Search results for "Interactions"

showing 10 items of 1963 documents

The Social Life of Viruses

2021

Despite their simplicity, viruses exhibit certain types of social interactions. Situations in which a given virus achieves higher fitness in combination with other members of the viral population have been described at the level of transmission, replication, suppression of host immune responses, and host killing, enabling the evolution of viral cooperation. Although cellular coinfection with multiple viral particles is the typical playground for these interactions, cooperation between viruses infecting different cells is also established through cellular and viral-encoded communication systems. In general, the stability of cooperation is compromised by cheater genotypes, as best exemplified…

genetic structuresGenotypeSpatial structurevirusesPopulationVirus-virus interactionsSuperinfection exclusionBiologyVirus ReplicationVirus03 medical and health sciencesVirologymedicineDefective interfering particleseducationViral evolution030304 developmental biology0303 health scienceseducation.field_of_studySocial evolution030306 microbiologyTransmission (medicine)Host (biology)Virionmedicine.diseaseCooperationEvolutionary biologyViral evolutionVirusesCoinfectionSocial evolutionAnnual Review of Virology
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Diplostomum spathaceum metacercarial infection and colour change in salmonid fish

2004

Colour changes in two salmonid fish, the salmon (Salmo salar) and sea trout (S. trutta), were examined in relation to infection with the trematode Diplostomum spathaceum. This parasite had no effect on the rate of colour change in these fish, although species specific differences in colour adjustment times were observed. Increasing asymmetry in parasite numbers between the right and left eye, which could lead to the retention of vision in one eye, nevertheless tended to reduce the colour change time in salmon with moderate infection (P=0.08). This first experimental attempt to examine colour changes in fish in relation to eye fluke infections provides grounds for future investigations. The …

genetic structuresTroutSalmo salarZoologySkin PigmentationTrematode InfectionsSalmonid fishEyeHost-Parasite InteractionsFish DiseasesSpecies SpecificityAnimalsParasite hostingSea troutSalmoSalmonidaeGeneral VeterinarybiologyEcologyGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationLeft eyeInfectious DiseasesDiplostomum spathaceumInsect ScienceParasitologyTrematodasense organsTrematodaParasitology Research
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The challenges of GxE research : A rejoinder

2017

genetiikkaympäristötekijätgenetic risk scoresbiomarkersidentificationhealth outcomesbiomarkkeritgene-environment interactionsriskitekijätterveyserot
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Wintertime Airborne Measurements of Ice Nucleating Particles in the High Arctic: A Hint to a Marine, Biogenic Source for Ice Nucleating Particles

2020

Ice nucleating particles (INPs) affect the radiative properties of cold clouds. Knowledge concerning their concentration above ground level and their potential sources is scarce. Here we present the first highly temperature resolved ice nucleation spectra of airborne samples from an aircraft campaign during late winter in 2018. Most INP spectra featured low concentration levels (<3 · 10−4 L−1 at −15°C). −2 −1 However, we also found INP concentrations of up to 1.8·10 L at −15°C and freezing onsets as high as −7.5°C for samples mainly from the marine boundary layer. Shape and onset temperature of the ice nucleation spectra of those samples as well as heat sensitivity hint at biogenic INP. Col…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesNucleation010502 geochemistry & geophysicsSnowAtmospheric sciencesEnergy budget01 natural sciencesArctic aerosolAtmosphereGeophysicsArcticArctic13. Climate actionMiddle latitudesIce nucleusSea iceGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental scienceaerosol-cloud interactionsice nucleating particles0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeophysical Research Letters
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Maritime antarctic lakes as sentinels of climate change

2012

Remote lakes, such as lakes from the Maritime Antarctica, can be used as sentinels of climate change, because they are mostly free of direct anthropogenic pressures, and they experience climate change as a main stressor capable of modifying the ecosystem structure and function. In this paper, the content of a lecture that has been presented at the First Conference of Lake Sustainability, which has been centred in our studies on lakes from Byers Peninsula (Maritime Antarctica), are summarized. These included physical, chemical and biological studies of these lakes and other freshwater ecosystems, which highlighted the relevance of biotic interactions for these ecosystems and its sensibility …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyGlobal warmingEcosystem modellingRegional warmingGeneral EngineeringClimate changeFreshwater ecosystemInvasive speciesPeninsulaSustainabilityClimate changeEnvironmental scienceEcosystemSpecies interactionsBiological invasionsGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesRegional warmingGeneral Environmental ScienceInternational Journal of Design &amp; Nature and Ecodynamics
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Research data supporting "Social information use about novel aposematic prey is not influenced by a predator’s previous experience with toxins"

