Search results for "Human evolutionary genetics"

showing 10 items of 15 documents

Genetic Basis of Body Color and Spotting Pattern in Redheaded Pine Sawfly Larvae (Neodiprion lecontei)

2018

Abstract Pigmentation has emerged as a premier model for understanding the genetic basis of phenotypic evolution, and a growing catalog of color loci is starting to reveal biases in the mutations, genes, and genetic architectures underlying color variation in the wild. However, existing studies have sampled a limited subset of taxa, color traits, and developmental stages. To expand the existing sample of color loci, we performed QTL mapping analyses on two types of larval pigmentation traits that vary among populations of the redheaded pine sawfly (Neodiprion lecontei): carotenoid-based yellow body color and melanin-based spotting pattern. For both traits, our QTL models explained a substan…

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineCandidate geneGenetic LinkageGenome InsectQuantitative Trait LociQuantitative trait locusBiologyInvestigationsevolutionary genetics010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencestoukat03 medical and health sciencesQuantitative Trait HeritableGenetic linkageGeneticsGene familyAnimalssahapistiäisetconvergent evolutionDomesticationGeneGenetic Association Studies030304 developmental biologyGenetics0303 health sciencesHuman evolutionary geneticsPigmentationta1184väri (ominaisuudet)carotenoidsChromosome Mappingbiology.organism_classificationgeneettinen muuntelugenetic architectureHymenopteraGenetic architecturekarotenoiditmelaninSawflyNeodiprion lecontei030104 developmental biologyPhenotypeEvolutionary biologyLarvata1181Femalepigmentti (biologia)
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Genome analysis of the monoclonal marbled crayfish reveals genetic separation over a short evolutionary timescale

2021

The marbled crayfish (Procambarus virginalis) represents a very recently evolved parthenogenetic freshwater crayfish species that has invaded diverse habitats in Europe and in Madagascar. However, population genetic analyses have been hindered by the homogeneous genetic structure of the population and the lack of suitable tools for data analysis. We have used whole-genome sequencing to characterize reference specimens from various known wild populations. In parallel, we established a whole-genome sequencing data analysis pipeline for the population genetic analysis of nearly monoclonal genomes. Our results provide evidence for systematic genetic differences between geographically separated …

0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicinePopulation geneticsQH301-705.5ParthenogenesisPopulationMedicine (miscellaneous)Population geneticsAstacoideaBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeArticleEvolutionary geneticsGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsvieraslajitBiology (General)Population GrowthEvolutionary dynamicseducationgenome analysiseducation.field_of_studyGenomeInvasive speciescrayfishHuman evolutionary geneticspartenogeneesiPopulation sizemusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologygenomiikkaCrayfishBiological EvolutionEuropePhylogeography030104 developmental biologynervous systemEvolutionary biologyGenetic structurearticleslajiutuminenProcambarus virginalisGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesravutCommunications Biology
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The roles of whole-genome and small-scale duplications in the functional specialization of Saccharomyces cerevisiae genes

2013

Researchers have long been enthralled with the idea that gene duplication can generate novel functions, crediting this process with great evolutionary importance. Empirical data shows that whole-genome duplications (WGDs) are more likely to be retained than small-scale duplications (SSDs), though their relative contribution to the functional fate of duplicates remains unexplored. Using the map of genetic interactions and the re-sequencing of 27 Saccharomyces cerevisiae genomes evolving for 2,200 generations we show that SSD-duplicates lead to neo-functionalization while WGD-duplicates partition ancestral functions. This conclusion is supported by: (a) SSD-duplicates establish more genetic i…

0106 biological sciencesCancer ResearchGenome evolutionlcsh:QH426-470ArabidopsisSaccharomyces cerevisiaeBiology01 natural sciencesGenomeDivergenceEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesMolecular evolutionPhylogeneticsGene DuplicationGene duplicationGeneticsMads-Box genesBiologyMolecular BiologyGenePhylogenyGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematics030304 developmental biologySmall-scale duplicationsGeneticsEvolutionary BiologyEvolutionary Theory0303 health sciencesAdaptive conflictHuman evolutionary geneticsNull mutationsSaccharomyces cerevisiae genomeProtein-Protein interactionslcsh:GeneticsEvolutionary biologyDiversificationEpistasisMolecular evolutionWhole-genome duplicationsGenome FungalYeast genomeInteractions revealResearch Article010606 plant biology & botany
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A Network Model for the Correlation between Epistasis and Genomic Complexity

