journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33148179/hidden-paths-to-endless-forms-most-wonderful-complexity-of-bacterial-motility-shapes-diversification-of-latent-phenotypes
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Olaya Rendueles, Gregory J Velicer
BACKGROUND: Evolution in one selective environment often latently generates phenotypic change that is manifested only later in different environments, but the complexity of behavior important to fitness in the original environment might influence the character of such latent-phenotype evolution. Using Myxococcus xanthus, a bacterium possessing two motility systems differing in effectiveness on hard vs. soft surfaces, we test (i) whether and how evolution while swarming on one surface-the selective surface-latently alters motility on the alternative surface type and (ii) whether patterns of such latent-phenotype evolution depend on the complexity of ancestral motility, specific ancestral motility genotypes and/or the selective surface of evolution...
November 4, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33148176/four-myriapod-relatives-but-who-are-sisters-no-end-to-debates-on-relationships-among-the-four-major-myriapod-subgroups
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nikolaus U Szucsich, Daniela Bartel, Alexander Blanke, Alexander Böhm, Alexander Donath, Makiko Fukui, Simon Grove, Shanlin Liu, Oliver Macek, Ryuichiro Machida, Bernhard Misof, Yasutaka Nakagaki, Lars Podsiadlowski, Kaoru Sekiya, Shigekazu Tomizuka, Björn M Von Reumont, Robert M Waterhouse, Manfred Walzl, Guanliang Meng, Xin Zhou, Günther Pass, Karen Meusemann
BACKGROUND: Phylogenetic relationships among the myriapod subgroups Chilopoda, Diplopoda, Symphyla and Pauropoda are still not robustly resolved. The first phylogenomic study covering all subgroups resolved phylogenetic relationships congruently to morphological evidence but is in conflict with most previously published phylogenetic trees based on diverse molecular data. Outgroup choice and long-branch attraction effects were stated as possible explanations for these incongruencies. In this study, we addressed these issues by extending the myriapod and outgroup taxon sampling using transcriptome data...
November 4, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33143638/multiple-waves-of-freshwater-colonization-of-the-three-spined-stickleback-in-the-japanese-archipelago
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryo Kakioka, Seiichi Mori, Tomoyuki Kokita, Takuya K Hosoki, Atsushi J Nagano, Asano Ishikawa, Manabu Kume, Atsushi Toyoda, Jun Kitano
BACKGROUND: The three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) is a remarkable system to study the genetic mechanisms underlying parallel evolution during the transition from marine to freshwater habitats. Although the majority of previous studies on the parallel evolution of sticklebacks have mainly focused on postglacial freshwater populations in the Pacific Northwest of North America and northern Europe, we recently use Japanese stickleback populations for investigating shared and unique features of adaptation and speciation between geographically distant populations...
November 3, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33143637/evolutionary-history-of-the-c-repeat-binding-factor-dehydration-responsive-element-binding-1-cbf-dreb1-protein-family-in-43-plant-species-and-characterization-of-cbf-dreb1-proteins-in-solanum-tuberosum
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wan Li, Yue Chen, Minghui Ye, Haibin Lu, Dongdong Wang, Qin Chen
BACKGROUND: Plants are easily affected by temperature variations, and high temperature (heat stress) and low temperature (cold stress) will lead to poor plant development and reduce crop yields. Therefore, it is very important to identify resistance genes for improving the ability of plants to resist heat stress or cold stress by using modern biotechnology. Members of the C-repeat binding factor/Dehydration responsive element-binding 1 (CBF/DREB1) protein family are related to the stress resistance of many plant species...
