Search results for "Molecular evolution"

showing 10 items of 117 documents

Genome Evolution in the Primary Endosymbiont of Whiteflies Sheds Light on Their Divergence

2015

International audience; Hemipteran insects are well-known in their ability to establish symbiotic relationships with bacteria. Among them, heteropteran insects present an array of symbiotic systems, ranging from the most common gut crypt symbiosis to the more restricted bacteriome-associated endosymbiosis, which have only been detected in members of the superfamily Lygaeoidea and the family Cimicidae so far. Genomic data of heteropteran endosymbionts are scarce and have merely been analyzed from the Wolbachia endosymbiont in bed bug and a few gut crypt-associated symbionts in pentatomoid bugs. In this study, we present the first detailed genomic analysis of a bacteriome-associated endosymbi…

Nonsynonymous substitutionMutation rateGenome evolution[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Lineage (evolution)divergence timecomparative genomicsPortieraBiologyGenomeEvolution MolecularHemipterataxonomyMolecular evolutionwhitefliesGeneticsAnimalsSymbiosisgenome reductionCladeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsComparative genomicsGeneticsendosymbiosisamino acid biosynthesismolecular evolutiongenome stasisfungiGenomicsbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionLygaeoideaHalomonadaceaebacteriametabolismendosymbiontGenome BacterialResearch ArticleGenome Biology and Evolution
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Taxas de substituições das Annonaceas: uma perspectiva do modelo códon

2014

The Annonaceae includes cultivated species of economic interest and represents an important source of information for better understanding the evolution of tropical rainforests. In phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequence data that are used to address evolutionary questions, it is imperative to use appropriate statistical models. Annonaceae are cases in point: Two sister clades, the subfamilies Annonoideae and Malmeoideae, contain the majority of Annonaceae species diversity. The Annonoideae generally show a greater degree of sequence divergence compared to the Malmeoideae, resulting in stark differences in branch lengths in phylogenetic trees. Uncertainty in how to interpret and analyse these…

Nonsynonymous substitutionmodelo códondiversificationcomprimentos dos ramosSynonymous substitution ratecharactersfilogenéticaAnnonaceaePlant Sciencelcsh:Plant cultureDNA sequencinggeneraMolecular evolutionPhylogeneticsCodon modelsphylogeny reconstructionLaboratorium voor Moleculaire Biologielcsh:SB1-1110patternsCladeNon-synonymous substitutionNdhFGeneticsflowering plantsPhylogenetic treebiologyhistorical biogeographymolecular evolutionBiology and Life Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationBiosystematiekratePhylogeneticsAnnonaceaesubstituições não-sinônimassubstituições sinônimasBiosystematicsBranch lengthsNon-synonymous substitution ratemaximum-likelihoodLaboratory of Molecular BiologyEPSAgronomy and Crop ScienceFood Sciencenucleotide substitution
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Heat shock proteins in three relatedDrosophila species belonging to theobscura group

1993

The effect of heat shock on protein synthesis in three related Drosophila species belonging to the obscura group was analyzed on SDS-acrylamide gels. Four major heat shock proteins (hsps) were found in these species, in which synthesis reaches a maximum at 34 degrees C. Although the higher molecular weight proteins are conserved, differences in size were found for the small hsps in these species. By means of in situ hybridization using D. melanogaster probes for the small hsp genes, it was inferred that the small hsp genes of the obscura group species are clustered at the 27A locus in all three species.

PharmacologyGeneticsGel electrophoresisHot TemperaturebiologyLocus (genetics)Cell Biologybiology.organism_classificationMolecular WeightCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceMolecular evolutionDrosophilidaeHeat shock proteinMelanogasterProtein biosynthesisAnimalsMolecular MedicineDrosophilaMolecular BiologyGeneHeat-Shock ProteinsIn Situ HybridizationExperientia
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Effect of population patchiness and migration rates on the adaptation and divergence of vesicular stomatitis virus quasispecies populations

1999

The effect of migration among different isolated virus quasispecies populations on their adaptation and diversity was analysed through experimental evolution. Anin vitrocell system was employed to simulate migration of vesicular stomatitis virus between isolated homogeneous host cell populations. The results clearly demonstrated a positive correlation between the migration rate and the magnitude of the mean fitness reached by the virus quasispecies populations. The results also showed, although less clearly, that fitness differences among quasispecies decreased with the magnitude of migration. These results are in close agreement with predictions of standard population genetics theory. Thes…

