3D molecular illustration showing protein complexes in shades of blue and purple. The structures are composed of tightly packed globular units and are arranged to form the digits 1 and 0.

Nature's 10: The people who helped shape science in 2025

A fired public-health official, a mosquito breeder and a baby with a smile seen around the world. These are just a few of the remarkable people chosen for Nature’s 10.

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  • Human–artificial intelligence (AI) dialogues can meaningfully impact voters’ attitudes towards presidential candidates and policy, demonstrating the potential of conversational AI to influence political decision-making.

    • Hause Lin
    • Gabriela Czarnek
    • David G. Rand
    Article
  • A generative artificial intelligence-powered method enables de novo design of highly active enzymes based on information about the geometry of residues in the active site, without requiring protein backbone or sequence information.

    • Donghyo Kim
    • Seth M. Woodbury
    • David Baker
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The analysis of the energy spectrum of 36 million tritium β-decay electrons recorded in 259 measurement days within the last 40 eV below the endpoint challenges the Neutrino-4 claim.

    • H. Acharya
    • M. Aker
    • G. Zeller
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Whole-genome and transcriptome analysis of 1,364 cases of breast cancer from South Korea broadens our understanding of breast cancer biology and reveals genomic features that connect tumour biology with treatment responses and clinical outcomes.

    • Ryul Kim
    • Jonghan Yu
    • Yeon Hee Park
    ArticleOpen Access
Donald Trump stands at a podium speaking into a microphone, holding up some paperwork.

How Trump 2.0 is reshaping science

Since US President Donald Trump took office in January 2025, his team has made major changes to the federal government that have disrupted research and research institutions in the United States and beyond.
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