2008

The study of genetic interactions (epistasis) is central to the understanding of genome organization and evolution. A general correlation between epistasis and genomic complexity has been recently shown, such that in simpler genomes epistasis is antagonistic on average (mutational effects tend to cancel each other out), whereas a transition towards synergistic epistasis occurs in more complex genomes (mutational effects strengthen each other). Here, we use a simple network model to identify basic features explaining this correlation. We show that, in small networks with multifunctional nodes, lack of redundancy, and absence of alternative pathways, epistasis is antagonistic on average. In c…

0106 biological sciencesSilent mutationGenome evolutionDNA Mutational Analysislcsh:MedicineBiology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesGenomeModels BiologicalCorrelation03 medical and health sciencesComputational Biology/Metabolic NetworksGenetics and Genomics/Population GeneticsAnimalsHumanslcsh:Science030304 developmental biologyGenomic organization0303 health sciencesEvolutionary BiologyMultidisciplinaryComputational Biology/Systems BiologyGenomeEvolutionary Biology/Evolutionary and Comparative GeneticsModels GeneticHuman evolutionary geneticsSystems Biologylcsh:RRobustness (evolution)Computational BiologyGenetics and GenomicsEpistasis GeneticGenomicsModels TheoreticalEvolutionary biologyMutationEpistasislcsh:QAlgorithmsResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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New insight into the colonization processes of common voles: inferences from molecular and fossil evidence.

2008

Biologie et Gestion des Populations, Campus International de Baillarguet, Montferrier/Lez, FranceElucidating the colonization processes associated with Quaternary climatic cycles is important in order to understand the distribution of biodiversity and the evolutionary potential of temperate plant and animal species. In Europe, general evolutionary scenarios have been defined from genetic evidence. Recently, these scenarios have been challenged with genetic as well as fossil data. The origins of the modern distributions of most temperate plant and animal species could predate the Last Glacial Maximum. The glacial survival of such populations may have occurred in either southern (Mediterranea…

0106 biological sciences[ SDE.BE.BIOD ] Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and Ecology/domain_sde.be.biodBiodiversitylcsh:Medicine[SDV.BID.SPT]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity/Systematics Phylogenetics and taxonomy01 natural sciencesbiodiversitéEvolutionary Biology/Animal GeneticsMaximum-LikelihoodControl RegionGlacial periodévolutionlcsh:SciencePhylogenyévolution biologiqueMismatch Distributionchangement climatique0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinarybiologyArvicolinaeFossilsEcology[SDV.BID.EVO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biodiversity/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE]mammifèreFossil RecordCytochromes bEuropePhylogeographyHabitatResearch ArticleEvolutionary Biology/PaleontologyGene FlowClimatic ChangesGenetic SpeciationcolonisationMolecular DatingCytochrome b010603 evolutionary biologyQuaternary03 medical and health sciencesAnimalsMicrotusDemography030304 developmental biologyBayesian ApproachEvolutionary Biology/Evolutionary and Comparative GeneticsrongeurHuman evolutionary geneticslcsh:RGenetic Variation[SDV.BBM.BM]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Biochemistry Molecular Biology/Molecular biologySequence Analysis DNAmicrotus arvalis15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationBiogeographic TraitsPhylogeographyGenetic SpeciationBiological dispersalAnimal Migrationlcsh:QCommon Vole
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Water: The First Archaic Mutagen of Evolution, the Adoptive Mother of Currently Nucleic Acids

2016

It would be intuitive to think that for the evolutionary onset of nucleic acids, and even before of their monomeric constituents, the water was crucial. Within the series of evolutions which start from the origin of the universe and still cannot, by definition, be considered concluded, certainly among the geothermal evolution end and the beginning of the chemical one, on Earth, the moment was favorable for the arrival of the first proto-nucleotides: from underground deposits of methanehydrate [1] and phosphate, with the support of all known pre-biotic physical-chemical conditions, were made the monomeric components of nucleic acids. The cradle of nucleic acids does not seem to have been so …

