Search results for "Biological evolution"

showing 10 items of 522 documents

Life History Trade-Offs and Relaxed Selection Can Decrease Bacterial Virulence in Environmental Reservoirs

2012

Pathogen virulence is usually thought to evolve in reciprocal selection with the host. While this might be true for obligate pathogens, the life histories of opportunistic pathogens typically alternate between within-host and outside-host environments during the infection-transmission cycle. As a result, opportunistic pathogens are likely to experience conflicting selection pressures across different environments, and this could affect their virulence through life-history trait correlations. We studied these correlations experimentally by exposing an opportunistic bacterial pathogen Serratia marcescens to its natural protist predator Tetrahymena thermophila for 13 weeks, after which we meas…

Food ChainEvolutionary ProcessesScienceVirulenceParallel EvolutionPathogenesisEnvironmentBiologyForms of EvolutionMicrobiologyDivergent EvolutionTetrahymena thermophilaMicrobial Ecology03 medical and health sciencesNatural Selectionexperimental evolutionSelection GeneticAdaptationBiologyMicrobial PathogensPathogenSerratia marcescensSelection (genetic algorithm)030304 developmental biologyGeneticsEvolutionary Biology0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryEcologyObligate030306 microbiologyHost (biology)Mechanism (biology)QRAdaptation PhysiologicalBiological EvolutionBacterial PathogensvirulenceEvolutionary EcologyMicrobial EvolutionBacterial pigmentMedicineta1181AdaptationResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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La relativité d’échelle dans la morphogenèse du vivant : fractal, déterminisme et hasard

2012

The Scale Relativity Theory has many biological applications from linear to non-linear and, from classical mechanics to quantum mechanics. Self-similar laws have been used as model for the description of a huge number of biological systems. Theses laws may explain the origin of basal life structures. Log-periodic behaviors of acceleration or deceleration can be applied to branching macroevolution, to the time sequences of major evolutionary leaps. The existence of such a law does not mean that the role of chance in evolution is reduced, but instead that randomness and contingency may occur within a framework which may itself be structured in a partly statistical way. The scale relativity th…

FractalScale relativitySurgeryBiological evolutionStatistical physicsMacroevolutionRandomnessMathematicsAnnales de Chirurgie Plastique Esthétique
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Do Women Prefer More Complex Music around Ovulation?

2012

The evolutionary origins of music are much debated. One theory holds that the ability to produce complex musical sounds might reflect qualities that are relevant in mate choice contexts and hence, that music is functionally analogous to the sexually-selected acoustic displays of some animals. If so, women may be expected to show heightened preferences for more complex music when they are most fertile. Here, we used computer-generated musical pieces and ovulation predictor kits to test this hypothesis. Our results indicate that women prefer more complex music in general; however, we found no evidence that their preference for more complex music increased around ovulation. Consequently, our f…

Future studiesCultural anthropologyMarkov modelslcsh:MedicineMusicalSocial and Behavioral SciencesBehavioral Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineAttitudes (psychology)Human PerformancePsychologylcsh:Sciencemedia_commonMultidisciplinary05 social sciencesExperimental PsychologyMiddle AgedBiological EvolutionSensory SystemsPreferenceBiological AnthropologyMental HealthAuditory SystemSexual selectionMate choiceSexual selectionMedicineFemaleSensory PerceptionMusic perceptionResearch ArticleCognitive psychologyAdultOvulationAdolescentSexual Behaviormedia_common.quotation_subjectBiologyForms of Evolution050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesQL0750AnimalsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesCultural anthropologyChemistry (relationship)BiologyOvulationEvolutionary BiologyBehaviorlcsh:RAnthropologylcsh:QBioacousticsMenstrual cycleMusic030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeurosciencePLoS ONE
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Divergent Macroparasite Infections in Parapatric Swiss Lake-Stream Pairs of Threespine Stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus)

2015

Spatial heterogeneity in diversity and intensity of parasitism is a typical feature of most hostparasite interactions, but understanding of the evolutionary implications of such variation is limited. One possible outcome of infection heterogeneities is parasite-mediated divergent selection between host populations, ecotypes or species which may facilitate the process of ecological speciation. However, very few studies have described infections in populationpairs along the speciation continuum from low to moderate or high degree of genetic differentiation that would address the possibility of parasite-mediated divergent selection in the early stages of the speciation process. Here we provide…

Gene FlowGenetic SpeciationAllopatric speciationlcsh:MedicinePopulation geneticsGasterosteusParapatric speciationjärvetinfektiotEcological speciationHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseaseslakesAnimalsinfectionslcsh:ScienceEcosystemkolmipiikkiMultidisciplinarybiologylcsh:RSticklebackbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionSmegmamorphaLakesGenetic SpeciationEvolutionary biologythreespine sticklebackta1181Macroparasite570 Life sciences; biologylcsh:QResearch ArticleMicrosatellite Repeats
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Weak warning signals can persist in the absence of gene flow.

