Search results for "Insect Science"

showing 10 items of 1011 documents

Mtlinteracts with members of Egfr signaling and cell adhesion genes in the Drosophila eye

2011

Mtl is a member of the Rho family of small GTPases in Drosophila. It was shown that Mtl is involved in planar cell polarity (PCP) establishment, together with other members of the same family like Cdc42, Rac1, Rac2 and RhoA. However, while Rac1, Rac2 and RhoA function downstream of Dsh in Fz/PCP signaling and upstream of a JNK cassette, Mtl and Cdc42 do not. To determine the functional context of Mtl during PCP establishment in the Drosophila eye, we performed a loss-of-function screen to search for dominant modifiers of a sev>Mtl rough eye phenotype. In addition, genetic interaction assays with candidate genes were also carried out. Our results show that Mtl interacts genetically with memb…

rho GTP-Binding ProteinsGeneticsOmmatidial rotationRHOAbiologyCytoskeleton organizationCell PolarityCDC42Cell biologyErbB ReceptorsPhenotypeInsect ScienceCell polarityCell Adhesionbiology.proteinAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsImmunoglobulin superfamilyDrosophilaCompound Eye ArthropodReceptors Invertebrate PeptideCell adhesionpsychological phenomena and processesDrosophila ProteinSignal TransductionFly
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Partially disarticulated new Miocene burrower bug (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae) from Cerová (Slovakia) documents occasional preservation of terr…

2015

The state of preservation of the bug Sehirus carpathiensis J.A. Lis, Vršanský & Schlögl, sp. n. (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae) from the Lakšárska Nová Ves Formation at Cerová (Slovakia) supports extremely rapid sinking and burial in upper bathyal Early Miocene sediments. The specimen originated from land at most a few kilometers away, but transport via a river can be excluded as the head and wings are still attached. Its most likely source based on fossil flora and the habitat of several living representatives of the genus is a riparian habitat in an adjacent area of land. Phylogenetically the new species is closely related to both Oligocene and living representatives of the genus, thus…

slovakiaBathyal zoneHemipteraPaleontologyGenuscerováCydnidaekey words. hemipteraheteropteracenozoicnew speciesbiologyEcologyHeteropterabathyalbiology.organism_classificationHemipterafossil insectcydnidaeQL1-991confocal profileInsect SciencesehirusPaleogeneCenozoicZoologySehirusEuropean Journal of Entomology
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Size-related mortality during overwintering in cavity-nesting ant colonies (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

2016

The ongoing process of climate change will result in higher temperatures during winter and therefore might increase the survival of overwintering invertebrates. However, the process may also lead to a reduction in snow cover and expose overwintering invertebrates to lower temperatures, which could result in higher mortality. During a field experiment, I investigated the effects of a reduction in snow cover on the survival of the ant Temnothorax crassispinus, which overwinters in nests located on the ground. Ant colonies differed in the survival rate of the workers in the experimental (from which snow cover was removed) and control group. In the control group, the survival rate was unrelated…

survival rate0106 biological sciencesField experimentHymenopteratemnothorax crassispinus010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesSurvival rateOverwinteringInvertebratesocial insectsbiologyEcologysnow coverAnt colonybiology.organism_classificationSnowoverwinteringANTformicidae010602 entomologyQL1-991Insect SciencehymenopteraZoologyhuman activitiesEuropean Journal of Entomology
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Prenatal thyroid hormones accelerate postnatal growth and telomere shortening in wild great tits

2021

AbstractEarly-life environment is known to affect later-life health and disease, which could be mediated by the early-life programming of telomere length, a key hallmark of ageing. According to thefetal programming of telomere biology hypothesis, variation in prenatal exposure to hormones is likely to influence telomere length. Yet the contribution of key metabolic hormones,i.e. thyroid hormones (THs), has been largely ignored. We recently showed that in contrast to predictions, exposure to elevated prenatal THs increased postnatal telomere length in wild collared flycatchers, but the generality of such effect, its underlying proximate mechanisms and consequences on survival have not been i…

telomerePhysiologymitokondriottalitiainenAquatic Sciencethyroid hormonemitochondriaikääntyminendevelopmental programmingageingInsect Scienceoxidative stressmaternal effectstelomeeritAnimal Science and Zoologymetabolismoksidatiivinen stressiaineenvaihduntaMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsJournal of Experimental Biology
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Tracking mite trophic interactions by multiplex PCR

