, Figure 3C showed similar imagery across western blot analyses for αTubulin and pAkt473. This error was caused by an inadvertent swap of two loading control panels of αTubulin and Akt that appeared during figure assembly. The corrected figure can be seen below.

The error and correction thereof do not affect the results or conclusions of the study. The authors apologize for any confusion caused.

How Beavers Save a Drying Rainforest

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What does it take to keep water in a landscape that’s slowly forgetting how to hold it? Heliox investigates the drought that stunned a Canadian rainforest — and the ancient, low-tech, furry solution that gray infrastructure couldn’t match. A deep dive into watershed science, ecological restoration, and the surprising return of North America’s original hydraulic engineers.

This Supervolcano Is Refilling With Magma After 7,300 Years

A supervolcano that once shook the Earth is quietly recharging—and scientists are finally seeing how it happens.

Scientists have found that the magma reservoir linked to the largest volcanic eruption of the Holocene is filling again. The discovery, led by Kobe University researchers studying Japan’s Kikai caldera, offers new insight into how massive caldera systems such as Yellowstone and Toba behave and may improve our ability to anticipate future activity.

What Makes Supervolcanoes So Powerful

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