November 3, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33138771/a-phylogenomic-study-of-steganinae-fruit-flies-diptera-drosophilidae-strong-gene-tree-heterogeneity-and-evidence-for-monophyly
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guilherme Rezende Dias, Eduardo Guimarães Dupim, Thyago Vanderlinde, Beatriz Mello, Antonio Bernardo Carvalho
BACKGROUND: The Drosophilidae family is traditionally divided into two subfamilies: Drosophilinae and Steganinae. This division is based on morphological characters, and the two subfamilies have been treated as monophyletic in most of the literature, but some molecular phylogenies have suggested Steganinae to be paraphyletic. To test the paraphyletic-Steganinae hypothesis, here, we used genomic sequences of eight Drosophilidae (three Steganinae and five Drosophilinae) and two Ephydridae (outgroup) species and inferred the phylogeny for the group based on a dataset of 1,028 orthologous genes present in all species (> 1,000,000 bp)...
November 2, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33129255/directional-divergence-of-ep300-duplicates-in-teleosts-and-its-implications
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xianzong Wang, Junli Yan
BACKGROUND: EP300 is a conserved protein in vertebrates, which serves as a key mediator of cellular homeostasis. Mutations and dysregulation of EP300 give rise to severe human developmental disorders and malignancy. Danio rerio is a promising model organism to study EP300 related diseases and drugs; however, the effect of EP300 duplicates derived from teleost-specific whole genome duplication should not just be neglected. RESULTS: In this study, we obtained EP300 protein sequences of representative teleosts, mammals and sauropsids, with which we inferred a highly supported maximum likelihood tree...
October 31, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33121428/the-sensitivity-of-a-honeybee-colony-to-worker-mortality-depends-on-season-and-resource-availability
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natalie J Lemanski, Siddhant Bansal, Nina H Fefferman
BACKGROUND: Honeybees have extraordinary phenotypic plasticity in their senescence rate, making them a fascinating model system for the evolution of aging. Seasonal variation in senescence and extrinsic mortality results in a tenfold increase in worker life expectancy in winter as compared to summer. To understand the evolution of this remarkable pattern of aging, we must understand how individual longevity scales up to effects on the entire colony. In addition, threats to the health of honey bees and other social insects are typically measured at the individual level...
October 29, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33115401/exact-median-tree-inference-for-unrooted-reconciliation-costs
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paweł Górecki, Alexey Markin, Oliver Eulenstein
BACKGROUND: Solving median tree problems under tree reconciliation costs is a classic and well-studied approach for inferring species trees from collections of discordant gene trees. These problems are NP-hard, and therefore are, in practice, typically addressed by local search heuristics. So far, however, such heuristics lack any provable correctness or precision. Further, even for small phylogenetic studies, it has been demonstrated that local search heuristics may only provide sub-optimal solutions...
October 28, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33109104/whole-genome-resequencing-provides-insights-into-the-evolution-and-divergence-of-the-native-domestic-yaks-of-the-qinghai-tibet-plateau
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Zhi-Xin Chai, Jin-Wei Xin, Cheng-Fu Zhang, Dawayangla, Luosang, Qiang Zhang, Pingcuozhandui, Chao Li, Yong Zhu, Han-Wen Cao, Hui Wang, Jian-Lin Han, Qiu-Mei Ji, Jin-Cheng Zhong
BACKGROUND: On the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, known as the roof ridge of the world, the yak is a precious cattle species that has been indispensable to the human beings living in this high-altitude area. However, the origin of domestication, dispersal route, and the divergence of domestic yaks from different areas are poorly understood. RESULTS: Here, we resequenced the genome of 91 domestic yak individuals from 31 populations and 1 wild yaks throughout China. Using a population genomics approach, we observed considerable genetic variation...
October 27, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33109084/the-evolution-of-fruit-scent-phylogenetic-and-developmental-constraints
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Omer Nevo, Kim Valenta, Annemarie Kleiner, Diary Razafimandimby, Juan Antonio James Jeffrey, Colin A Chapman, Manfred Ayasse
BACKGROUND: Fruit scent is increasingly recognized as an evolved signal whose function is to attract animal seed dispersers and facilitate plant reproduction. However, like all traits, fruit scent is likely to evolve in response to conflicting selective pressures and various constraints. Two major constraints are (i) phylogenetic constraints, in which traits are inherited from ancestors rather than adapted to current conditions and (ii) developmental constraints, if phenotypes are limited by the expression of other traits within the individual...
