keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37095629/molecular-evolution-of-patristacin-genes-in-teleosts-based-on-the-genome-survey
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yuko Nakano, Tatsuki Nagasawa, Yohei Okazawa, Naoya Mashiko, Shigeki Yasumasu, Mari Kawaguchi
During the evolution of astacin metalloprotease family genes, gene duplication occurred, especially in the lineage of teleosts, in which several types of astacins containing six conserved cysteines (c6ast) emerged. One of them is patristacin, originally found in syngnathid fishes, such as pipefishes and seahorses. Patristacin is expressed in the brood pouch and is present on the same chromosome as other c6ast (pactacin and nephrosin) genes. We first surveyed all the genes from 33 teleost species using a genome database, and characterized the genes by phylogenetic analysis...
April 24, 2023: Journal of Experimental Zoology. Part B, Molecular and Developmental Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36969711/improvements-to-the-gulf-pipefish-syngnathus-scovelli-genome
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Balan Ramesh, Clay M Small, Hope Healey, Bernadette Johnson, Elyse Barker, Mark Currey, Susan Bassham, Megean Myers, William A Cresko, Adam Gregory Jones
The Gulf pipefish Syngnathus scovelli has emerged as an important species for studying sexual selection, development, and physiology. Comparative evolutionary genomics research involving fishes from Syngnathidae depends on having a high-quality genome assembly and annotation. However, the first S. scovelli genome assembled using short-read sequences and a smaller RNA-sequence dataset has limited contiguity and a relatively poor annotation. Here, using PacBio long-read high-fidelity sequences and a proximity ligation library, we generate an improved assembly to obtain 22 chromosome-level scaffolds...
2023: GigaByte
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36959216/unmasking-pipefish-otolith-using-synchrotron-based-scanning-x-ray-fluorescence
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vincent Haÿ, Sophie Berland, Kadda Medjoubi, Andrea Somogyi, Marion I Mennesson, Philippe Keith, Clara Lord
Scientists use otoliths to trace fish life history, especially fish migrations. Otoliths incorporate signatures of individual growth and environmental use. For many species, distinct increment patterns in the otolith are difficult to discern; thus, questions remain about crucial life history information. To unravel the history of such species, we use synchrotron-based scanning X-ray fluorescence. It allows the mapping of elements on the entire otolith at a high spatial resolution. It gives access to precise fish migration history by tagging landmark signature for environmental transition and it also characterises localised growth processes at a mineral level...
March 23, 2023: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36646326/prolactin-and-the-evolution-of-male-pregnancy
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony B Wilson, Camilla M Whittington, Axel Meyer, Sunny K Scobell, Marie-Emilie Gauthier
Prolactin (PRL) is a multifunctional hormone of broad physiological importance, and is involved in many aspects of fish reproduction, including the regulation of live birth (viviparity) and both male and female parental care. Previous research suggests that PRL also plays an important reproductive role in syngnathid fishes (seahorses, pipefish and seadragons), a group with a highly derived reproductive strategy, male pregnancy - how the PRL axis has come to be co-opted for male pregnancy remains unclear. We investigated the molecular evolution and expression of the genes for prolactin and its receptor (PRLR) in an evolutionarily diverse sampling of syngnathid fishes to explore how the co-option of PRL for male pregnancy has impacted its evolution, and to clarify whether the PRL axis is also involved in regulating reproductive function in species with more rudimentary forms of male pregnancy...
January 13, 2023: General and Comparative Endocrinology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36602224/dna-barcodes-for-the-pipefish-genus-corythoichthys-actinopterygii-syngnathiformes-from-the-indian-ocean-provide-insights-into-cryptic-diversity
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kannan Shalu, Liju Thomas, Ghosh Ramvilas, K S Shabeena, Siby Philip, S Sureshkumar, Rajeev Raghavan, Kutty Ranjeet
The syngnathiform genus Corythoichthys comprises a group of taxonomically complex, tail-brooding (Syngnathinae) pipefishes widely distributed in the Indo-Pacific region. Due to the presence of overlapping interspecific morphological characters, reliable taxonomic information on Corythoichthys is still lacking. Using 52 CO1 sequences including seven newly generated, a phylogenetic analysis was carried out to understand the genetic diversity, distribution and 'species groups' within the genus Corythoichthys. Species delimitation using Automatic Barcode Gap Discovery (ABGD) analysis confirmed the presence of 13 species which include 'species-complexes', previously considered as a single taxon...