2019

Significance With our comprehensive set of field (model survival), laboratory (controlled learning, palatability, toxin analysis), and molecular data, we provide evidence that polymorphism can persist in an aposematic population, despite expectations of positive frequency-dependent selection. We show that this can happen if prey species carrying a strong signal can exploit predator learning to elicit broad avoidance of many signals, even if predators only have experience with a single signal. This could allow novel signals to be protected within a population of aposematic prey. Thus, under the expectations of broad generalization coupled with limited gene flow, weak aposematic signals can p…

Gene FlowunpalatabilityBehavior AnimalEvolutionfood and beveragesGenetic VariationBiological SciencesBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalpolymorphismAnimal Communicationfrequency-dependent selectionGenetics PopulationPhenotypePNAS PlusPredatory BehaviorAvoidance LearningAnimalsaposematismAnuraChickensAnimals Poisonoussecondary defensesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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Horizontally transmitted parasitoid killing factor shapes insect defense to parasitoids

2021

Protection from parasitism by a virus Parasitoid wasps have developed myriad systems to overcome the defense mechanisms of their hosts as they lay their eggs in the bodies and eggs of targeted species. Gasmi et al . report how the host can fight back when infected by a virus that expresses a protein conferring resistance to the parasitoid. When members of the butterfly and moth family are targeted by wasps, a protein family has evolved that is horizontally carried by viruses—and sometimes is incorporated into the host genome—and impairs the ability of parasitoid offspring to fully develop and emerge. Characterizing the ability of this protein to protect hosts against specific parasites, the…

Gene Transfer Horizontalmedia_common.quotation_subjectGenome InsectWaspsZoologyParasitismApoptosisInsect VirusesInsectSpodopteraCompetition (biology)Host-Parasite InteractionsParasitoidLepidoptera genitaliaViral Proteins03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineEvolutionary arms raceAnimals030304 developmental biologymedia_common0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarybiologyHost (biology)fungibiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionMicrogastrinaeNucleopolyhedrovirusesLepidopteraLarvaEntomopoxvirinaeInsect Proteins030217 neurology & neurosurgeryScience
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DNA sequence and pattern of expression of the sea urchin (Paracentrotus lividus) alpha-tubulin genes.

1989

To study the molecular aspects of the regulation of transcription of a multigene family, we have isolated and sequenced cDNA and genomic clones coding for the alpha-tubulin of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus. Two cDNA clones, P alpha 10 and P alpha 4, contain respectively the coding information for 391 C-terminal and for 338 N-terminal amino acids of the 452 residues that constitute the complete protein. They show silent nucleotide substitutions only, suggesting that P alpha 10 and P alpha 4 represent the cloned copies of two allelic gene transcripts, which encode for two alpha-tubulin isoforms with identical amino acid sequence in the region of the overlap. The comparison of the predi…

Gene isoformSequence analysisMolecular Sequence DataRestriction MappingParacentrotus lividusTranscription (biology)TubulinComplementary DNAGeneticsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceRNA MessengerPeptide sequenceGeneMammalsbiologyBase SequenceRNACell BiologyDNAbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyBiological EvolutionGene Expression RegulationMultigene FamilySea UrchinsDNA ProbesDevelopmental BiologyMolecular reproduction and development
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Sequences of isopenicillin N synthetase genes suggest horizontal gene transfer from prokaryotes to eukaryotes

1990

Evolutionary distances between bacterial and fungal isopenicillin N synthetase (IPNS) genes have been compared to distances between the corresponding 5S rRNA genes. The presence of sequences homologous to the IPNS gene has been examined in DNAs from representative prokaryotic organisms and Ascomycotina. The results of both analyses strongly support two different events of horizontal transfer of the IPNS gene from bacteria to filamentous fungi. This is the first example of such a type of transfer from prokaryotes to eukaryotes.

Genes FungalMolecular Sequence DataPenicillium chrysogenumBiologyTransfectionAspergillus nidulansGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology5S ribosomal RNASequence Homology Nucleic AcidGeneGeneral Environmental ScienceGeneticsBase SequenceGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologyGenetic transferNucleic acid sequenceGeneral MedicineTransfectionbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionStreptomycesAcremoniumGenes BacterialHorizontal gene transferNucleic acidOxidoreductasesGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesBacteriaProceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
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Chasing the Origin of Viruses: Capsid-Forming Genes as a Life-Saving Preadaptation within a Community of Early Replicators

2015

Virus capsids mediate the transfer of viral genetic information from one cell to another, thus the origin of the first viruses arguably coincides with the origin of the viral capsid. Capsid genes are evolutionarily ancient and their emergence potentially predated even the origin of first free-living cells. But does the origin of the capsid coincide with the origin of viruses, or is it possible that capsid-like functionalities emerged before the appearance of true viral entities? We set to investigate this question by using a computational simulator comprising primitive replicators and replication parasites within a compartment matrix. We observe that systems with no horizontal gene transfer…

Genes ViralSciencevirusesorigin of virusesBiologyVirus Physiological PhenomenaVirus ReplicationEvolution Molecularvirus capsids03 medical and health sciencesCompartment (development)Gene030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryModels Genetic030306 microbiologyHuman evolutionary geneticsta1184ta1183QRBiological Evolutioncapsid genesCapsidViral replicationViral evolutionHorizontal gene transferMedicineCapsid ProteinsResearch ArticleVirus Physiological Phenomena
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Sequence and evolution of the gene for the monomeric globin I and its linkage to genes coding for dimeric globins in the insect Chironomus thummi.

1995

We isolated genomic clones containing sequences encoding globins I and IA from a Chironomus thummi thummi genomic library. Three clones contain globin IA (ctt-1A) genes, while one contains a globin I (ctt-1) gene. The coding regions of the four genes are identical except for the single base substitution accounting for the globin I/IA polymorphism. The noncoding DNA flanking the coding region is more than 98% similar, confirming a previous hypothesis that the globin ctt-1 and ctt-1A genes are alleles. Hemoglobins I and IA are monomeric in the insect hemolymph. Earlier in situ hybridization studies suggested that monomeric and dimeric globin genes are clustered at different chromosomal loci. …

Genetic LinkageMolecular Sequence DataGenes InsectBiologyChironomidaechemistry.chemical_compoundMolecular evolutionhemic and lymphatic diseasesGeneticsCoding regionAnimalsGenomic libraryGlobinAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsIn Situ HybridizationGeneticsPolytene chromosomeBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino AcidChromosome MappingMolecular biologyNoncoding DNABiological EvolutionGlobinschemistrySequence AlignmentDNAJournal of molecular evolution
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