October 27, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33076840/frequent-birth-and-death-events-throughout-perforin-1-evolution
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Miguel Araujo-Voces, Víctor Quesada
BACKGROUND: Through its ability to open pores in cell membranes, perforin-1 plays a key role in the immune system. Consistent with this role, the gene encoding perforin shows hallmarks of complex evolutionary events, including amplification and pseudogenization, in multiple species. A large proportion of these events occurred in phyla for which scarce genomic data were available. However, recent large-scale genomics projects have added a wealth of information on those phyla. Using this input, we annotated perforin-1 homologs in more than eighty species including mammals, reptiles, birds, amphibians and fishes...
October 19, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33076817/divergent-genes-in-gerbils-prevalence-relation-to-gc-biased-substitution-and-phenotypic-relevance
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yichen Dai, Rodrigo Pracana, Peter W H Holland
BACKGROUND: Two gerbil species, sand rat (Psammomys obesus) and Mongolian jird (Meriones unguiculatus), can become obese and show signs of metabolic dysregulation when maintained on standard laboratory diets. The genetic basis of this phenotype is unknown. Recently, genome sequencing has uncovered very unusual regions of high guanine and cytosine (GC) content scattered across the sand rat genome, most likely generated by extreme and localized biased gene conversion. A key pancreatic transcription factor PDX1 is encoded by a gene in the most extreme GC-rich region, is remarkably divergent and exhibits altered biochemical properties...
October 19, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33059595/correction-to-an-integrative-phylogenomic-approach-to-elucidate-the-evolutionary-history-and-divergence-times-of-neuropterida-insecta-holometabola
#33
Alexandros Vasilikopoulos, Bernhard Misof, Karen Meusemann, Doria Lieberz, Tomáš Flouri, Rolf G Beutel, Oliver Niehuis, Torsten Wappler, Jes Rust, Ralph S Peters, Alexander Donath, Lars Podsiadlowski, Christoph Mayer, Daniela Bartel, Alexander Böhm, Shanlin Liu, Paschalia Kapli, Carola Greve, James E Jepson, Xingyue Liu, Xin Zhou, Horst Aspöck, Ulrike Aspöck
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via the original article.
October 15, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33028204/molecular-evolutionary-and-structural-analysis-of-human-uchl1-gene-demonstrates-the-relevant-role-of-intragenic-epistasis-in-parkinson-s-disease-and-other-neurological-disorders
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Muhammad Saqib Nawaz, Razia Asghar, Nashaiman Pervaiz, Shahid Ali, Irfan Hussain, Peiqi Xing, Yiming Bao, Amir Ali Abbasi
BACKGROUND: Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder. PD associated human UCHL1 (Ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1) gene belongs to the family of deubiquitinases and is known to be highly expressed in neurons (1-2% in soluble form). Several functions of UCHL1 have been proposed including ubiquitin hydrolyze activity, ubiquitin ligase activity and stabilization of the mono-ubiquitin. Mutations in human UCHL1 gene have been associated with PD and other neurodegenerative disorders...
October 7, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33028200/correction-to-potential-causes-and-consequences-of-rapid-mitochondrial-genome-evolution-in-thermoacidophilic-galdieria-rhodophyta
#35
Chung Hyun Cho, Seung In Park, Claudia Ciniglia, Eun Chan Yang, Louis Graf, Debashish Bhattacharya, Hwan Su Yoon
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via the original article.