2020

Background A thorough knowledge of trophic webs in agroecosystems is essential to achieve successful biological pest control. Phytoseiid mites are the most efficient natural enemies of tetranychid mites, which include several important pests worldwide. Nevertheless, phytoseiids may feed on other food sources including other microarthropods, plants and even other phytoseiids (intraguild predation), which can interfere with biological control services. Molecular gut content analysis is a valuable tool for characterizing trophic interactions, mainly when working on microarthropods such as mites. We have designed new primers for Phytoseiidae, Tetranychidae and Thysanoptera identification and th…

trophic linksMitesPhytoseiidaebiologyThysanopteraPrey detectionBiological pest controlZoologyplantGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationPredationprey detectionPredatory BehaviorInsect Sciencemolecular diet analysisAnimalsTetranychus urticaePest Control BiologicalMultiplex Polymerase Chain ReactionAcariAgronomy and Crop SciencePredatorIntraguild predationTrophic levelPest Management Science
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Genomic structure and promoter analysis of pathogen-inducedrepatgenes fromSpodoptera exigua

2009

The repat gene family encodes midgut proteins overexpressed in response to pathogen infection in the lepidopteran Spodoptera exigua. Up-regulation of repat genes has been observed after challenging the larvae with both Bacillus thuringiensis toxins and after infection with the baculovirus Autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus. In our study, PCR amplification of the genomic region and genome walking were used to obtain the genomic structure and the sequence of the 5'-upstream region of repat1 and repat2, two of the most phylogenetically distant members of the repat family. A similar gene structure between repat1 and repat2 has been found, with conserved exon-intron positions a…

virusesGenome InsectMolecular Sequence DataGenes InsectSpodopteraBiologySpodopteraOpen Reading FramesGenes ReporterIntron-mediated enhancementGene expressionGeneticsPrimer walkingAnimalsGene familyCloning MolecularPromoter Regions GeneticMolecular BiologyGeneGeneticsBase SequencefungiIntronPromoterbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyInsect ScienceSequence AlignmentInsect Molecular Biology
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Modulation of Hepatitis C Virus NS5A Hyperphosphorylation by Nonstructural Proteins NS3, NS4A, and NS4B

1999

NS5A of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a highly phosphorylated protein involved in resistance against interferon and required most likely for replication of the viral genome. Phosphorylation of this protein is mediated by a cellular kinase(s) generating multiple proteins with different electrophoretic mobilities. In the case of the genotype 1b isolate HCV-J, in addition to the basal phosphorylated NS5A (designated pp56), a hyperphosphorylated form (pp58) was found on coexpression of NS4A (T. Kaneko, Y. Tanji, S. Satoh, M. Hijikata, S. Asabe, K. Kimura, and K. Shimotohno, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 205:320‐326, 1994). Using a comparative analysis of two full-length genomes of genotype 1b…

virusesHepatitis C virusHepacivirusMolecular Sequence DataImmunologyGene ExpressionReplicationHyperphosphorylationGenome ViralHepacivirusViral Nonstructural Proteinsmedicine.disease_causeMicrobiologyCell LineInterferonCricetinaeVirologymedicineAnimalsHumansPhosphorylationNS5ANS3Base SequencebiologyPestivirusvirus diseasesRNAbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionbiology.organism_classificationVirologyMolecular biologydigestive system diseasesAmino Acid SubstitutionInsect ScienceDNA Viralmedicine.drugJournal of Virology
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Binding and internalization of human papillomavirus type 33 virus-like particles by eukaryotic cells

