0000000000928673

AUTHOR

Tarmo Ketola

showing 104 related works from this author

Additional file 6 of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

The concatenated tree based on six housekeeping MLSA genes (including trpB; right) and five MLSA gene sequences (rpoD, dnaK, tuf, gyrB, atpA; left). The arrow shows disagreement concerning the position of strain G2 (B399) between the two trees. (PDF 77 kb)

researchProduct

Association of colony morphotypes with virulence, growth and resistance against protozoan predation in the fish pathogen Flavobacterium columnare.

2014

Many opportunistic pathogens can alternate between inside- and outside-host environments during their life cycle. The opportunistic fish pathogen Flavobacterium columnare is an inhabitant of the natural microbial community and causes significant yearly losses in aquaculture worldwide. The bacterium grows in varying colony morphotypes that are associated with either virulence (rhizoid type) or resistance to starvation and phages (rough type). Rough type strains can arise spontaneously or can be induced by phage infection. To identify the determinants of morphotype fitness, we measured virulence, growth parameters, biofilm-forming ability and resistance to amoeba and ciliate predation of both…

PopulationVirulenceApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyFlavobacteriumMicrobiologyTetrahymena thermophila03 medical and health sciencesFish DiseasesAnimalsBacteriophages14. Life underwatereducationPathogenZebrafish030304 developmental biologyCiliate0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyAcanthamoeba castellaniiEcologybiologyVirulence030306 microbiologyfungiBiofilmbiology.organism_classificationRhizoidFlavobacterium columnareFlavobacteriumFEMS microbiology ecology
researchProduct

Environmentally triggered evolutionary cascade across trophic levels in an experimental phage-bacteria-insect system

2019

Abstract Environmental changes can cause strong cascading effects in species communities due to altered biological interactions between species (Zarnetske et al., 2012). Highly specialized interactions arising from the co-evolution of hosts and parasites, such as bacteria and phages, and short generation times of these species could rapidly lead to considerable evolutionary changes in their biotic interactions (Kerr, 2012; Buck and Ripple, 2017), with potential large-scale ramifications to other trophic levels. Here we report experimental evidence of cascading environmental effects across trophic levels in an experimental system where phage-bacteria coevolution in an abiotically altered env…

researchProduct

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

genetic structuresstomatognathic systemfungibacteriaequipment and supplies3. Good health
researchProduct

A mechanistic underpinning for sigmoid dose-dependent infection

2016

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineUnderpinningenvironmentally transmitted diseasesDose dependenceSigmoid functionBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesinfektiot03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologytartuntatauditta1181infectionsNeuroscienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOikos
researchProduct

Effects of acclimation time and epigenetic mechanisms on growth of Neurospora in fluctuating environments

2017

AbstractReaction norms or tolerance curves have often been used to predict how organisms deal with fluctuating environments. A potential drawback is that reaction norms measured in different constant environments may not capture all aspects of organismal responses to fluctuating environments. We examined growth of the filamentous fungusNeurospora crassain fluctuating temperatures and tested if growth in fluctuating temperatures can be explained simply by growth in different constant temperatures or if more complex models are needed. In addition, as previous studies on fluctuating environments have revealed that past temperatures that organisms have experienced can affect their response to c…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineAcclimatizationMutantEnvironmentMethylation010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesAcclimatizationNeurosporaArticleEpigenesis GeneticNeurospora crassaHistones03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsEpigeneticsGenetics (clinical)030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbiologyCell CyclefungiTemperatureAcetylationDNA MethylationModels Theoreticalbiology.organism_classificationFilamentous fungusNeurospora030104 developmental biologyRNA Interference PathwayH3k4 methylationDNA methylationBiophysicsGene-Environment InteractionRNA Interference
researchProduct

No uniform associations between parasite prevalence and environmental nutrients

2014

The resource quality of the host has been shown to affect parasite transmission success, prevalence, and virulence. Seasonal availability of environmental nutrients alters density and stoichiometric quality (carbon–nutrient ratios) of both producers and consumers, suggesting that nutrient availability may drive fluctuations in parasite prevalence patterns observed in nature. We examined the interactions between the population dynamics of a keystone herbivore, Daphnia, and its parasites, and their associations with water nutrient concentrations, resource quantity and quality, and other environmental variables (temperature, pH, oxygen concentration) in a small lake, using general linear model…

epibiontseducation.field_of_studyHerbivorebiologyseasonal epidemicsHost (biology)EcologyPopulationLarssonia obtusabiology.organism_classificationDaphniastoichiometryhost-parasite interactionsNutrientPasteuria ramosasDaphnia longispinamicrosporidiaParasite hostingSpecies richnessEpibionteducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcology
researchProduct

FLUCTUATING TEMPERATURE LEADS TO EVOLUTION OF THERMAL GENERALISM AND PREADAPTATION TO NOVEL ENVIRONMENTS

2013

Environmental fluctuations can select for generalism, which is also hypothesized to increase organisms' ability to invade novel environments. Here, we show that across a range of temperatures, opportunistic bacterial pathogen Serratia marcescens that evolved in fluctuating temperature (daily variation between 24°C and 38°C, mean 31°C) outperforms the strains that evolved in constant temperature (31°C). The growth advantage was also evident in novel environments in the presence of parasitic viruses and predatory protozoans, but less clear in the presence of stressful chemicals. Adaptation to fluctuating temperature also led to reduced virulence in Drosophila melanogaster host, which suggests…

0106 biological sciencesEcologyRange (biology)Host (biology)fungiVirulenceThermal fluctuationsBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences010601 ecologyEnvironmental temperature13. Climate actionGeneticsAdaptationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution
researchProduct

Experimental evolution in fluctuating environments: tolerance measurements at constant temperatures incorrectly predict the ability to tolerate fluct…

2015

The ability to predict the consequences of fluctuating environments on species distribution and extinction often relies on determining the tolerances of species or genotypes in different constant environments (i.e. determining tolerance curves). However, very little is known about the suitability of measurements made in constant environments to predict the level of adaptation to rapidly fluctuating environments. To explore this question, we used bacterial clones adapted to constant or fluctuating temperatures and found that measurements across a range of constant temperatures did not indicate any adaptation to fluctuating temperatures. However, adaptation to fluctuating temperatures was onl…

Experimental evolutionPhenotypic plasticityExtinctionEcologyClimate ChangeSpecies distributionTemperatureThermal fluctuationsfluctuating environmentsEnvironmentBiologyAtmospheric sciencesAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological Evolutionphenotypic plasticityG by E interactiontemperature adaptation13. Climate actionta1181AdaptationConstant (mathematics)bacteriaSerratia marcescensEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Luonnon monimuotoisuus ja vihreä elvytys

2021

Suomi on toistaiseksi selvinnyt koronaviruksen (COVID-19) aiheuttamasta kriisistä taloudellisesti verrokkimaita paremmin, mutta työllisyystilanne on silti heikentynyt ympäri maata ja talouden ennustetaan supistuvan noin 4,7 prosenttia vuonna 20201. Negatiivisten talousvaikutusten minimoimiseksi hallitus on suuntaamassa EU:n elpymisvälineestä varoja käytettäväksi toimiin, jotka samanaikaisesti auttavat ratkaisemaan aikamme kahta merkittävää kriisiä: ilmastonmuutosta ja luontokatoa. Kyse on aidosti vakavista kriiseistä. Esimerkiksi Maailman talousfoorumi on listannut luonnon ekosysteemien romahduksen ja ilmastonmuutoksen torjunnan epäonnistumisen sekä vaikutuksiltaan että todennäköisyydeltään…

researchProduct

Within-host evolution decreases virulence in an opportunistic bacterial pathogen

2015

Abstract Background Pathogens evolve in a close antagonistic relationship with their hosts. The conventional theory proposes that evolution of virulence is highly dependent on the efficiency of direct host-to-host transmission. Many opportunistic pathogens, however, are not strictly dependent on the hosts due to their ability to reproduce in the free-living environment. Therefore it is likely that conflicting selection pressures for growth and survival outside versus within the host, rather than transmission potential, shape the evolution of virulence in opportunists. We tested the role of within-host selection in evolution of virulence by letting a pathogen Serratia marcescens db11 sequent…

EXPRESSIONPARASITESTRANSMISSIONAdaptation BiologicalVirulenceCOMPETITIONmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesmedicineAnimalsSecretionPathogenSerratia marcescensIN-VIVOEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCOOPERATION030304 developmental biologySERRATIA-MARCESCENSLife Cycle Stages0303 health sciencesVirulencebiology030306 microbiologyPseudomonas aeruginosaHost (biology)PSEUDOMONAS-AERUGINOSAvirulenssibiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionBacterial LoadDrosophila melanogastertaudinaiheuttajatINFECTIONSTRADE-OFFHost-Pathogen Interactions1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyhostsDrosophila melanogasterAdaptationBacteriaResearch ArticleBMC Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Keskeiset keinot luontokadon pysäyttämiseksi

2021

Sanna Marinin hallitus on sitoutunut luonnon monimuotoisuuden tilan parantamiseen ja luontokadon pysäyttämiseen. Lupaus on äärimmäisen tärkeä. Luonnon ekosysteemien heikennys uhkaa elintärkeiden eko-systeemipalveluiden tuotantoa sekä ihmisten terveyttä, hyvinvointia ja turvallisuutta. Maailman talousfoorumi on nostanut luontokadon viiden vakavimman ihmiskuntaa uhkaavan riskin joukkoon. Myös Suomen luontotyyppien ja lajiston uhanalaisuustilanne on hälyttävä. Hallituksen kehysriihessä päätetään hallitusohjelman toteuttamisesta ja lunastetaan vuoden 2019 eduskuntavaalien lupaukset luonto- ja ilmastotoimista. Myös EU:n uusi biodiversiteettistrategia velvoittaa Suomea panostamaan luonnonsuojeluu…

Suomen Luontopaneelin julkaisuja
researchProduct

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

genetic structuresstomatognathic systemfungibacteriaequipment and supplies3. Good health
researchProduct

Rapid evolutionary adaptation to elevated salt concentrations in pathogenic freshwater bacteria Serratia marcescens.