0301 basic medicineGeneticsHuman evolutionary geneticsDNA damageMutagenesisMutagenBiologymedicine.disease_causeEvolutionary geneticsSettore BIO/18 - Genetica03 medical and health sciences030104 developmental biologymedicineNucleic acidEvolutionary mutagenesiDuctal adenocarcinomaAdoptive motherCarcinogenesisJournal of Carcinogenesis & Mutagenesis
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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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Molecular basis of adaptive convergence in experimental populations of RNA viruses

2002

Abstract Characterizing the molecular basis of adaptation is one of the most important goals in modern evolutionary genetics. Here, we report a full-genome sequence analysis of 21 independent populations of vesicular stomatitis ribovirus evolved on the same cell type but under different demographic regimes. Each demographic regime differed in the effective viral population size. Evolutionary convergences are widespread both at synonymous and nonsynonymous replacements as well as in an intergenic region. We also found evidence for epistasis among sites of the same and different loci. We explain convergences as the consequence of four factors: (1) environmental homogeneity that supposes an id…

GeneticsNonsynonymous substitutionLikelihood Functionseducation.field_of_studyClonal interferenceHuman evolutionary geneticsPopulation sizePoint mutationPopulationEpistasis GeneticBiologyEvolution MolecularPhylogeneticsEvolutionary biologyGeneticsPoint MutationRNA VirusesEpistasiseducationPhylogenyResearch Article
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Genomic structure and paralogous regions of the inversion breakpoint occurring between human chromosome 3p12.3 and orangutan chromosome 2.

2003

Intrachromosomal duplications play a significant role in human genome pathology and evolution. To better understand the molecular basis of evolutionary chromosome rearrangements, we performed molecular cytogenetic and sequence analyses of the breakpoint region that distinguishes human chromosome 3p12.3 and orangutan chromosome 2. FISH with region-specific BAC clones demonstrated that the breakpoint-flanking sequences are duplicated intrachromosomally on orangutan 2 and human 3q21 as well as at many pericentromeric and subtelomeric sites throughout the genomes. Breakage and rearrangement of the human 3p12.3-homologous region in the orangutan lineage were associated with a partial loss of dup…

Genome evolutionHerpesvirus 4 HumanPan troglodytesBiologyHybrid CellsChimpanzee genome projectEvolution MolecularContig MappingChromosome 19Pongo pygmaeusGeneticsAnimalsHumansLymphocytesMolecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)In Situ Hybridization FluorescenceChromosomal inversionCell Line TransformedSequence DeletionGeneticsHuman evolutionary geneticsCercopithecidaeChromosome BreakageGenome projectChromosomes MammalianChromosome InversionChromosomes Human Pair 3Chromosome breakageChromosome 21Cytogenetic and genome research
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Metabolic Networks of Sodalis glossinidius: A Systems Biology Approach to Reductive Evolution

2012

BackgroundGenome reduction is a common evolutionary process affecting bacterial lineages that establish symbiotic or pathogenic associations with eukaryotic hosts. Such associations yield highly reduced genomes with greatly streamlined metabolic abilities shaped by the type of ecological association with the host. Sodalis glossinidius, the secondary endosymbiont of tsetse flies, represents one of the few complete genomes available of a bacterium at the initial stages of this process. In the present study, genome reduction is studied from a systems biology perspective through the reconstruction and functional analysis of genome-scale metabolic networks of S. glossinidius.ResultsThe functiona…

Genome evolutionTsetse FliesSystems biologyScienceGenomeMicrobiologyModels BiologicalAnimals Genetically ModifiedEvolution MolecularEnterobacteriaceaeEscherichia coliAnimalsComputer SimulationBiologyGeneticsEvolutionary BiologyMultidisciplinarybiologyHost (biology)Human evolutionary geneticsBacterial genomicsSystems BiologyQSodalis glossinidiusEnterobacteriaceae InfectionsRComputational BiologyGenomicsbiology.organism_classificationPhenotypePhenotypeEvolutionary biologyHost-Pathogen InteractionsMedicineDirected Molecular EvolutionGenome BacterialMetabolic Networks and PathwaysResearch Article
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