January 5, 2023: Journal of Fish Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36575514/ancestral-reconstruction-reveals-catalytic-inactivation-of-activation-induced-cytidine-deaminase-concomitant-with-cold-water-adaption-in-the-gadiformes-bony-fish
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Atefeh Ghorbani, S Javad Khataeipour, Monica H Solbakken, David N G Huebert, Minasadat Khoddami, Khalil Eslamloo, Cassandra Collins, Tiago Hori, Sissel Jentoft, Matthew L Rise, Mani Larijani
BACKGROUND: Antibody affinity maturation in vertebrates requires the enzyme activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) which initiates secondary antibody diversification by mutating the immunoglobulin loci. AID-driven antibody diversification is conserved across jawed vertebrates since bony and cartilaginous fish. Two exceptions have recently been reported, the Pipefish and Anglerfish, in which the AID-encoding aicda gene has been lost. Both cases are associated with unusual reproductive behavior, including male pregnancy and sexual parasitism...
December 27, 2022: BMC Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36496780/clinical-and-pathological-findings-associated-with-mycobacteriosis-in-captive-syngnathids
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Estefanía Montero, Carlos Rojo-Solís, Noelia de Castro, Miguel Fernández, Valentín Pérez, Juan M Corpa, Joaquín Ortega
Mycobacteriosis is an important disease that affects captive and wild aquatic fish. Syngnathids are susceptible to infection by non-tuberculous mycobacteria. The aim of this study was to describe clinical signs, and macroscopic and histological lesions in 25 syngnathids and the molecular characterization of the causative mycobacteria. Clinical presentation ranged from sudden death to non-specific signs, including anorexia, poor body condition, weight loss and marked dyspnea with increased respiratory effort and rate...
November 23, 2022: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36494371/immunogenetic-losses-co-occurred-with-seahorse-male-pregnancy-and-mutation-in-tlx1-accompanied-functional-asplenia
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yali Liu, Meng Qu, Han Jiang, Ralf Schneider, Geng Qin, Wei Luo, Haiyan Yu, Bo Zhang, Xin Wang, Yanhong Zhang, Huixian Zhang, Zhixin Zhang, Yongli Wu, Yingyi Zhang, Jianping Yin, Si Zhang, Byrappa Venkatesh, Olivia Roth, Axel Meyer, Qiang Lin
In the highly derived syngnathid fishes (pipefishes, seadragons & seahorses), the evolution of sex-role reversed brooding behavior culminated in the seahorse lineage's male pregnancy, whose males feature a specialized brood pouch into which females deposit eggs during mating. Then, eggs are intimately engulfed by a placenta-like tissue that facilitates gas and nutrient exchange. As fathers immunologically tolerate allogenic embryos, it was suggested that male pregnancy co-evolved with specific immunological adaptations...
December 9, 2022: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36351887/a-comparative-analysis-of-the-ontogeny-of-syngnathids-pipefishes-seahorses-reveals-how-heterochrony-contributed-to-their-diversification
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ralf F Schneider, Joost M Woltering, Dominique Adriaens, Olivia Roth
BACKGROUND: Syngnathids are a highly derived and diverse fish clade comprising the pipefishes, pipe-horses and seahorses. They are characterized by a plethora of iconic traits that increasingly capture the attention of biologists, including geneticists, ecologists and developmental biologists. The current understanding of the origins of their derived body plan is, however, hampered by incomplete and limited descriptions of the early syngnathid ontogeny. RESULTS: We provide a comprehensive description of the development of Nerophis ophidion, Syngnathus typhle, Hippocampus erectus from early cleavage stages to release from the male brooding organ and beyond, including juvenile development...