2014

Rapid evolutionary adaptions to new and previously detrimental environmental conditions can increase the risk of invasion by novel pathogens. We tested this hypothesis with a 133-day-long evolutionary experiment studying the evolution of the pathogenic Serratia marcescens bacterium at salinity niche boundary and in fluctuating conditions. We found that S. marcescens evolved at harsh (80 g/L) and extreme (100 g/L) salt conditions had clearly improved salt tolerance than those evolved in the other three treatments (ancestral conditions, nonsaline conditions, and fluctuating salt conditions). Evolutionary theories suggest that fastest evolutionary changes could be observed in intermediate sele…

SELECTIONVARIABLE ENVIRONMENTSPREVENT EXTINCTIONniche expansionPopulationNicheGeneralist and specialist speciespathogen invasionstolerance curve14. Life underwaterexperimental evolutioneducationTEMPERATUREEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationOriginal ResearchExperimental evolutioneducation.field_of_studyEcologybiologyEcologyfluctuating environmentharsh environmentbiology.organism_classificationTEMPORALLY VARYING ENVIRONMENT6. Clean waterSalinityDROSOPHILAExperimental evolutionESCHERICHIA-COLISerratia marcescens1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyPOPULATIONSVIRULENCEta1181AdaptationGENERALISTSBacteriaEcology and evolution
researchProduct

Täsmäratkaisuja kestävään tulevaisuuteen : suosituksia planetaarisen hyvinvoinnin tukemiseen poliittisessa ohjelmatyössä

2023

Peer reviewed

kestävä kulutusmaankäytön suunnittelukestävä kehityspoliittinen päätöksentekoympäristöpolitiikkavihreä siirtymäsuosituksetyhdyskuntasuunnittelukestävä elämäntaparuokaturvaliikennesuunnitteluyritysvastuuympäristövastuuluonnonsuojelu
researchProduct

Environmental Fluctuations Drive Species' Competitive Success in Experimental Invasions

2020

Climate change is presumed to increase both the number and frequency of fluctuations in environmental conditions. Fluctuations can affect the ecological and evolutionary processes that make species more successful competitors. For example, fluctuating conditions can create selection pressures for traits that are profitable in adaptation to fast climate change. On an ecological timescale, environmental fluctuations can facilitate species competitive success by reducing other species’ population sizes. Climate change could then enhance species invasions into new areas if fluctuation-adapted invaders displace their native competitors in chancing environments. We tested experimentally whether f…

0106 biological scienceseducation.field_of_studyEcologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationevoluutioClimate changeCompetitor analysis010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)populaatioekologiaEnvironmental scienceAnimal Science and ZoologyvieraslajitAdaptationeducationympäristönmuutoksetEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape Conservationmedia_commonAnnales Zoologici Fennici
researchProduct

Thermal Tolerance is linked with Virulence in a Fish Pathogen

2017

ABSTRACTAlthough increase in temperatures may boost the number of pathogens, a complex process involving the interaction of a susceptible host, a virulent strain, and environmental factors would influence disease virulence in unpredictable ways. Here we explored if the virulence of an environmentally growing opportunistic fish pathogen,Flavobacterium columnare, would be malleable to evolutionary changes via correlated selection on thermal tolerance. Virulence among the strains increased over years, but tolerance to higher temperatures was associated with reduced virulence. Our results suggest that observed increase in frequency of columnaris epidemics over the last decade is most likely ass…

0106 biological sciences0303 health sciencesObligateHost (biology)VirulenceGrowing seasonBiologybiology.organism_classificationmedicine.disease010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesColumnarisMicrobiology03 medical and health sciences13. Climate actionSusceptible individualFlavobacterium columnaremedicinePathogen030304 developmental biology
researchProduct

Invasion triple trouble : environmental fluctuations, fluctuation-adapted invaders and fluctuation-mal-adapted communities all govern invasion success

2017

AbstractIt has been suggested that climate change will lead to increased environmental fluctuations, which will undoubtedly have evolutionary consequences for all biota. For instance, fluctuations can directly increase the risk of invasions of alien species into new areas, as these species have repeatedly been proposed to benefit from disturbances. At the same time increased environmental fluctuations may also select for better invaders. However, selection by fluctuations may also influence the resistance of communities to invasions, which has rarely been tested. We tested eco-evolutionary dynamics of invasion with bacterial clones, evolved either in constant or fluctuating temperatures, an…

0106 biological sciencesSerratiaEvolutionEcology (disciplines)Climate changeEnvironmentBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesQH359-425vieraslajitAlien species030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesResistance (ecology)EcologyfluctuationtulokaslajitBiota15. Life on landilmastonmuutoksetinvasionAdaptation Physiologicalclimate changeevoluutioekologia13. Climate actionAdaptationIntroduced SpeciesResearch Article
researchProduct

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

genetic structuresstomatognathic systemfungibacteriaequipment and supplies3. Good health
researchProduct

Table S1 and S2 from Heat hardening capacity in Drosophila melanogaster is life stage specific and juveniles show the highest plasticity

2019

Table S1. Tukey's post-hoc test results after false discovery rate correction to compare the heat resistance of hardened and non-hardened individuals at different life stages exposed to 25 ºC compared to corresponding 37 ºC test temperature. The table shows the sum of square (SS), Fdf ratio and the p-values.; Table S2. Tukey's post-hoc test results after false discovery rate (FDR) correction to compare the heat resistance of different life stages at different test temperatures. The table shows the Fdf ratio and the p-values with p < 0.05 in bold.

researchProduct

Evolution of bacterial life-history traits is sensitive to community structure

2016

Very few studies have experimentally assessed the evolutionary effects of species interactions within the same trophic level. Here we show that when Serratia marcescens evolve in multispecies communities, their growth rate exceeds the growth rate of the bacteria that evolved alone, whereas the biomass yield gets lower. In addition to the community effects per se, we found that few species in the communities caused strong effects on S. marcescens evolution. The results indicate that evolutionary responses (of a focal species) are different in communities, compared to species evolving alone. Moreover, selection can lead to very different outcomes depending on the community structure. Such con…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineExperimental evolutionEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectCommunity structureSpecies diversityContext (language use)Biologybiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)Life history theory03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologySerratia marcescensGeneticsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonTrophic levelEvolution
researchProduct

The effect of a temperature-sensitive prophage on the evolution of virulence in an opportunistic bacterial pathogen

2019

AbstractViruses are key actors of ecosystems and have major impacts on global biogeochemical cycles. Prophages deserve particular attention as they are ubiquitous in bacterial genomes and can enter a lytic cycle when triggered by environmental conditions. We explored how temperature affects the interactions between prophages and other biological levels by using an opportunistic pathogen, the bacterium Serratia marcescens, that harbours several prophages and that had undergone an evolution experiment under several temperature regimes. We found that the release of one of the prophages was temperature-sensitive and malleable to evolutionary changes. We further discovered that the virulence of …

2. Zero hungerAbiotic componentGenetics0303 health sciencesExperimental evolution030306 microbiologyHost (biology)VirulenceBacterial genome sizeBiologyTemperateness03 medical and health sciencesLytic cycle13. Climate actionProphage030304 developmental biology
researchProduct

Systematic Comparison of Epidemic and Non-Epidemic Carbapenem Resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae Strains

2021

Over the past few decades, extensively drug resistant (XDR) resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae has become a notable burden to healthcare all over the world. Especially carbapenemase-producing strains are problematic due to their capability to withstand even last resort antibiotics. Some sequence types (STs) of K. pneumoniae are significantly more prevalent in hospital settings in comparison to other equally resistant strains. This provokes the question whether or not there are phenotypic characteristics that may render certain K. pneumoniae more suitable for epidemic dispersal between patients, hospitals, and different environments. In this study, we selected seven epidemic and non-epidemic ca…

virulenceantibiotic resistanceextended-spectrum beta-lactamaselcsh:QR1-502XDR Klebsiella pneumoniaeepidemiclcsh:MicrobiologyFrontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology
researchProduct

Rich resource environment of fish farms facilitates phenotypic variation and virulence in an opportunistic fish pathogen

2020

Phenotypic variation is suggested to facilitate the persistence of environmentally growing pathogens under environmental change. Here, we hypothesized that the intensive farming environment induces higher phenotypic variation in microbial pathogens than natural environment, because of high stochasticity for growth and stronger survival selection compared to the natural environment. We tested the hypothesis with an opportunistic fish pathogen Flavobacterium columnare isolated either from fish farms or from natural waters. We measured growth parameters of two morphotypes from all isolates in different resource concentrations and two temperatures relevant for the occurrence of disease epidemic…

GillLIFE-HISTORYFish farmingDIVERSITYZoologyVirulenceDISEASEColumnarisbakteerit03 medical and health sciencescolony typeCOLUMNARISGeneticsmedicinefish diseasesHETEROGENEITYPLASTICITYPARASITEmuuntelu (biologia)TEMPERATUREvesiviljely (kalatalous)PathogenEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesbiology030306 microbiologyfungiphenotypic variationbacteriumkalatauditbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseEVOLUTIONtaudinaiheuttajatRhizoidaquaculture1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyFlavobacterium columnareGROWTHfenotyyppiAdaptationGeneral Agricultural and Biological Scienceskalanviljelylaitokset
researchProduct

The Good-Genes and Compatible-Genes Benefits of Mate Choice

2009

Genetic benefits from mate choice could be attained by choosing mates with high heritable quality (“good genes”) and that are genetically compatible (“compatible genes”). We clarify the conceptual and empirical framework for estimating genetic benefits of mate choice, stressing that benefits must be measured from offspring fitness because there are no unequivocal surrogates for genetic quality of individuals or for compatibility of parents. We detail the relationship between genetic benefits and additive and nonadditive genetic variance in fitness, showing that the benefits have been overestimated in previous verbal treatments. We point out that additive benefits readily arise from nonaddit…

evoluutio
researchProduct

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

genetic structuresstomatognathic systemfungibacteriaequipment and supplies3. Good health
researchProduct

Town population size and structuring into villages and households drive infectious disease risks in pre-healthcare Finland

2021

Social life is often considered to cost in terms of increased parasite or pathogen risk. However, evidence for this in the wild remains equivocal, possibly because populations and social groups are often structured, which affects the local transmission and extinction of diseases. We test how the structuring of towns into villages and households influenced the risk of dying from three easily diagnosable infectious diseases—smallpox, pertussis and measles—using a novel dataset covering almost all of Finland in the pre-healthcare era (1800–1850). Consistent with previous results, the risk of dying from all three diseases increased with the local population size. However, the division of towns …

0106 biological sciencesPopulationDiseaseCommunicable Diseases010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMeaslesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologySocial group03 medical and health sciencesmedicineHumansSmallpoxCitieseducationFinland030304 developmental biologyGeneral Environmental SciencePopulation Density0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studyEcologyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyTransmission (medicine)Population sizeGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseGeographyInfectious disease (medical specialty)General Agricultural and Biological SciencesDelivery of Health CareDemographyProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
researchProduct

The relationship between stocking eggs in boreal spawning rivers and the abundance of brown trout parr

2015

Abstract Stocking with eggs has been widely used as a management measure to support degraded salmonid stocks. In Finland, Atlantic salmon and both sea-migrating and lake-migrating brown trout are stocked as eggs, alevins, fry, parr, and smolt, whereas trout are also stocked as mature fish. The aim of this stocking is to improve catches and to support collapsed spawning stocks. We assessed the success of stocking with brown trout eggs in a study of 17 Finnish boreal forest rivers, of which 9 were subject to egg stocking. All rivers contained some naturally spawning trout. In 16 rivers, including non-stocking years and unstocked rivers, egg stocking did not increase the total (wild and stocke…

Alizarin redAquatic ScienceOceanographysurvivalBrown troutStockingotolithAbundance (ecology)medicineSalmo truttaegg pocketEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOtolithegg boxEcologybiologyTaigabiology.organism_classificationFisheryTroutmedicine.anatomical_structureBorealalevinThreatened speciesta1181reddhenkiinjääminenstock managementICES Journal of Marine Science
researchProduct