2019

This data is from the experiment investigating social avoidance learning in wild-caught great tits, conducted at Konnevesi Research Station in Central Finland during winter 2017. Sheet 1 (���main data���) contains data from the main avoidance learning experiment, including individual attributes (sex, age, weight etc.), experimental treatments and individuals��� foraging choices in the learning trials. Sheet 2 (���preference test���) contains data from the initial preference test of the symbols that were used in the experiment, and Sheet 3 (���visibility test���) data from the initial visibility test of the same symbols.

great titssocial learningpredator-prey interactionstoxin loadaposematismmimicry
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Interactions of virus proteins within the host cell

2014

green fluorescent proteinvuorovaikutusisäntäsolutviruksetcanine parvovirusconfocal microscopykonfokaalimiroskopiakoiran parvovirusplasmiditvirus-isäntä-vuorovaikutusvirusproteiinitbacteriophage PRD1parvoviruksetchaperoniiniproteiinitbakteriofagi PRD1virus-host interactions
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Halogen Bonds in Square Planar 2,5-Dihalopyridine-Copper(II) Bromide Complexes

2018

halogeenitintermolecular interactions010405 organic chemistryIntermolecular forcestructure elucidationchemistry.chemical_elementkuparikompleksiyhdisteet010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesCopper0104 chemical sciencesInorganic ChemistryCopper(II) bromidechemistry.chemical_compoundCrystallographyPlanarchemistrycopperHalogenhalogensSquare (unit)bromiditta116European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry
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The impact of wildlife and environmental factors on hantavirus infection in the host and its translation into human risk

2023

Identifying factors that drive infection dynamics in reservoir host populations is essential in understanding human risk from wildlife-originated zoonoses. We studied zoonotic Puumala orthohantavirus (PUUV) in the host, the bank vole ( Myodes glareolus ), populations in relation to the host population, rodent and predator community and environment-related factors and whether these processes are translated into human infection incidence. We used 5-year rodent trapping and bank vole PUUV serology data collected from 30 sites located in 24 municipalities in Finland. We found that PUUV seroprevalence in the host was negatively associated with the abundance of red foxes, but this process did no…

hantaviruksetesiintyvyysGeneral Immunology and MicrobiologymetsämyyräjyrsijätGeneral MedicinezoonoositriskitekijätpopulaatiodynamiikkaGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biologyzoonotic Puumala orthohantavirusjuvenile dilution effectPuumala-virustop–down trophic interactionsdilution effectGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciencesluonnonvaraiset eläimetGeneral Environmental Science
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Infection success of Echinoparyphium aconiatum (Trematoda) in its snail host under high temperature: role of host resistance

2014

Background Extreme weather events such as summer heat waves become more frequent owing to global climate change and are predicted to alter disease dynamics. This is because high temperatures can reduce host immune function. Predicting the impact of climate change on host-parasite interactions is, however, difficult as temperature may also affect parasite infective stages and other host characteristics determining the outcome of interaction. Methods Two experiments were conducted to investigate these phenomena in a Lymnaea stagnalis–Echinoparyphium aconiatum (Trematoda) interaction. In the first experiment, the effects of exposure of snails to experimental heat waves [maintenance at 25°C vs.…

heat waveEchinoparyphium aconiatum; Global climate change; Heat wave; Lymnaea; stagnalis; Resistance to infection; Host-parasite interaction; Experimental assessmentHot TemperatureExperimental assessmentResearchGlobal climate changeSnailsglobal climate changeresistance to infectionhost-parasite interactionpiippolimakotiloInfectious DiseasesHeat waveHost-Pathogen Interactionsechinoparyphium aconiatumResistance to infectionAnimalsParasitologyLymnaea stagnalisexperimental assessmentTrematodaHost-parasite interactionCercariaEchinoparyphium aconiatum
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