November 9, 2022: Developmental Dynamics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36030631/seahorse-brood-pouch-morphology-and-control-of-male-parturition-in-hippocampus-abdominalis
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J S Dudley, J W Paul, V Teh, T E Mackenzie, T A Butler, J M Tolosa, R Smith, M Foley, S Dowland, M B Thompson, C M Whittington
INTRODUCTION: Syngnathids (seahorses, pipefishes and seadragons) are among the few vertebrates that display male pregnancy. During seahorse pregnancy, males incubate developing embryos embedded in a placenta within a fleshy brood pouch, before expelling fully developed neonates at parturition. The mechanisms underpinning seahorse parturition are poorly understood. METHODS: We examined the morphology of the brood pouch using microcomputed tomography and histological techniques, in combination with physiological assays, to examine how male pot-bellied seahorses (Hippocampus abdominalis) control labour...
August 6, 2022: Placenta
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35863060/the-evolution-of-the-testis-transcriptome-in-pregnant-male-pipefishes-and-seahorses
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bernadette D Johnson, Andrew P Anderson, Clayton M Small, Emily Rose, Sarah P Flanagan, Corey Hendrickson-Rose, Adam G Jones
In many animals, sperm competition and sexual conflict are thought to drive the rapid evolution of male-specific genes, especially those expressed in the testes. A potential exception occurs in the male pregnant pipefishes, where females transfer eggs to the males, eliminating testes from participating in these processes. Here, we show that testis-related genes differ dramatically in their rates of molecular evolution and expression patterns in pipefishes and seahorses (Syngnathidae) compared to other fish...
July 21, 2022: Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35733255/leafy-and-weedy-seadragon-genomes-connect-genic-and-repetitive-dna-features-to-the-extravagant-biology-of-syngnathid-fishes
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Clayton M Small, Hope M Healey, Mark C Currey, Emily A Beck, Julian Catchen, Angela S P Lin, William A Cresko, Susan Bassham
Seadragons are a remarkable lineage of teleost fishes in the family Syngnathidae, renowned for having evolved male pregnancy. Comprising three known species, seadragons are widely recognized and admired for their fantastical body forms and coloration, and their specific habitat requirements have made them flagship representatives for marine conservation and natural history interests. Until recently, a gap has been the lack of significant genomic resources for seadragons. We have produced gene-annotated, chromosome-scale genome models for the leafy and weedy seadragon to advance investigations of evolutionary innovation and elaboration of morphological traits in seadragons as well as their pipefish and seahorse relatives...
June 28, 2022: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35625444/ecological-traits-and-trophic-plasticity-in-the-greater-pipefish-syngnathus-acus-in-the-nw-iberian-peninsula
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Miquel Planas
The great pipefish Syngnathus acus is one of the most representative European syngnathids, being highly associated with seagrass and macroalgal beds. Surprisingly, the ecology of this large ovoviviparous marine fish has received scanty attention. The population inhabiting three sites on Cíes Archipelago (Atlantic Islands National Park, NW Spain) was monitored in 2017-2018 for spatial and temporal changes in abundances, reproduction traits, trophic niche occupancy, and dietary regimes across reproduction states, through an isotopic (δ13 C and δ15 N) approach...
May 7, 2022: Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35601769/new-data-on-pipefishes-and-seahorse-s-endohelminths-off-crimean-coasts-of-the-black-sea
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Y Kornyychuk, T Polyakova, N Pronkina
A total of 357 Syngnathidae fishes ( Syngnathus abaster Risso, 1827, S. typhle Linnaeus, 1758 and Hippocampus hippocampus (Linnaeus, 1758) caught in different habitats along Crimean Black Sea shelf were examined for presence of endohelminths and revealed to be hosts of 15 helminth species. The fishes are second intermediate hosts for five "birds'" digenean species and nematodes (larvae of three species and immature adults of one more species) completing life-cycles in waterbirds and fish; for two acanthocephalans and three cestodes larvae ending development in fish...