Intensive aquaculture selects for increased virulence and interference competition in bacteria

2016

Although increased disease severity driven by intensive farming practices is problematic in food production, the role of evolutionary change in disease is not well understood in these environments. Experiments on parasite evolution are traditionally conducted using laboratory models, often unrelated to economically important systems. We compared how the virulence, growth and competitive ability of a globally important fish pathogen, Flavobacterium columnare , change under intensive aquaculture. We characterized bacterial isolates from disease outbreaks at fish farms during 2003–2010, and compared F. columnare populations in inlet water and outlet water of a fish farm during the 2010 outbre…

0301 basic medicineFish farmingPopulationevoluutioVirulenceDiseaseBiologyFlavobacteriumGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyFish DiseasesFlavobacterium columnare03 medical and health sciencesAquacultureFlavobacteriaceae InfectionsevolutionAnimalsSelection Geneticeducationvesiviljely (kalatalous)FinlandResearch ArticlesGeneral Environmental ScienceExperimental evolutioneducation.field_of_studyGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyEcologyIntensive farmingbusiness.industryta1183virulenssiGeneral MedicineBiological Evolutionvirulence030104 developmental biologyaquaculturePerchesFood processingMicrobial Interactionsta1181General Agricultural and Biological SciencesbusinessSalmonidaefish farmingpathogen
researchProduct

Jatkuvapeitteisen metsänkäsittelyn ympäristö- ja talousvaikutukset : Luontopaneelin yhteenveto ja suositukset luontopolitiikan suunnittelun ja päätök…

2022

Raportin yhteenveto LUONTOPANEELIN KESKEISET HUOMIOT JA SUOSITUKSET • Jatkuvapeitteisen metsänkäsittelyn osuutta kannattaa merkittävästi kasvattaa taloudellisista syistä. Valtaosa suomalaisista ja pohjoismaisista jatkuvapeitteistä ja jaksollista metsänkäsittelyä vertailevista tutkimuksista koskee puuntuotantomäärää metsänkäsittelyn taloudellisen tuloksen sijaan. Mahdollisimman suuri puuntuotannon määrä voi olla edullista puun ostajalle, mutta se ei välttämättä ole taloudellisesti paras vaihtoehto maanomistajan eli puun tuottajan eikä myöskään puun tuottajien ja ostajien yhteenlasketun taloudellisen tuloksen eli kansantalouden näkökulmasta. Vaikka hakkuukertymät voivat jatkuvapeitteisessä me…

metsätalousmetsänkäsittelyluonnonsuojelubiodiversiteetti
researchProduct

Coincidental loss of bacterial virulence in multi-enemy microbial communities.

2014

The coincidental virulence evolution hypothesis suggests that outside-host selection, such as predation, parasitism and resource competition can indirectly affect the virulence of environmentally-growing bacterial pathogens. While there are some examples of coincidental environmental selection for virulence, it is also possible that the resource acquisition and enemy defence is selecting against it. To test these ideas we conducted an evolutionary experiment by exposing the opportunistic pathogen bacterium Serratia marcescens to the particle-feeding ciliate Tetrahymena thermophila, the surfacefeeding amoeba Acanthamoeba castellanii, and the lytic bacteriophage Semad11, in all possible combi…

Ecological selectionBacteriophageNatural SelectionBacteriophagesANTAGONISTIC COEVOLUTIONLISTERIA-MONOCYTOGENESSerratia marcescens1183 Plant biology microbiology virologyGeneticsSERRATIA-MARCESCENSAcanthamoeba castellanii0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryEcologybiologyQTetrahymenaRAcanthamoeba castellaniiMedicineResearch ArticleEvolutionary ProcessesVirulence FactorsAntagonistic CoevolutionScienceMicrobial ConsortiaeducationVirulenceMicrobiologyMicrobial EcologyMicrobiologyEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesmulti-enemy microbial communitiesWater environment030304 developmental biologySTAPHYLOCOCCUS-AUREUSEvolutionary BiologyPSEUDOMONAS-AERUGINOSA VIRULENCE030306 microbiologybacterial virulenceDICTYOSTELIUM-DISCOIDEUMBiology and Life SciencesBacteriologybiology.organism_classificationOrganismal EvolutionArtificial SelectionTETRAHYMENA-THERMOPHILAEvolutionary EcologyMicrobial Evolutionta1181AMEBA ACANTHAMOEBA-CASTELLANIILEGIONELLA-PNEUMOPHILABacteriaMEDIA COMPOSITION INFLUENCESPLoS ONE
researchProduct

Heat hardening capacity in Drosophila melanogaster is life stage-specific and juveniles show the highest plasticity

2019

Variations in stress resistance and adaptive plastic responses during ontogeny have rarely been addressed, despite the possibility that differences between life stages can affect species' range margins and thermal tolerance. Here, we assessed the thermal sensitivity and hardening capacity of Drosophila melanogaster across developmental stages from larval to the adult stage. We observed strong differences between life stages in heat resistance, with adults being most heat resistant followed by puparia , pupae and larvae . The impact of heat hardening (1 h at 35°C) on heat resistance changed during ontogeny, with the highest positive effect of hardening observed in puparia and pupae and the …

0106 biological scienceslife stage-specific plasticityHot TemperaturelämmönsietoOntogenyZoologyLife stage-specific plasticitythermal sensitivityBiologyPlasticity010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesThermal sensitivityJuvenileClimate changeHeat resistanceAnimalsAdult stageHeat shock030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesLarvaEvolutionary Biologyhardeningheat resistancefungiPupabanaanikärpänenilmastonmuutoksetAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Pupaclimate changeDrosophila melanogasterEctothermLarvaHardeningta1181General Agricultural and Biological SciencesHeat-Shock Response
researchProduct

Temperature-dependent mutational robustness can explain faster molecular evolution at warm temperatures, affecting speciation rate and global pattern…

2015

Distribution of species across the Earth shows strong latitudinal and altitudinal gradients with the number of species decreasing with declining temperatures. While these patterns have been recognized for well over a century, the mechanisms generating and maintaining them have remained elusive. Here, we propose a mechanistic explanation for temperature-dependent rates of molecular evolution that can influence speciation rates and global biodiversity gradients. Our hypothesis is based on the effects of temperature and temperature-adaptation on stability of proteins and other catalytic biomolecules. First, due to the nature of physical forces between biomolecules and water, stability of biomo…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineMutation ratespecies diversityEcologymolecular evolutionta1182Species diversityRobustness (evolution)temperaturemutational robustnessBiologyIncipient speciation010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologyspeciation13. Climate actionMolecular evolutionModels of DNA evolutionEpistasista1181Species richnessEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcography
researchProduct

Heterozygote advantage and pleiotropy contribute to intraspecific color trait variability

2022

The persistence of intrapopulation phenotypic variation typically requires some form of balancing selection because drift and directional selection eventually erode genetic variation. Heterozygote advantage remains a classic explanation for the maintenance of genetic variation in the face of selection. However, examples of heterozygote advantage, other than those associated with disease resistance, are rather uncommon. Across most of its distribution, males of the aposematic moth Arctia plantaginis have two hindwing phenotypes determined by a heritable one locus-two allele polymorphism (genotypes: WW/Wy = white morph, yy = yellow morph). Using genotyped moths, we show that the presence of o…

varoitusväriMaleMATING SUCCESSHeterozygoteFREQUENCY-DEPENDENT SELECTIONColorMothsYELLOW GENEgenotyyppitäpläsiilikäsSEXUAL SELECTIONPARASEMIApleiotropyGeneticsAnimalsmuuntelu (biologia)Life History TraitsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsluonnonvalintaPolymorphism GeneticLABORATORY ADAPTATIONwood tiger mothColor locusEVOLUTIONARY DYNAMICSPOLYMORPHISMlife-history traitscolor locusheterozygote advantageMATE CHOICEWARNING COLORATIONPhenotypesukupuolivalintaintraspecific trait variation1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyfenotyyppiFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolution
researchProduct

The good-genes and compatible-genes benefits of mate choice.

2009

Genetic benefits from mate choice could be attained by choosing mates with high heritable quality ("good genes") and that are genetically compatible ("compatible genes"). We clarify the conceptual and empirical framework for estimating genetic benefits of mate choice, stressing that benefits must be measured from offspring fitness because there are no unequivocal surrogates for genetic quality of individuals or for compatibility of parents. We detail the relationship between genetic benefits and additive and nonadditive genetic variance in fitness, showing that the benefits have been overestimated in previous verbal treatments. We point out that additive benefits readily arise from nonaddit…

GeneticsMaleReproductionGenetic VariationBiological evolutionBiologyMating Preference AnimalEmpirical researchMate choiceEvolutionary biologySexual selectionGenetic variationAnimalsFemaleForm of the GoodEmpirical evidenceGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCrosses GeneticThe American naturalist
researchProduct

Ecological conditions alter cooperative behaviour and its costs in a chemically defended sawfly

2018

The evolution of cooperation and social behaviour is often studied in isolation from the ecology of organisms. Yet, the selective environment under which individuals evolve is much more complex in nature, consisting of ecological and abiotic interactions in addition to social ones. Here, we measured the life-history costs of cooperative chemical defence in a gregarious social herbivore, Diprion pini pine sawfly larvae, and how these costs vary under different ecological conditions. We ran a rearing experiment where we manipulated diet (resin content) and attack intensity by repeatedly harassing larvae to produce a chemical defence. We show that forcing individuals to allocate more to coope…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineMaleautomimicrygenetic structures[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Social behaviourTrade-offlife-history costs01 natural sciencesantipredator defencesocial behavioursahapistiäisetCooperative BehaviorComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSGeneral Environmental ScienceAbiotic componentbiologyBehavior AnimalEcology[SDV.BA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyPinus sylvestrisGeneral MedicineSawflyLarvaFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesDiprion piniAdaptive valueCheatingeläinten käyttäytyminen010603 evolutionary biologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsBehaviourpuolustusmekanismit (biologia)Social BehaviorHerbivoreGeneral Immunology and Microbiologymimikryfungibiology.organism_classificationHymenopteraImmunity InnateDiet030104 developmental biologyPredatory Behaviorta1181Resins Plant
researchProduct

Genetics of condition and sexual selection

2007

FM Tarmo Ketolan ekologian ja ympäristönhoidon väitöskirjan ”Genetics of Condition and Sexual Selection” (Kunnon ja seksuaalivalinnan genetiikka) tarkastustilaisuus Jyväskylän yliopistossa. Vastaväittäjänä professori Juha Merilä (Helsingin yliopisto) ja kustoksena dosentti Janne Kotiaho.Linkki väitöksen pdf-versioon tiedotteen lopussa.FM Tarmo Ketola havaitsi väitöstutkimuksessaan, että geneettisesti huonolaatuiset sirkkayksilöt pystyvät käyttämään vähemmän energiaa aktiviteetteihin kuin hyvälaatuiset. Koska sisäsiitos lisäsi perusenergiankulutusta eli ruumiintoimintojen ylläpitoon kulutettua energiaa, se heikensi yksilöiden kuntoa.– Aiemmin on oletettu, että huonolaatuisilla yksilöillä on …

quantitative geneticsperinnöllisyystiedesukupuolivalintaGryllodes sigillatusenergy metabolismhyönteisetinbreedingsexual selectionmutationsseksuaalisuusconditionkuntoperinnöllisyys
researchProduct