1995

Infection of cells by human papillomaviruses (HPVs) associated with malignant genital lesions has not been studied because of the lack of an in vitro system and the unavailability of virions. We have now used virus-like particles (VLPs) of HPV type 33 to analyze the initial events in the interaction of the HPV capsid with cell lines. Binding of VLPs to HeLa cells was observed in biochemical assays and by immunofluorescence. VLP binding was inhibited by antisera raised against VLPs but not by monoclonal antibodies recognizing either L1 or L2 epitopes accessible on VLPs. Under saturating conditions, approximately 2 x 10(4) VLPs were bound per cell, with a dissociation constant of about 100 pM…

virusesImmunoelectron microscopyImmunologyBiologyAntibodies ViralMembrane Fusioncomplex mixturesMicrobiologyVirusEpitopeCell LineMiceVirologyAnimalsHumansMicroscopy ImmunoelectronPapillomaviridaeCapsomereVirionMembrane Proteinsvirus diseasesLipid bilayer fusionbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionMolecular biologyEndocytosisEndocytic vesicleCapsidCell cultureInsect ScienceResearch ArticleJournal of Virology
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Assembly and Translocation of Papillomavirus Capsid Proteins

2002

ABSTRACT The major and minor capsid proteins of polyomavirus are preassembled in the cytoplasm and translocated to the nucleus only as a VP1-VP2/VP3 complex. In this study, we describe independent nuclear translocation of the L1 major protein and the L2 minor capsid protein of human papillomavirus type 33 by several approaches. First, we observed that expression and nuclear translocation of L2 in natural lesions precede expression of L1. Second, using a cell culture system for coexpression, we found that accumulation of L2 in nuclear domain 10 (ND10) subnuclear structures precedes L1 by several hours. In contrast, complexes of L2 and mutants of L1 forced to assemble in the cytoplasm are tra…

virusesImmunologyActive Transport Cell NucleusChromosomal translocationBiologyMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundCapsidVirologyMG132medicineAnimalsHumansPapillomaviridaeCOS cellsStructure and AssemblyVirus AssemblyOncogene Proteins Viralbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionMolecular biologymedicine.anatomical_structureCapsidchemistryCytoplasmCell cultureInsect ScienceCOS CellsProteasome inhibitorCapsid ProteinsFemaleNucleusmedicine.drug
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Nuclear localization but not PML protein is required for incorporation of the papillomavirus minor capsid protein L2 into virus-like particles.

2004

ABSTRACT Recent reports suggest that nuclear domain(s) 10 (ND10) is the site of papillomavirus morphogenesis. The viral genome replicates in or close to ND10. In addition, the minor capsid protein, L2, accumulates in these subnuclear structures and recruits the major capsid protein, L1. We have now used cell lines deficient for promyelocytic leukemia (PML) protein, the main structural component of ND10, to study the role of this nuclear protein for L2 incorporation into virus-like particles (VLPs). L2 expressed in PML protein knockout (PML −/− ) cells accumulated in nuclear dots, which resemble L2 aggregates forming at ND10 in PML protein-containing cells. These L2 assemblies also attracted…

virusesImmunologyActive Transport Cell NucleusNuclear dotsBiologyPromyelocytic Leukemia ProteinMicrobiologyCell LinePromyelocytic leukemia proteinMiceDeath-associated protein 6Virus-like particleVirologymedicineAnimalsHumansNuclear proteinPapillomaviridaeAdaptor Proteins Signal TransducingCell NucleusTumor Suppressor ProteinsStructure and AssemblyIntracellular Signaling Peptides and ProteinsVirionvirus diseasesNuclear ProteinsOncogene Proteins Viralbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionMolecular biologyCell biologyNeoplasm ProteinsCell nucleusMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureInsect ScienceMutationbiology.proteinCapsid ProteinsNuclear transportCarrier ProteinsCo-Repressor ProteinsNuclear localization sequenceMolecular ChaperonesTranscription FactorsJournal of virology
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