March 2022: Helminthologia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35551281/embryonic-and-aglomerular-kidney-development-in-the-bay-pipefish-syngnathus-leptorhynchus
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bianca R Maters, Emily Stevenson, Peter D Vize
In this report we describe the embryogenesis of the bay pipefish, Syngnathus leptorhynchus, and the organogenesis of its aglomerular kidney. Early development was analyzed via a series of montages and images documenting embryos collected from the brood pouches of pregnant males. Despite differences in terminal morphology between pipefish and common teleost models such as medaka and zebrafish, the embryogenesis of these highly advanced fishes is generally similar to that of other fishes. One of the unique features of these fishes is their utilization of an aglomerular kidney...
2022: PloS One
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35346180/phylogenomic-analysis-of-syngnathidae-reveals-novel-relationships-origins-of-endemic-diversity-and-variable-diversification-rates
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Josefin Stiller, Graham Short, Healy Hamilton, Norah Saarman, Sarah Longo, Peter Wainwright, Greg W Rouse, W Brian Simison
BACKGROUND: Seahorses, seadragons, pygmy pipehorses, and pipefishes (Syngnathidae, Syngnathiformes) are among the most recognizable groups of fishes because of their derived morphology, unusual life history, and worldwide distribution. Despite previous phylogenetic studies and recent new species descriptions of syngnathids, the evolutionary relationships among several major groups within this family remain unresolved. RESULTS: Here, we provide a reconstruction of syngnathid phylogeny based on genome-wide sampling of 1314 ultraconserved elements (UCEs) and expanded taxon sampling to assess the current taxonomy and as a basis for macroevolutionary insights...
March 27, 2022: BMC Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34951070/immunological-tolerance-in-the-evolution-of-male-pregnancy
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jamie Parker, Arseny Dubin, Ralf Schneider, Kim Sara Wagner, Sissel Jentoft, Astrid Böhne, Till Bayer, Olivia Roth
The unique male pregnancy in pipefishes and seahorses ranges from basic attachment (pouch-less species: Nerophinae) of maternal eggs to specialized internal gestation in pouched species (e.g. Syngnathus and Hippocampus) with many transitions in between. Due to this diversity, male pregnancy offers a unique platform for assessing physiological and molecular adaptations in pregnancy evolution. These insights will contribute to answering long-standing questions of why and how pregnancy evolved convergently in so many vertebrate systems...
December 23, 2021: Molecular Ecology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34849773/a-highly-contiguous-nuclear-genome-assembly-of-the-mandarinfish-synchiropus-splendidus-syngnathiformes-callionymidae
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martin Stervander, William A Cresko
The fish order Syngnathiformes has been referred to as a collection of misfit fishes, comprising commercially important fish such as red mullets as well as the highly diverse seahorses, pipefishes, and seadragons-the well-known family Syngnathidae, with their unique adaptations including male pregnancy. Another ornate member of this order is the species mandarinfish. No less than two types of chromatophores have been discovered in the spectacularly colored mandarinfish: the cyanophore (producing blue color) and the dichromatic cyano-erythrophore (producing blue and red)...
December 8, 2021: G3: Genes—Genomes—Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34810509/erratum-caio-i-a-dallevo-gomes-george-m-t-mattox-amp-mnica-toledo-piza-2020-taxonomic-review-of-the-pipefish-genus-pseudophallus-herald-with-the-description-of-a-new-species-syngnathiformes-syngnathidae-zootaxa-4859-081112
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34628145/preferential-habitats-prediction-in-syngnathids-using-species-distribution-models
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J Hernández-Urcera, F J Murillo, M Regueira, M Cabanellas-Reboredo, M Planas
Syngnathids are considered as flagship species for marine conservation. Seahorses and pipefish are highly vulnerable to anthropogenic and environmental disturbances, but most species are currently considered Data Deficient by IUCN, requiring more biological and ecological research. Although syngnathids are well known for their unusual breeding biology, some aspects on the ecology of this family have rarely received attention. The knowledge on the factors governing syngnathids distribution is limited to some species and geographical regions...
December 2021: Marine Environmental Research
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