Is reproduction really costly? Energy metabolism of bank vole (Clethrionomys glareolus) females through the reproductive cycle

2007

Energetic requirements during reproduction are important determinants of the onset of reproduction and of breeding strategy (e.g., breeding post-partum) and therefore affect female reproductive output in seasonally varying environments. To balance the energetic needs of breeding with energy availability, females must optimize energy allocation between their own energy use and energy allocated to their litter. Here, we studied energetic costs and potential energetic trade-offs of reproduction in female bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus). We measured energy consumption, i.e., metabolic rates as determined from carbon dioxide production of females either with their pups (breeding unit) to fi…

Litter (animal)PregnancyEcologybiologyEcologyOffspringmedia_common.quotation_subjectEnergy consumptionmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationBank voleAnimal sciencemedicine.anatomical_structureLactationmedicineReproductionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSemelparity and iteroparitymedia_commonEcoscience
researchProduct

Manipulating genetic architecture to reveal fitness relationships

2014

Evolutionary biologyta1181Aerospace Engineeringmanipulaatio (psykologia)Biologygenetic architecturegeneettinen kaavaGenetic architectureProceedings of Peerage of Science
researchProduct

Constant, cycling, hot and cold thermal environments: strong effects on mean viability but not on genetic estimates

2012

It has frequently been suggested that trait heritabilities are environmentally sensitive, and there are genetic trade-offs between tolerating different environments such as hot and cold or constant and fluctuating temperatures. Future climate predictions suggest an increase in both temperatures and their fluctuations. How species will respond to these changes is uncertain, particularly as there is a lack of studies which compare genetic performances in constant vs. fluctuating environments. In this study, we used a nested full-sib/half-sib breeding design to examine how the genetic variances and heritabilities of egg-to-adult viability differ at high and low temperatures with and without da…

Animal scienceEcologyDirect effectsTraitFuture climateGene–environment interactionBiologyHeritabilityCyclingConstant (mathematics)Genetic correlationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Inbreeding depression in intraspecific metabolic scaling

2013

Metabolic scaling (i.e., the relationship between the size and metabolic rate of organisms) has been suggested to explain a large variety of biological patterns from individual growth to species diversity. However, considerable disagreement remains regarding the underlying causes of metabolic scaling patterns, and what these patterns are. As in all biology, understanding metabolic scaling will require understanding its evolution by natural selection. We searched for evidence of natural selection on metabolic scaling indirectly by manipulating the genetic quality of male and female Drosophila montana flies with induced mutations and inbreeding, building on the notion that mutations and inbre…

GeneticsNatural selectionDirectional selectionTraitInbreeding depressionAnimal Science and ZoologyAllometryBiologyInbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIntraspecific competitionSelection (genetic algorithm)Animal Biology
researchProduct

The seasonality of three childhood infections in a pre-industrial society without schools

2021

AbstractBackgroundThe burden of many infectious diseases varies seasonally and a better understanding of the drivers of infectious disease seasonality would help to improve public health interventions. For directly transmitted highly-immunizing childhood infections, the leading hypothesis is that seasonality is strongly driven by social gatherings imposed by schools, with maxima and minima during school terms and holidays respectively. However, we currently have a poor understanding of the seasonality of childhood infections in societies without schools and whether these are driven by human social gatherings. Here, we used unique nationwide data consisting of >40 epidemics over 100 years…

GeographyTransmission (medicine)Infectious disease (medical specialty)High transmissionPublic health interventionsmedicineSmallpoxPre-industrial societySeasonalitymedicine.diseaseMeaslesDemography
researchProduct

Quantitative genetics of temperature performance curves of Neurospora crassa

2020

AbstractEarth’s temperature is increasing due to anthropogenic CO2emissions; and organisms need either to adapt to higher temperatures, migrate into colder areas, or face extinction. Temperature affects nearly all aspects of an organism’s physiology via its influence on metabolic rate and protein structure, therefore genetic adaptation to increased temperature may be much harder to achieve compared to other abiotic stresses. There is still much to be learned about the evolutionary potential for adaptation to higher temperatures, therefore we studied the quantitative genetics of growth rates in different temperatures that make up the thermal performance curve of the fungal model systemNeuros…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineClimate ChangeQuantitative Trait LocievoluutioAdaptation BiologicalkasvuevolvabilityG‐matrixphenotypic plasticity010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesNeurospora crassa03 medical and health sciencesGenetic variationGeneticsSelection (genetic algorithm)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyAbiotic component0303 health sciencesExperimental evolutionExtinctionModels GeneticNeurospora crassabiologyepigeneettinen periytyminenCrassaTemperatureGenetic VariationQuantitative geneticsbiology.organism_classificationgeneettinen muunteluBiological EvolutionEvolvability030104 developmental biologyreaction norm13. Climate actionEnvironmental sciencefenotyyppilämpötilafungiAdaptationsienetGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesBiological systemEvolution
researchProduct

Evolutionary rescue at different rates of environmental change is affected by trade-offs between short-term performance and long-term survival.

2021

As climate change accelerates and habitats free from anthropogenic impacts diminish, populations are forced to migrate or to adapt quickly. Evolutionary rescue (ER) is a phenomenon, in which a population is able to avoid extinction through adaptation. ER is considered to be more likely at slower rates of environmental change. However, the effects of correlated characters on evolutionary rescue are seldom explored yet correlated characters could play a major role in ER. We tested how evolutionary background in different fluctuating environments and the rate of environmental change affect the probability of ER by exposing populations of the bacteria Serratia marcescens to two different rates …

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineEnvironmental changeClimate ChangePopulationevoluutioClimate changeadaptationBiologyAffect (psychology)010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesexperimental evolutionskin and connective tissue diseaseseducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicssopeutuminenExperimental evolutioneducation.field_of_studyExtinctionBacteriaEcologyAnthropogenic EffectstemperatureilmastonmuutoksetAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological Evolutionclimate change030104 developmental biologyHabitat13. Climate actionevolutionary rescuelämpötilasense organsAdaptationympäristönmuutoksetJournal of evolutionary biologyREFERENCES
researchProduct

Propagule pressure increase and phylogenetic diversity decrease community’s susceptibility to invasion

2017

Background Invasions pose a large threat to native species, but the question of why some species are more invasive, and some communities more prone to invasions than others, is far from solved. Using 10 different three-species bacterial communities, we tested experimentally if the phylogenetic relationships between an invader and a resident community and the propagule pressure affect invasion probability. Results We found that greater diversity in phylogenetic distances between the members of resident community and the invader lowered invasion success, and higher propagule pressure increased invasion success whereas phylogenetic distance had no clear effect. In the later stages of invasion,…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePhylogenetic similarity and propagule pressuremedia_common.quotation_subjectPhylogenetic distanceIntroduced speciesphylogenetic distanceBiologyBacterial Physiological Phenomena010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)bakteerit03 medical and health sciencesInvasionphylogenetic similarity and propagule pressureAnimalsPhylogenySerratia marcescensQH540-549.5Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneral Environmental Sciencemedia_commonBacteriaCompetitionEcologyPhylogenetic treeEcologyCommunity identityPropagule pressureGenetic Variation15. Life on landinvasionPhylogenetic diversity030104 developmental biologyPhylogenetic distancecompetitionResearch ArticleBMC Ecology
researchProduct

Experimental evolution of evolutionary potential in fluctuating environments

2023

Variation is the raw material for evolution. Evolutionary potential is determined by the amount of genetic variation, but evolution can also alter the visibility of genetic variation to natural selection. Fluctuating environments are suggested to maintain genetic variation but they can also affect environmental variance, and thus, the visibility of genetic variation to natural selection. However, experimental studies testing these ideas are relatively scarce. In order to determine differences in evolutionary potential we quantified variance attributable to population, genotype and environment for populations of the bacterium Serratia marcescens. These populations had been experimentally evo…

luonnonvalintapopulaatiogenetiikkagenetic variationevoluutioexperimental evolutionfluctuating environmentsbet-hedginggeneettinen muunteluympäristönmuutoksetEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Application of high resolution melting assay (HRM) to study temperature-dependent intraspecific competition in a pathogenic bacterium

2017

AbstractStudies on species’ responses to climate change have focused largely on the direct effect of abiotic factors and in particular temperature, neglecting the effects of biotic interactions in determining the outcome of climate change projections. Many microbes rely on strong interference competition; hence the fitness of many pathogenic bacteria could be a function of both their growth properties and intraspecific competition. However, due to technical challenges in distinguishing and tracking individual strains, experimental evidence on intraspecific competition has been limited so far. Here, we developed a robust application of the high-resolution melting (HRM) assay to study head-to…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineGenotypeClimate ChangeScienceintraspecific competitionmedia_common.quotation_subject030106 microbiologyZoologymedicine.disease_causeFlavobacterium010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesArticleCompetition (biology)Intraspecific competitionHigh Resolution Melt03 medical and health sciencesmedicineAnimalsmedia_commonAbiotic componentMultidisciplinarybiologyStrain (chemistry)EcologyQFishesTemperatureRpathogenic bacteriaPathogenic bacteriabiology.organism_classificationhigh-resolution melting (HRM) assay13. Climate actionFlavobacterium columnareMedicinelämpötilaGenetic FitnessBacteriaScientific Reports
researchProduct

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

genetic structuresstomatognathic systemfungibacteriaequipment and supplies3. Good health
researchProduct

Resource availability and competition shape the evolution of survival and growth ability in a bacterial community

2013

Resource availability is one of the main factors determining the ecological dynamics of populations or species. Fluctuations in resource availability can increase or decrease the intensity of resource competition. Resource availability and competition can also cause evolutionary changes in life-history traits. We studied how community structure and resource fluctuations affect the evolution of fitness related traits using a two-species bacterial model system. Replicated populations of Serratia marcescens (copiotroph) and Novosophingobium capsulatum (oligotroph) were reared alone or together in environments with intergenerational, pulsed resource renewal. The comparison of ancestral and evol…

0106 biological sciencesecological nichesBACTERIAL BIOFILMSResource (biology)media_common.quotation_subjectScienceAdaptation BiologicalBiologyco-evolutionEnvironment010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesCompetition (biology)Bacterial evolution03 medical and health sciencesSpecies SpecificityAdaptive radiationCopiotrophSerratia marcescens030304 developmental biologymedia_commonEcological niche0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryEcologyMicrobiotaQCommunity structureRInterspecific competitionbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionSurvival AnalysisSphingomonadaceaeSerratia marcescens1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyLinear ModelsMedicineMicrobial Interactionsta1181competitionResearch ArticlePLOS ONE
researchProduct

Energy use, diapause behaviour and northern range expansion potential in the invasive Colorado potato beetle