October 7, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33028198/the-flattened-and-needlelike-leaves-of-the-pine-family-pinaceae-share-a-conserved-genetic-network-for-adaxial-abaxial-polarity-but-have-diverged-for-photosynthetic-adaptation
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hong Du, Jin-Hua Ran, Yuan-Yuan Feng, Xiao-Quan Wang
BACKGROUND: Leaves have highly diverse morphologies. However, with an evolutionary history of approximately 200 million years, leaves of the pine family are relatively monotonous and often collectively called "needles", although they vary in length, width and cross-section shapes. It would be of great interest to determine whether Pinaceae leaves share similar morpho-physiological features and even consistent developmental and adaptive mechanisms. RESULTS: Based on a detailed morpho-anatomical study of leaves from all 11 Pinaceae genera, we particularly investigated the expression patterns of adaxial-abaxial polarity genes in two types of leaves (needlelike and flattened) and compared their photosynthetic capacities...
October 7, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33008334/an-enigmatic-translocation-of-the-vertebrate-primordial-eye-field
#37
REVIEW
R G Loosemore, S D Matthaei, T C Stanger
The primordial eye field of the vertebrate embryo is a single entity of retinal progenitor cells spanning the anterior neural plate before bifurcating to form bilateral optic vesicles. Here we review fate mapping data from zebrafish suggesting that prior to evagination of the optic vesicles the eye field may undergo a Maypole-plait migration of progenitor cells through the midline influenced by the anteriorly subducting diencephalon. Such an enigmatic translocation of scaffolding progenitors could have evolutionary significance if pointing, by way of homology, to an ancient mechanism for transition of the single eye field in chordates to contralateral eye fields in vertebrates...
October 2, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32977769/mitochondrial-nuclear-coadaptation-revealed-through-mtdna-replacements-in-saccharomyces-cerevisiae
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tuc H M Nguyen, Sargunvir Sondhi, Andrew Ziesel, Swati Paliwal, Heather L Fiumera
BACKGROUND: Mitochondrial function requires numerous genetic interactions between mitochondrial- and nuclear- encoded genes. While selection for optimal mitonuclear interactions should result in coevolution between both genomes, evidence for mitonuclear coadaptation is challenging to document. Genetic models where mitonuclear interactions can be explored are needed. RESULTS: We systematically exchanged mtDNAs between 15 Saccharomyces cerevisiae isolates from a variety of ecological niches to create 225 unique mitochondrial-nuclear genotypes...
September 25, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32972368/floral-signals-evolve-in-a-predictable-way-under-artificial-and-pollinator-selection-in-brassica-rapa
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pengjuan Zu, Florian P Schiestl, Daniel Gervasi, Xin Li, Daniel Runcie, Frédéric Guillaume
BACKGROUND: Angiosperms employ an astonishing variety of visual and olfactory floral signals that are generally thought to evolve under natural selection. Those morphological and chemical traits can form highly correlated sets of traits. It is not always clear which of these are used by pollinators as primary targets of selection and which would be indirectly selected by being linked to those primary targets. Quantitative genetics tools for predicting multiple traits response to selection have been developed since long and have advanced our understanding of evolution of genetically correlated traits in various biological systems...
September 24, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32962630/phenotypic-coupling-of-sleep-and-starvation-resistance-evolves-in-d-melanogaster
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Didem P Sarikaya, Julie Cridland, Adam Tarakji, Hayley Sheehy, Sophia Davis, Ashley Kochummen, Ryan Hatmaker, Nossin Khan, Joanna Chiu, David J Begun
BACKGROUND: One hypothesis for the function of sleep is that it serves as a mechanism to conserve energy. Recent studies have suggested that increased sleep can be an adaptive mechanism to improve survival under food deprivation in Drosophila melanogaster. To test the generality of this hypothesis, we compared sleep and its plastic response to starvation in a temperate and tropical population of Drosophila melanogaster. RESULTS: We found that flies from the temperate population were more starvation resistant, and hypothesized that they would engage in behaviors that are considered to conserve energy, including increased sleep and reduced movement...
September 22, 2020: BMC Evolutionary Biology
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