ON THE COVER: Nereocystis luetkeana, seen here in Port Renfrew, British Columbia, is a canopy-forming kelp that is common in the nearshore waters of the Northeast Pacific. It exhibits pronounced morphological plasticity across hydrodynamic gradients that allows it to minimize drag experienced in flow while maximizing light interception. Photo credit: L. Coleman
Immunofluorescence image of Plasmodium berghei sporozoites (red) in HeLa cells 1.5 hours post infection. The parasitophorous vacuole membrane (PVM) that surrounds the parasites was stained with antibodies against the PVM‐resident protein UIS4 (grey). DNA was stained with DAPI (blue). Imaging was performed on a Leica SP8 confocal microscope. For further details, readers are referred to the article by Bindschedler et al. on p. e13271 of this issue.
Transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) with wavelength at 808 nm was applied to a rat model of acute seizures. The tPBM successfully attenuated convulsive status epilepticus, and the tPBM was shown to reduce the apoptosis of parvalbumin‐positive interneurons (PV‐INs) and preserved the integrity of perisomatic inhibitory network of PV‐INs to principle cells in the hippocampus. Further details can be found in the article by Chung‐Min Tsai, Shwu‐Fen Chang, and Hsi Chang ( e202000095 ).
Cover Image The pistillate-phase flowers of Artabotrys (Annonaceae): A. blumei (left) and A. brachypetalus (right). Photos by Junhao Chen, taken in Hong Kong and South Africa, respectively (DOI: 10.1111/1442-1984.12273 ).
Lake Inle, a pristine lake in Myanmar, is known to harbor a number of endemic aquatic species and is a home to an enigmatic cyanobacterium Oscillatoria kawamurae, which was first reported in Lake Biwa (Japan). Macroscopic trichome (upper left), microscopic image (upper middle). Photos by Phong San (Lake Inle) and Nanda Kyaw Thu (O. kawamurae). See Thu et al. in this issue. Cover picture from: Article link here
An optical fan was demonstrated to screen leukemia cells from the blood sample at the single‐cell level in a noninvasive and noncontact manner. Further details can be found in the article by Xiaoshuai Liu, Yuchao Li, Xiaohao Xu, Yao Zhang, Baojun Li ( e201900155 ).
Scanning electron micrographs of two members of the marine diatom genus Nagumoea, N. africana (the left four photos) and N. serrata (the right two). This genus is characterized as unique by the ladder-like structure of its internal valve as shown in the image. Morphology and molecular phylogeny of this genus are reported by Sugawara et al. in this issue.
The detection of colon cancer by using Poincaré sphere and 2D polarimetric imaging approach. Further details can be found in the article by Deyan Ivanov, Viktor Dremin, Alexander Bykov, Ekaterina Borisova, et al. ( e202000082 ).
Images of bacterial cells stained with KK114 dye and visualized with STED microscopy. On the monitor: large field of view of B. subtilis cells, the KK114 ball‐and‐stick model and the schematics of the STED setup. Different space‐filling representations of the FtsZ protein are also shown. Further details can be found in the article by Massimiliano Lucidi, Radu Hristu, Lorenzo Nichele, George A. Stanciu, Denis E. Tranca, Alina Maria Holban, Paolo Visca, Stefan G. Stanciu, and Gabriella Cincotti ( e202000097 ).
Beautiful underwater view of an edible brown alga, Sargassum fusiforme (Fucales, Phaeophyceae) at the rocky shore in Sakurajima, Kagoshima, Japan (Photo by Ryuta Terada). Characteristic responses of the PSII photochemical efficiency on desiccation and salinity gradients in S. fusiforme are reported by Yonemori et al. in this issue.
A type of compact and cost‐effective light‐sheet imaging device, termed sub‐voxel‐resolving light‐sheet add‐on module (SLAM), is developed to cooperate with conventional 2D epifluorescence microscope, allowing high‐contrast, resolution‐improved 3D imaging of various biological samples at high throughput. Further details can be found in the article by Fang Zhao, Yicong Yang, Yi Li, et al. ( e201960243 ).
Cover Image An infl orescence of Clerodendrum izuinsulare (left) and C. trichotomum (right). Photos by Natsuki Aihara in Niijima Island (left) and by Takashi Miyake in Izu Peninsula (right), Japan. Miyake et al., doi.org/10.1111/1442-1984.12287
Cover Image Tulipa pumila. This photo was taken by Sandro Pratesi at Doccino at the municipality of Riparbella, province of Pisa, Tuscany, Italy (DOI: 10.1111/1442-1984.12267 ).
The cover image is based on the Original Article Regulatory role of human fibrocartilage stem cells in condyle osteochondroma by Qing Yin et al., https://doi.org/10.1111/cpr.13342 .
The figure shows the detailed morphology of vasculature and dynamic changes of the blood vessel diameter and density and the oxygen saturation in the blood vessels in fetal brain after acute prenatal ethanol exposure in the second‐trimester equivalent murine model obtained using a real‐time photoacoustic tomography (PAT) system. Further details can be found in the article by Tianqi Shan, Yuan Zhao, Shixie Jiang, Huabei Jiang ( e201960161 ).
CRISPR-Cas9 system with PEG-mediated transfection was efficient for genome editing in Ulva prolifera. U. prolifera (left) and male gametes (middle). Wild type (upper right) and the genome-edited strain (lower right) cultured in 2-FA selection medium, and each mutation site on the APT gene. See Ichihara et al. in this issue.
Photographs of Kulikovskiyia triundulata gen. et sp. nov. along with holotypic locality. Upper left: Photograph of the holotypic locality (lateritic rocky plateau of Maharashtra, India). Upper middle: Live cell showing chloroplast structure in valve view. Upper right: DIC image of a frustule in valve view. Lower: SEM image of the external valve showing peripheral and apical spines, siliceous slats and tri‐undulate valve shape. See Roy et al. in this issue. Cover picture from: Article link here