2011

Summary 1. As organisms expand their range towards northern latitudes they will encounter selective factors like harsh winter conditions. The ability to cope with and adapt to harsh winters may depend on the variability and evolutionary potential of relevant traits. 2. One adaptation in insects is winter diapause. It is characterized by changes in physiology, behaviour or in both. Physiological changes include lowered metabolic rate that enhances survival by saving limited energy reserves during overwintering. Active behavioural changes like burrowing into the soil allow individuals to escape harsh conditions. 3. We examined variation in overwintering body mass, resting metabolic rate (CO2 …

biologyEcologyRange (biology)Basal metabolic rateColorado potato beetleAdaptationHeritabilityDiapausebiology.organism_classificationLeptinotarsaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsOverwinteringFunctional Ecology
researchProduct

Temperature-dependent mutational robustness can explain faster molecular evolution at warm temperatures, affecting speciation rate and global pattern…

2016

Distribution of species across the Earth shows strong latitudinal and altitudinal gradients with the number of species decreasing with declining temperatures. While these patterns have been recognized for well over a century, the mechanisms generating and maintaining them have remained elusive. Here, we propose a mechanistic explanation for temperature-dependent rates of molecular evolution that can influence speciation rates and global biodiversity gradients. Our hypothesis is based on the effects of temperature and temperature-adaptation on stability of proteins and other catalytic biomolecules. First, due to the nature of physical forces between biomolecules and water, stability of biomo…

species diversitymolecular evolutionmutational robustnesslajiutuminenlämpötila
researchProduct

Genetic compatibility and sexual selection

2005

In a recent review in TREE [1], Mays and Hill discuss the interface between sexual selection for good genes (i.e. female choice based on traits indicating heritable fitness) and sexual selection for genetic compatibility (i.e. how well the genes of the parents function together in their offspring). We feel that the scope of their contribution is somewhat limited, primarily because they implicitly equate genetic compatibility with genetic dissimilarity. Compatibility does, however, not equal dissimilarity.

Mate choiceEvolutionary biologyOffspringSexual selectionCompatibility (mechanics)Genetic compatibilityBiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFunction (biology)Trends in Ecology & Evolution
researchProduct

Additional file 1 of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

Site, year of isolation, source of isolation (fish or water), location of isolation, host species, sequence type (ST), and allelic profile data for the 83Â F. columnare strains from Finland analyzed by MLST. (DOCX 46 kb)

researchProduct

Broad thermal tolerance is negatively correlated with virulence in an opportunistic bacterial pathogen

2018

Predicting the effects of global increase in temperatures on disease virulence is challenging, especially for environmental opportunistic bacteria, because pathogen fitness may be differentially affected by temperature within and outside host environment. So far, there is very little empirical evidence on the connections between optimal temperature range and virulence in environmentally growing pathogens. Here, we explored whether the virulence of an environmentally growing opportunistic fish pathogen, Flavobacterium columnare, is malleable to evolutionary changes via correlated selection on thermal tolerance. To this end, we experimentally quantified the thermal performance curves (TPCs) f…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinelämmönsietoGrowing seasonVirulenceZoology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesthermal tolerancethermal performance curvesbakteerit03 medical and health sciencesOpportunistic pathogenGeneticsPathogenEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics2. Zero hungerGenetic diversitybiologyHost (biology)opportunistic pathogenta1182virulenssiOriginal Articlesilmastonmuutoksetbiology.organism_classificationvirulenceclimate changetaudinaiheuttajat030104 developmental biology13. Climate actionFlavobacterium columnareta1181Original ArticleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesBacteriaEvolutionary Applications
researchProduct

EVOLUTION OF HSP90 EXPRESSION IN TETRAHYMENA THERMOPHILA (PROTOZOA, CILIATA) POPULATIONS EXPOSED TO THERMALLY VARIABLE ENVIRONMENTS

2004

Evolutionary consequences of thermally varying environments were studied in the ciliated protozoan Tetrahymena thermophila. Replicated lines were propagated for 60 days, a maximum of 500 generations, in stable, slowly fluctuating (red spectrum), and rapidly fluctuating (blue spectrum) temperatures. The red and blue fluctuations had a dominant period length of 15 days and two hours, respectively. The mean temperature of all time series was 25 degrees C and the fluctuating temperatures had the same minimum (10 degrees C), maximum (40 degrees C), and variance. During the experiment, population sizes and biomasses were monitored at three-day intervals. After the experiment, carrying capacity an…

0106 biological sciencesTime FactorsPopulationGene ExpressionEnvironment010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesTetrahymena thermophila03 medical and health sciencesAnimal scienceBotanyGeneticsAnimalsCarrying capacityHSP90 Heat-Shock ProteinsGrowth rateeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologyAnalysis of Variance0303 health sciencesExperimental evolutioneducation.field_of_studybiologyCiliataTemperatureTetrahymenabiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionHsp9013. Climate actionbiology.proteinProtozoaGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEvolution
researchProduct

A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2015

Background Columnaris disease caused by Flavobacterium columnare is a serious problem in aquaculture, annually causing large economic losses around the world. Despite considerable research, the molecular epidemiology of F. columnare remains poorly understood. Methods We investigated the population structure and spatiotemporal changes in the genetic diversity of F. columnare population in Finland by using a multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and analysis (MLSA) based on DNA sequence variation within six housekeeping genes. A total of 83 strains of F. columnare were collected from eight different areas located across the country between 2003 and 2012. Results Partial sequencing of six housekee…

Microbiology (medical)DNA BacterialGenotypeSequence analysisPopulationMolecular Sequence DataSequence HomologyclonalityAquacultureMLST/MLSA schemeMicrobiologyFlavobacteriumFlavobacterium columnareFish DiseasesFlavobacteriaceae InfectionsGenetic variationAnimalsCluster Analysis14. Life underwatereducationRecombination rateFinlandPhylogenyGeneticsrecombination rateClonalFrameGenetic diversityeducation.field_of_studyMolecular EpidemiologyGenes EssentialbiologyPhylogenetic treeMolecular epidemiologyGenetic VariationSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationFlavobacterium columnareMultilocus sequence typingResearch ArticleClonalityMultilocus Sequence TypingBMC Microbiology
researchProduct

Soiden ennallistamisen suoluonto-, vesistö- ja ilmastovaikutukset : Luontopaneelin yhteenveto ja suositukset luontopolitiikan suunnittelun ja päätöks…

2021

Suomen alkuperäisestä 10,4 miljoonan hehtaarin suoalasta yli puolet on ojitettu metsä- ja maatalouden sekä turvetuotannon tarpeisiin. Etelä-Suomessa ojitus on ollut voimakkainta: keskimäärin noin 75 prosenttia ja monin paikoin vielä suurempi osa soista on ojitettu. Suot ovat Euroopan luontotyypeistä kaikkein uhanalaisin luontotyyppiryhmä ja Suomella on erityisvastuu soiden suojelusta. Kaikkiaan 54 prosenttia Suomen 50 suoluontotyypistä on uhanalaisia ja lisäksi 20 prosenttia on silmällä-pidettäviä. Ensisijaisesti Suomen soilla elävistä lajeista 11 prosenttia eli yhteensä 120 lajia on uhanalaisia. Uhanalaisilla lajeilla ja luontotyypeillä on korkea riski hävitä Suomesta. Mittava ojitus näkyy…

1172 Ympäristötiede4112 Metsätiede
researchProduct

Marked Neurospora crassa strains for competition experiments and Bayesian methods for fitness estimates

2019

AbstractThe filamentous fungusNeurospora crassa, a model microbial eukaryote, has a life cycle with many features that make it suitable for studying experimental evolution. However, it has lacked a general tool for estimating relative fitness of different strains in competition experiments. To remedy this need, we constructedN. crassastrains that contain a modifiedcsr-1locus and developed an assay for detecting the proportion of the marked strain using a post PCR high resolution melting assay. DNA extraction from spore samples can be performed on 96-well plates, followed by a PCR step, which allows many samples to be processed with ease. Furthermore, we suggest a Bayesian approach for estim…

0106 biological sciencesGenetics0303 health sciencesMating typeExperimental evolutionbiologyevoluutiobiologiaCrassaLocus (genetics)QH426-470biology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesDNA extractionhigh resolution meltingNeurospora crassacompetitive fitness03 medical and health sciencesGeneticsfungiexperimental evolutionAllelesienetGene030304 developmental biology
researchProduct

Adaptation to environmental stress at different timescales

2020

Environments are changing rapidly, and to cope with these changes, organisms have to adapt. Adaptation can take many shapes and occur at different speeds, depending on the type of response, the trait, the population, and the environmental conditions. The biodiversity crisis that we are currently facing illustrates that numerous species and populations are not capable of adapting with sufficient speed to ongoing environmental changes. Here, we discuss current knowledge on the ability of animals and plants to adapt to environmental stress on different timescales, mainly focusing on thermal stress and ectotherms. We discuss within-generation responses that can be fast and induced within minute…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineTime FactorsEnvironmental changeAcclimatizationClimate Changemedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationBiodiversity010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEpigenesis Genetic03 medical and health sciencesHistory and Philosophy of ScienceStress PhysiologicalevolutionAnimalsHumansEcosystemeducationEcosystemPlant Physiological Phenomenamedia_commoneducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental ExposurePlants15. Life on landAdaptation Physiologicalenvironmental stress030104 developmental biology13. Climate actionEctothermplasticityTraitEnvironmental sciencePsychological resilienceAdaptationbusinesstrangenerational effects
researchProduct

The effect of a temperature-sensitive prophage on the evolution of virulence in an opportunistic bacterial pathogen.

2022

https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.16638 Abstract Viruses are key actors of ecosystems and have major impacts on global biogeochemical cycles. Prophages deserve particular attention as they are ubiquitous in bacterial genomes and can enter a lytic cycle when triggered by environmental conditions. We explored how temperature affects the interactions between prophages and other biological levels by using an opportunistic pathogen, the bacterium Serratia marcescens, that harbours several prophages and that had undergone an evolution experiment under several temperature regimes. We found that the release of one of the prophages was temperature-sensitive and malleable to evolutionary changes. We furthe…

prophage inductionMARINE VIRUSESbiologiset vaikutuksetviruksetProphagesvirusLIPOPOLYSACCHARIDESEQUENCEbakteriofagitGeneticsBacteriophagesexperimental evolutionPHYSIOLOGYEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcosystem11832 Microbiology and virologySERRATIA-MARCESCENSepigeneticsVirulenceINDUCTIONopportunistic pathogenTemperatureLYSOGENYekosysteemit (ekologia)taudinaiheuttajatMUTANTSepigenetiikkalämpötilaBACTERIOPHAGERESISTANCEGenome BacterialMolecular ecologyREFERENCES
researchProduct

DOES ENVIRONMENTAL ROBUSTNESS PLAY A ROLE IN FLUCTUATING ENVIRONMENTS?

2013

Fluctuating environments are expected to select for individuals that have highest geometric fitness over the experienced environments. This leads to the prediction that genetically determined environmental robustness in fitness, and average fitness across environments should be positively genetically correlated to fitness in fluctuating environments. Because quantitative genetic experiments resolving these predictions are missing, we used a full-sib, half-sib breeding design to estimate genetic variance for egg-to-adult viability in Drosophila melanogaster exposed to two constant or fluctuating temperatures that were above the species' optimum temperature, during development. Viability in t…

Phenotypic plasticityEcologyfungiStatisticsGeneticsbacteriaRobustness (evolution)Gene–environment interactionBiologyGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciencescomplex mixturesGenetic correlationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEvolution
researchProduct

Inbreeding depression in the effects of body mass on energy use

2011

Large organisms have higher metabolic rates than small organisms but, if we compare their relative metabolic rates (i.e. per gram of tissue), this relationship is very often reversed. The pervasiveness of this phenomenon, called metabolic scaling, has attracted several theoretical explanations, and also produced lingering debate over whether metabolic scaling is a physically constrained and universally constant phenomenon or a more variable and evolutionarily malleable trait. To bring novel insights to this debate, we manipulated male Gryllodes sigillatus crickets’ coefficients of inbreeding to determine whether metabolic scaling is sensitive to the manipulation of genetic quality. Because …

Evolutionary biologyEcologyEnergy (esotericism)Basal metabolic rateTraitInbreeding depressionBiologyBalancing selectionAffect (psychology)InbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)Biological Journal of the Linnean Society
researchProduct

Different food sources elicit fast changes to bacterial virulence

2016

Environmentally transmitted, opportunistic bacterial pathogens have a life cycle that alternates between hosts and environmental reservoirs. Resources are often scarce and fluctuating in the outside-host environment, whereas overcoming the host immune system could allow pathogens to establish a new, resource abundant and stable niche within the host. We tested if short-term exposure to different outside-host resource types and concentrations affect Serratia marcescens —(bacterium)'s virulence in Galleria mellonella (moth). As expected, virulence was mostly dictated by the bacterial dose, but we also found a clear increase in virulence when the bacterium had inhabited a low (versus high) re…

0301 basic medicine030106 microbiologyNicheAdaptation BiologicalVirulenceEnvironmentMothsSerratiaMicrobiology03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsPathogenSerratia marcescensEvolutionary BiologyLife Cycle StagesVirulencebiologyHost (biology)fungita1183Outbreakbiology.organism_classificationAgricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)Bacterial LoadGalleria mellonellaeutrophicationLarvaplasticityHost-Pathogen Interactionsta1181General Agricultural and Biological SciencesresourcesBacteriavirulence pathogenBiology Letters
researchProduct

Can evolution of sexual dimorphism be triggered by developmental temperatures?

2012

Genetic prerequisites for the evolution of sexual dimorphism, sex-specific heritabilities and low or negative genetic correlations between homologous traits in males and females are rarely found. However, sexual dimorphism is evolving rapidly following environmental change, suggesting that sexual dimorphism and its genetic background could be environmentally sensitive. Yet few studies have explored the sensitivity of the genetic background of sexual dimorphism on environmental variation. In this study, on Drosophila melanogaster, we used a large nested full-sib–half-sib breeding design where families were split into four different developmental temperatures: two constant temperature treatme…

Sexual conflictGeneticsSexual dimorphismbiologyEvolutionary biologyGenetic variationQuantitative geneticsDrosophila melanogasterHeritabilityGene–environment interactionbiology.organism_classificationGenetic correlationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Adaptation to fluctuations in temperature by nine species of bacteria

2018

Rapid environmental fluctuations are ubiquitous in the wild, yet majority of experimental studies mostly consider effects of slow fluctuations on organism. To test the evolutionary consequences of fast fluctuations, we conducted nine independent experimental evolution experiments with bacteria. Experimental conditions were same for all species, and we allowed them to evolve either in fluctuating temperature alternating rapidly between 20°C and 40°C or at constant 30°C temperature. After experimental evolution, we tested the performance of the clones in both rapid fluctuation and in constant environments (20°C, 30°C and 40°C). Results from experiments on these nine species were combined meta…

TEMPERATURE FLUCTUATIONympäristöevoluutiobiologiavaikutukseteliöttemperature fluctuationSPECIALISTSTHERMAL PERFORMANCE CURVESbakteerittolerance curveexperimental evolutionsopeutuminenCLIMATE-CHANGEolosuhteetEXPERIMENTAL EVOLUTIONTOLERANCE CURVETEMPORALLY VARYING ENVIRONMENTREACTION NORMDROSOPHILAreaction normESCHERICHIA-COLI1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyPOPULATIONStoleranssitlämpötilaSENSITIVITYGENERALISTS
researchProduct

Epigenetic control of phenotypic plasticity in a filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa

2016

AbstractPhenotypic plasticity is the ability of a genotype to produce different phenotypes under different environmental or developmental conditions. Phenotypic plasticity is an ubiquitous feature of living organisms, and is typically based on variable patterns of gene expression. However, the mechanisms by which gene expression is influenced and regulated during plastic responses are poorly understood in most organisms. While modifications to DNA and histone proteins have been implicated as likely candidates for generating and regulating phenotypic plasticity, specific details of each modification and its mode of operation have remained largely unknown. In this study, we investigated how e…

0106 biological sciencesGenetics0303 health sciencesPhenotypic plasticitybiologyContext (language use)biology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesNeurospora crassa03 medical and health sciencesHistoneHistone methylationDNA methylationbiology.proteinEpigeneticsGene030304 developmental biology010606 plant biology & botany
researchProduct

Species co-occurrence networks of ground beetles in managed grasslands

2020

AbstractGrassland biodiversity, including traditional rural biotopes maintained by traditional agricultural practices, has become threatened worldwide. Road verges have been suggested to be complementary or compensatory habitats for species inhabiting grasslands. Species co-occurrence patterns linked with species traits can be used to separate between the different mechanisms (stochasticity, environmental filtering, biotic interactions) behind community structure. Here, we study species co-occurrence networks and underlying mechanisms of ground beetle species (Carabidae) in three different managed grassland types (meadows, pastures, road verges, n = 12 in each type) in Central Finland. We a…

0106 biological scienceslaitumetesiintyvyysBiodiversitytienpientareetkedotnurmet010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGrasslandGround beetlejoint species distribution modelsspecies traitsmaakiitäjäisetEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsbiodiversitygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyEcology010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyCommunity structureenvironmental filteringeliöyhteisötbiology.organism_classificationbiodiversiteettiGeographyHabitatAnimal ecologyThreatened speciesSpecies richnessCarabidae
researchProduct

Epigenetic Control of Phenotypic Plasticity in the Filamentous Fungus Neurospora crassa

2016

Abstract Phenotypic plasticity is the ability of a genotype to produce different phenotypes under different environmental or developmental conditions. Phenotypic plasticity is a ubiquitous feature of living organisms, and is typically based on variable patterns of gene expression. However, the mechanisms by which gene expression is influenced and regulated during plastic responses are poorly understood in most organisms. While modifications to DNA and histone proteins have been implicated as likely candidates for generating and regulating phenotypic plasticity, specific details of each modification and its mode of operation have remained largely unknown. In this study, we investigated how e…

0301 basic medicineRNA-interferenssiGenotypeInvestigationsQH426-470MethylationModels BiologicalHistone methylationEpigenesis GeneticNeurospora crassaHistonesGene Knockout Techniques03 medical and health sciencesRNA interferenceHistone demethylationGene Expression Regulation FungalHistone methylationGeneticshistone deacetylationEpigeneticshistone methylationGenetikMolecular BiologyGeneCrosses GeneticGenetic Association StudiesGenetics (clinical)Histone deacetylationGeneticsAnalysis of VariancePhenotypic plasticityModels StatisticalDNA methylationNeurospora crassabiologyAcetylationbiology.organism_classificationDNA-metylaatioPhenotype030104 developmental biologyHistonereaction normMutationDNA methylationbiology.proteinta1181fungisienetAlgorithmsG3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics
researchProduct

Inbreeding, energy use and condition

2009

In energetic terms, fitness may be seen to be dependent on successful allocation of energy between life-history traits. In addition, fitness will be constrained by the energy allocation ability, which has also been defined as condition. We suggest here that the allocation ability, estimated as the difference between total energy budget and maintenance metabolism, may be used as a measure of condition. We studied this possibility by measuring the resting metabolic rate and metabolism during forced exercise in Gryllodes sigillatus crickets. To verify that these metabolic traits are closely related to fitness, we experimentally manipulated the degree of inbreeding of individuals belonging to t…

GeneticsPopulation fragmentationEnergy (esotericism)HeritabilityBiologyGryllidaeEvolutionary biologyBasal metabolic rateInbreeding depressionAnimalsFemaleInbreedingEnergy MetabolismEnergy allocationInbreedingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSelection (genetic algorithm)Journal of Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Electronic Supplementary Material from Ecological conditions alter cooperative behaviour and its costs in a chemically defended sawfly.

2018

The evolution of cooperation and social behaviour is often studied in isolation from the ecology of organisms. Yet, the selective environment under which individuals evolve is much more complex in nature, consisting of ecological and abiotic interactions in addition to social ones. Here, we measured the life-history costs of cooperative chemical defence in a gregarious social herbivore, Diprion pini pine sawfly larvae, and how these costs vary under different ecological conditions. We ran a rearing experiment where we manipulated diet (resin content) and attack intensity by repeatedly harassing larvae to produce a chemical defence. We show that forcing individuals to allocate more to cooper…

genetic structuresfungi
researchProduct

Roles of adenosine and cytosine methylation changes and genetic mutations in adaptation to different temperatures

2019

Abstract Epigenetic modifications have been found to be involved in evolution, but the relative contributions of genetic and epigenetic variation in adaptation are unknown. Furthermore, previous studies on the role of epigenetic changes in adaptation have nearly exclusively focused on cytosine methylation in eukaryotes. We collected phenotypic, genetic, and epigenetic data from populations of the bacterium Serratia marcescens that had undergone experimental evolution in contrasting temperatures to investigate the relationship between environment, genetics, epigenetic, and phenotypic traits. The genomic distribution of methylated adenosines (m6A) pointed to their role in regulation of gene e…

sense organsskin and connective tissue diseases
researchProduct

Additional file 4 of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

The fluorescence peak profiles for the ARISA genotypes analysed with ABI Prism 3130xl Genetic Analyser and the GeneMapper v.5.0 software (Applied Biosystems, Carlsbad, California, USA). For the 83 strains isolated from Finland, we also determined the ARISA (automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis) genotypes following the procedure described by Suomalainen et al. [8]. However, the previously published method was modified so that ABI Prism 3130xl Genetic Analyser is used instead of LI-COR 4200 automatic sequencer The analysis revealed that ARISA genotypes associate uniformly with the clusters from the MLSA scheme. Briefly, the PCR reaction mixture (total volume 10 ul) contained 1X Drea…

researchProduct

Additional file 3 of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

Neighbor Joining phylogenetic trees based on the individual sequences of six MLST loci (trpB, rpoD, gyrB, dnaK, atpA,and tuf). MEGA v5.2 was used to evaluate the models for nucleotide substitution for each protein-coding locus and to construct the phylogenetic trees for Finnish F. columnare strains. The F. columnare type strain NCIMB 2248T isolated in the USA and two reference strains JIP39/87 and ATCC49512, both isolated in France, were also included in the phylogenetic analysis. The best model indicated by the lowest Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) value was used to generate the Neighbor-Joining tree based on 1000 replicates. The T92 model was selected for dnaK, tuf, and gyrB, while …

researchProduct

Additional file 2 of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

Target genes and primers for the housekeeping genes of F. columnare. The loci used for the MLST/MLSA scheme are shown in bold font. Length refers to the length of the target sequence. * Reference for 16S rDNA primers [52]. (DOCX 20 kb)

genetic structures3. Good health
researchProduct

Gene expression centroids that link with low intrinsic aerobic exercise capacity and complex disease risk

2010

A strong link exists between low aerobic exercise capacity and complex metabolic diseases. To probe this linkage, we utilized rat models of low and high intrinsic aerobic endurance running capacity that differ also in the risk for metabolic syndrome. We investigated in skeletal muscle gene-phenotype relationships that connect aerobic endurance capacity with metabolic disease risk factors. The study compared 12 high capacity runners (HCRs) and 12 low capacity runners (LCRs) from generation 18 of selection that differed by 615% for maximal treadmill endurance running capacity. On average, LCRs were heavier and had increased blood glucose, insulin, and triglycerides compared with HCRs. HCRs we…

medicine.medical_treatmentBiochemistryResearch Communicationschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicineRisk Factorslipid metabolismOligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis0303 health sciencesExercise ToleranceImmunohistochemistryMitochondriamedicine.anatomical_structureFemaleBiotechnologymedicine.medical_specialtyOxidative phosphorylationBiology03 medical and health sciencesOxygen ConsumptionMetabolic DiseasesPhysical Conditioning AnimalInternal medicineGeneticsmedicineAnimalsoxygen metabolismAerobic exerciseGenetic Predisposition to Diseaseskeletal muscleMuscle SkeletalMolecular BiologyAerobic capacity030304 developmental biologyMyosin Heavy Chainscomplex metabolic diseaseFatty acid metabolismGene Expression ProfilingInsulinSkeletal musclemedicine.diseaseRatsDisease Models AnimalEndocrinologyGene Expression RegulationchemistryBasal metabolic rateMetabolic syndromeEnergy Metabolism030217 neurology & neurosurgeryThe FASEB Journal
researchProduct

Roles of adenine methylation and genetic mutations in adaptation to different temperatures in Serratia marcescens

2019

AbstractEpigenetic modifications can contribute to adaptation, but the relative contributions of genetic and epigenetic variation are unknown. Previous studies on the role of epigenetic changes in adaptation in eukaryotes have nearly exclusively focused on cytosine methylation (m5C), while prokaryotes exhibit a richer system of methyltransferases targetting adenines (m6A) or cytosines (m4C, m5C). DNA methylation in prokaryotes has many roles, but its potential role in adaptation still needs further investigation. We collected phenotypic, genetic, and epigenetic data using single molecule real-time sequencing of clones of the bacterium Serratia marcescens that had undergone experimental evol…

GeneticsRegulation of gene expressionCancer ResearchExperimental evolutionMethyltransferaseDNA methylationPhenotypic traitMethylationEpigeneticsAdaptationBiologyMolecular BiologyPhenotype
researchProduct

Luonnon monimuotoisuus ja vihreä elvytys

2021

Suomi on toistaiseksi selvinnyt koronaviruksen (COVID-19) aiheuttamasta kriisistä taloudellisesti verrokkimaita paremmin, mutta työllisyystilanne on silti heikentynyt ympäri maata ja talouden ennustetaan supistuvan noin 4,7 prosenttia vuonna 20201. Negatiivisten talousvaikutusten minimoimiseksi hallitus on suuntaamassa EU:n elpymisvälineestä varoja käytettäväksi toimiin, jotka samanaikaisesti auttavat ratkaisemaan aikamme kahta merkittävää kriisiä: ilmastonmuutosta ja luontokatoa. Kyse on aidosti vakavista kriiseistä. Esimerkiksi Maailman talousfoorumi on listannut luonnon ekosysteemien romahduksen ja ilmastonmuutoksen torjunnan epäonnistumisen sekä vaikutuksiltaan että todennäköisyydeltään…

0106 biological sciencesGeneral Health Professions010501 environmental sciences010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences0105 earth and related environmental sciencesSuomen Luontopaneelin julkaisuja
researchProduct

Keskeiset keinot luontokadon pysäyttämiseksi

2021

Sanna Marinin hallitus on sitoutunut luonnon monimuotoisuuden tilan parantamiseen ja luontokadon pysäyttämiseen. Lupaus on äärimmäisen tärkeä. Luonnon ekosysteemien heikennys uhkaa elintärkeiden eko-systeemipalveluiden tuotantoa sekä ihmisten terveyttä, hyvinvointia ja turvallisuutta. Maailman talousfoorumi on nostanut luontokadon viiden vakavimman ihmiskuntaa uhkaavan riskin joukkoon. Myös Suomen luontotyyppien ja lajiston uhanalaisuustilanne on hälyttävä. Hallituksen kehysriihessä päätetään hallitusohjelman toteuttamisesta ja lunastetaan vuoden 2019 eduskuntavaalien lupaukset luonto- ja ilmastotoimista. Myös EU:n uusi biodiversiteettistrategia velvoittaa Suomea panostamaan luonnonsuojeluu…

researchProduct

Experimental approaches for testing if tolerance curves are useful for predicting fitness in fluctuating environments

2017

Most experimental studies on adaptation to stressful environments are performed under conditions that are rather constant and rarely ecologically relevant. Fluctuations in natural environmental conditions are ubiquitous and include for example variation in intensity and duration of temperature, droughts, parasite loads, and availability of nutrients, predators and competitors. The frequency and amplitude of many of these fluctuations are expected to increase with climate change. Tolerance curves are often used to describe fitness components across environmental gradients. Such curves can be obtained by assessing performance in a range of constant environmental conditions. In this perspectiv…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineSpecies distributionlcsh:EvolutionClimate changeEnvironmental stressBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesEnvironmental stress03 medical and health sciencesAbundance (ecology)lcsh:QH540-549.5Tolerance curveslcsh:QH359-425Range (statistics)EconometricsClimate changeConstant and fluctuating environmentsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicssietokykysopeutuminenEcologyEcologyconstant and fluctuating environmentsBiotailmastonmuutoksetenvironmental stressSpecies distributionsconstant and fluctuating environmentstolerance curvesclimate changespecies distributions030104 developmental biologyta1181lcsh:EcologyAdaptationConstant (mathematics)ympäristönmuutokset
researchProduct

Endurance in excercise is associated with courtship call rate in decorated cricket, Gryllodes sigillatus

2009

Question: Is sexual signalling (courtship call rate) determined by physiological fitness (energy metabolism at rest), endurance during physically demanding activity, an aspect of immune defence (lytic activity) or body mass? Organism: Pedigree laboratory population of decorated crickets (Gryllodes sigillatus). Methods: Behavioural trial of male courtship call rate and measurements of males’ physiological performance. Covariance analysis exploring the determinants of courtship call rate. Results: We found that endurance was strongly positively associated with the courtship call rate. However, neither the lytic activity nor the resting metabolic rate correlated with courtship call rate. Toget…

sisäsiitosperiytyvyysmorfologiafungibehavior and behavior mechanismsenergian käyttöpsychological phenomena and processesreproductive and urinary physiologykunto
researchProduct

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

genetic structuresstomatognathic systemfungibacteriaequipment and supplies3. Good health
researchProduct

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

genetic structuresstomatognathic systemfungibacteriaequipment and supplies3. Good health
researchProduct

Additional file 2 of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

Target genes and primers for the housekeeping genes of F. columnare. The loci used for the MLST/MLSA scheme are shown in bold font. Length refers to the length of the target sequence. * Reference for 16S rDNA primers [52]. (DOCX 20 kb)

genetic structures3. Good health
researchProduct

Soiden ennallistamisen suoluonto-, vesistö- ja ilmastovaikutukset. Luontopaneelin yhteenveto ja suositukset luontopolitiikan suunnittelun ja päätökse…

2021

Suomen alkuperäisestä 10,4 miljoonan hehtaarin suoalasta yli puolet on ojitettu metsä- ja maatalouden sekä turvetuotannon tarpeisiin. Etelä-Suomessa ojitus on ollut voimakkainta: keskimäärin noin 75 prosenttia ja monin paikoin vielä suurempi osa soista on ojitettu. Suot ovat Euroopan luontotyypeistä kaikkein uhanalaisin luontotyyppiryhmä ja Suomella on erityisvastuu soiden suojelusta. Kaikkiaan 54 prosenttia Suomen 50 suoluontotyypistä on uhanalaisia ja lisäksi 20 prosenttia on silmällä-pidettäviä. Ensisijaisesti Suomen soilla elävistä lajeista 11 prosenttia eli yhteensä 120 lajia on uhanalaisia. Uhanalaisilla lajeilla ja luontotyypeillä on korkea riski hävitä Suomesta. Mittava ojitus näkyy…

16. Peace & justiceSuomen Luontopaneelin julkaisuja
researchProduct

Additional file 5 of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

Phylogenetic tree based on the 16Â s rDNA sequence data obtained from the representatives of Finnish F .columnare genotypes (A-H) studied in this study and other F .columnare sequences obtained from the GenBank. The tree was constructed by a UPGMA clustering method with a resampling of 1,000 bootstrap replicates and the Jukes Cantor model. Two strains representative of each ARISA genotype/MLSA cluster studied in this study were used for tree construction (identical sequences removed for clarity of representation). (PDF 191 kb)

researchProduct

Jatkuvapeitteisen metsänkäsittelyn vaikutukset luonnon monimuotoisuuteen, vesistöihin, ilmastoon, virkistyskäyttöön ja metsätuhoriskeihin

2022

Sekä jatkuvapeitteistä että jaksollista metsänkäsittelyä tehdään eri voimakkuuksilla ja erilaisin hakkuutavoin. Ei ole olemassa yksiselitteistä sääntöä, jolla voitaisiin todeta, kuuluuko jokin tietty hakkuutapa jatkuva-peitteiseen vai jaksolliseen käsittelyyn (avohakkuita lukuun ottamatta). Esimerkiksi yläharvennuksia tehdään molemmissa käsittelytavoissa. Kaikkien metsänkäsittelytapojen aiheuttama häiriö on tyypillisesti sitä voimakkaampi, mitä voimakkaampi hakkuu tehdään. Avohakkuut aiheuttavat suurimman haitallisen vaikutuksen sekä luontoon että moniin metsien tarjoamiin ekosysteemipalveluihin. Yhteiskunnan kokonais-edun kannalta jatkuvapeitteisen käsittelyn osuuden lisääminen puuntuotann…

metsätalousmetsänkäsittelyluonnonsuojelubiodiversiteetti
researchProduct

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

2019

of A multilocus sequence analysis scheme for characterization of Flavobacterium columnare isolates

genetic structuresstomatognathic systemfungibacteriaequipment and supplies3. Good health
researchProduct

Systematic Comparison of Epidemic and Non-Epidemic Carbapenem Resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae Strains

2021

Over the past few decades, extensively drug resistant (XDR) resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae has become a notable burden to healthcare all over the world. Especially carbapenemase-producing strains are problematic due to their capability to withstand even last resort antibiotics. Some sequence types (STs) of K. pneumoniae are significantly more prevalent in hospital settings in comparison to other equally resistant strains. This provokes the question whether or not there are phenotypic characteristics that may render certain K. pneumoniae more suitable for epidemic dispersal between patients, hospitals, and different environments. In this study, we selected seven epidemic and non-epidemic ca…

Microbiology (medical)antibiotic resistanceImmunologyextended-spectrum beta-lactamasevirulenssiepidemiatMicrobiologyepidemicbakteeritvirulenceInfectious DiseasesKlebsiella-bakteeritXDR Klebsiella pneumoniaeantibioottiresistenssi
researchProduct

Data from: Intensive aquaculture selects for increased virulence and interference competition in bacteria

2016

Although increased disease severity driven by intensive farming practices is problematic in food production, the role of evolutionary change in disease is not well understood in these environments. Experiments on parasite evolution are traditionally conducted using laboratory models, often unrelated to economically important systems. We compared how the virulence, growth and competitive ability of a globally important fish pathogen, Flavobacterium columnare, change under intensive aquaculture. We characterized bacterial isolates from disease outbreaks at fish farms during 2003-2010, and compared F. columnare populations in inlet water and outlet water of a fish farm during the 2010 outbreak…

medicine and health careDanio rerioVirulenceMedicineAquacultureLife sciencesfish farmingpathogenflavobacterium columnare
researchProduct

Data from: A mechanistic underpinning for sigmoid dose-dependent infection

2016

Theoretical models of environmentally transmitted diseases often assume that transmission is a constant process, which scales linearly with pathogen dose. Here we question the applicability of such an assumption and propose a sigmoidal form for the pathogens infectivity response. In our formulation, this response arises under two assumptions: 1) multiple invasion events are required for a successful pathogen infection and 2) the host invasion state is reversible. The first assumption reduces pathogen infection rates at low pathogen doses, while the second assumption, due to host immune function, leads to a saturating infection rate at high doses. The derived pathogen dose:infection rate -re…

medicine and health careepidemiological modellingGalleria mellonellaenvironmental transmissionMedicinepathogen transmissionLife sciencesSerratia marcescens
researchProduct

Data from: Fluctuating temperature leads to evolution of thermal generalism and preadaptation to novel environments

2013

Environmental fluctuations can select for generalism, which is also hypothesized to increase organisms’ ability to invade novel environments. Here, we show that across a range of temperatures, opportunistic bacterial pathogen Serratia marcescens that evolved in fluctuating temperature (daily variation between 24°C and 38°C, mean 31°C) outperforms the strains that evolved in constant temperature (31°C). The growth advantage was also evident in novel environments in the presence of parasitic viruses and predatory protozoans, but less clear in the presence of stressful chemicals. Adaptation to fluctuating temperature also led to reduced virulence in Drosophila melanogaster host, which suggests…

medicine and health carefungiMedicinePodoviridaeLife sciencesSerratia marcescensTetrahymena thermophilaSelection - Experimental
researchProduct

Appendix B. Supplementary results: description of stratification and ice cover, environmental variables, elemental composition of Daphnia, and propor…

2016

Supplementary results: description of stratification and ice cover, environmental variables, elemental composition of Daphnia, and proportion of Daphnia infected with Larssonia obtusa and Pasteuria ramosa during the study period.

researchProduct

Data from: Different food sources elicit fast changes to bacterial virulence

2016

Environmentally transmitted, opportunistic bacterial pathogens have a life cycle that alternates between hosts and environmental reservoirs. Resources are often scarce and fluctuating in the outside-host environment, whereas overcoming the host immune system could allow pathogens to establish a new, resource abundant and stable niche within the host. We tested if shortterm exposure to different outside-host resource types and concentrations affect Serratia marcescens—(bacterium)’s virulence in Galleria mellonella (moth). As expected, virulence was mostly dictated by the bacterial dose, but we also found a clear increase in virulence when the bacterium had inhabited a low (versus high) resou…

medicine and health carefungiMedicineLife sciences
researchProduct

Data from: Propagule pressure increase and phylogenetic diversity decrease community’s susceptibility to invasion

2017

Invasions pose a large threat to native species, but the question of why some species are more invasive, and some communities more prone to invasions than others, is far from solved. Using ten different three-species bacterial communities, we tested experimentally if the phylogenetic relationships between an invader and a resident community and propagule pressure affect invasion probability. We found that greater diversity in phylogenetic distances between the resident community members and the invader lowered invasion success, and higher propagule pressure increased invasion success whereas phylogenetic distance had no clear effect. In the later stages of invasion phylogenetic diversity ha…

medicine and health carePseudomonas putidaphylogenetic similarity and propagule pressureLife SciencesMedicinephylogenetic distanceEnterobacter aerogenesPseudomonas chlororaphisSerratia marcescensLeclercia adecarboxylata
researchProduct

Appendix A. Description of the study site, sampling procedure, and chemical analysis.

2016

Description of the study site, sampling procedure, and chemical analysis.

researchProduct

Data from: Heat hardening capacity in Drosophila melanogaster is life stage specific and juveniles show the highest plasticity

2019

Variations in stress resistance and adaptive plastic responses during ontogeny have rarely been addressed, despite the possibility that differences between life stages can affect species' range margins and thermal tolerance. Here, we assessed the thermal sensitivity and hardening capacity of Drosophila melanogaster across developmental stages from larval to the adult stage. We observed strong differences between life stages in heat resistance, with adults being most heat resistant followed by puparia, pupae and larvae. The impact of heat hardening (1 h at 35°C) on heat resistance changed during ontogeny, with the highest positive effect of hardening observed in puparia and pupae and the low…

medicine and health carehardeningfungilife stage specific plasticityMedicineHeat resistanceLife sciences
researchProduct

Data from: Ecological conditions alter cooperative behaviour and its costs in a chemically defended sawfly

2018

The evolution of cooperation and social behaviour is often studied in isolation from the ecology of organisms. Yet, the selective environment under which individuals evolve is much more complex in nature, consisting of ecological and abiotic interactions in addition to social ones. Here we measured the life-history costs of cooperative chemical defence in a gregarious social herbivore, Diprion pini pine sawfly larvae, and how these costs vary under different ecological conditions. We ran a rearing experiment where we manipulated diet (resin content) and attack intensity by repeatedly harassing larvae to produce a chemical defence. We show that forcing individuals to allocate more to coopera…

medicine and health careautomimicrygenetic structuresDiprionidaefungiMedicineDiprion piniLife scienceslife-history costsantipredator defence
researchProduct

Data from: Effects of acclimation time and epigenetic mechanisms on growth of Neurospora in fluctuating environments

2018

Reaction norms or tolerance curves have often been used to predict how organisms deal with fluctuating environments. A potential drawback is that reaction norms measured in different constant environments may not capture all aspects of organismal responses to fluctuating environments. We examined growth of the filamentous fungus Neurospora crassa in fluctuating temperatures and tested if growth in fluctuating temperatures can be explained simply by growth in different constant temperatures or if more complex models are needed. In addition, as previous studies on fluctuating environments have revealed that past temperatures that organisms have experienced can affect their response to current…

medicine and health careNeurospora crassaepigeneticsfluctuating environmentfungiMedicineLife sciences
researchProduct

Data from: Broad thermal tolerance is negatively correlated with virulence in an opportunistic bacterial pathogen

2018

Predicting the effects of global increase in temperatures on disease virulence is challenging, especially for environmental opportunistic bacteria, because pathogen fitness may be differentially affected by temperature within and outside host environment. So far, there is very little empirical evidence on the connections between optimal temperature range and virulence in environmentally growing pathogens. Here we explored if the virulence of an environmentally growing opportunistic fish pathogen, Flavobacterium columnare, is malleable to evolutionary changes via correlated selection on thermal tolerance. To this end, we experimentally quantified the thermal performance curves (TPCs) for max…

medicine and health careVirulenceopportunistic pathogenLife SciencesMedicinethermal performance curvesflavobacterium columnare
researchProduct

Supplemental Material for Kronholm et al., 2020

2020

Supplementary material that includes a figure and table for article: Marked Neurospora crassa strains for competition experiments and Bayesian methods for fitness estimates. By Kronholm et al.

FOS: Biological sciencesGenetics
researchProduct

Data from: Evolution of bacterial life history traits is sensitive to community structure

2016

Very few studies have experimentally assessed the evolutionary effects of species interactions within the same trophic level. Here we show that when Serratia marcescens evolve in multispecies communities, their growth rate exceeds the growth rate of the bacteria that evolved alone, whereas the biomass yield gets lower. In addition to the community effects per se, we found that few species in the communities caused strong effects on S. marcescens evolution. The results indicate that evolutionary responses (of a focal species) are different in communities, compared to species evolving alone. Moreover, selection can lead to very different outcomes depending on the community structure. Such con…

medicine and health careNovosophingobium capsulatumPseudomonas putidaLife SciencesMedicineEnterobacter aerogenesPseudomonas chlororaphisSerratia marcescensLeclercia adecarboxylata
researchProduct

Original data and analysis scripts for article: Marked Neurospora crassa strains for competition experiments and Bayesian methods for fitness estimat…

2019

fungiexperimental evolutionhigh resolution meltingcompetitive fitness
researchProduct

Research data of an article: "Application of high resolution melting assay (HMR) to study temperature dependent infraspecific competition in an patho…

2017

Studies on species’ responses to climate change have focused largely on the direct effect of abiotic factors and in particular temperature, neglecting the effects of biotic interactions in determining the outcome of climate change projections. Many microbes rely on strong interference competition; hence the fitness of many pathogenic bacteria could be a function of both their growth properties and intraspecific competition. However, due to technical challenges in distinguishing and tracking individual strains, experimental evidence on intraspecific competition has been limited so far. Here, we developed a robust application of the high-resolution melting (HRM) assay to study head-to-head co…

microbeFlavobacterium columnaretemperaturebacteriacompetitionpathogen
researchProduct

The effect of environmental fluctuations – Could climate change promote species’ invasion success?

2018

The global climate change is presumed to increase the amount of fluctuations in the environmental conditions. This could increase the amount of species invasion into new areas if fluctuations affect the ecological and evolutionary processes that make species successful as invaders, and native communities and their environments more susceptible to invasions1. Disturbed environments are assumed to be more prone to invasions and the fluctuations in invasive species’ home range could pre-adapt them to tolerate similar conditions elsewhere. Under fluctuating conditions, natural selection could potentially favor traits like generalism, which is profitable in adaptation to wide range of conditions…

researchProduct