PopulationAdaptation BiologicalViral quasispeciesBiologyVesicular stomatitis Indiana virusVirusCell LineDivergenceViral Envelope ProteinsCricetinaeVirologyTumor Cells CulturedAnimalsHumanseducationGeneticseducation.field_of_studyExperimental evolutionMembrane GlycoproteinsModels GeneticGenetic Variationbiology.organism_classificationVirologyHomogeneousVesicular stomatitis virusDirected Molecular EvolutionAdaptationJournal of General Virology
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Fitness Trade-Offs Determine the Role of the Molecular Chaperonin GroEL in Buffering Mutations

2015

Molecular chaperones fold many proteins and their mutated versions in a cell and can sometimes buffer the phenotypic effect of mutations that affect protein folding. Unanswered questions about this buffering include the nature of its mechanism, its influence on the genetic variation of a population, the fitness trade-offs constraining this mechanism, and its role in expediting evolution. Answering these questions is fundamental to understand the contribution of buffering to increase genetic variation and ecological diversification. Here, we performed experimental evolution, genome resequencing, and computational analyses to determine the trade-offs and evolutionary trajectories of Escherich…

PopulationGenetic FitnessBiologyGroELCell LineChaperonin10127 Institute of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental StudiesGenetic drift1311 Geneticsmutational bufferingOperonGenetic variationGenetics1312 Molecular BiologyEscherichia coliexperimental evolutioneducationMolecular BiologyDiscoveriesEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics2. Zero hungerGeneticseducation.field_of_studyExperimental evolutionGenetic DriftChaperonin 60Gene Expression Regulation BacterialGroEL1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGenes BacterialMutation570 Life sciences; biology590 Animals (Zoology)bacteriaProtein foldingGenetic FitnessDirected Molecular EvolutionSubcellular Fractions
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Protein SRP54 iz morske spužve Geodia cydonium

2002

In the systematic search for phylogenetically conserved proteins in the simplest and most ancient extant metazoan phylum – Porifera, we have identified and analyzed a cDNA encoding the signal recognition particle 54 kD protein (SRP54) from the marine sponge Geodia cydonium (Demospongiae). The signal recognition particle (SRP) is a universally conserved ribonucleoprotein complex of a very ancient origin, comprising SRP RNA and several proteins (six in mammals). The nucleotide sequence of the sponge cDNA predicts a protein of 499 amino acid residues with a calculated Mr of 55175. G. cydonium SRP54 displays unusually high overall similarity (90 %) with human/mammalian SRP54 proteins, higher th…

Porifera; Metazoa; molecular evolution; common ancestor; signal recognition particle; SRP54Food Technology and Biotechnology
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Intra-specific variability and biological relevance of P3N-PIPO protein length in potyviruses

2013

Background:Pipo was recently described as a new ORF encoded within the genome of the Potyviridae family members (PNAS 105:5897-5902, 2008). It is embedded within the P3 cistron and is translated in the +2 reading frame relative to the potyviral long ORF as the P3N-PIPO fusion protein. In this work, we first collected pipo nucleotide sequences available for different isolates of 48 Potyvirus species. Second, to determine the biological implications of variation in pipo length, we measured infectivity, viral accumulation, cell-to-cell and systemic movements for two Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) variants with pipo alleles of different length in three different susceptible host species, and tested…

PotyvirusArabidopsisBiologyEvolution MolecularViral ProteinsCistronMolecular evolutionTobaccoTurnip mosaic virusGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsPotyviridaeBayesian phylogenetic methodsHost-range determinantsBrassica rapaPotyvirusbiology.organism_classificationVirus evolutionVirus fitness componentsStop codonPotato virus YGenesHost-Pathogen InteractionsCodon TerminatorMolecular evolutionGenetic FitnessResearch Article
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Origin of the prolactin-releasing hormone (PRLH) receptors: evidence of coevolution between PRLH and a redundant neuropeptide Y receptor during verte…

2004

We present seven new vertebrate homologs of the prolactin-releasing hormone receptor (PRLHR) and show that these are found as two separate subtypes, PRLHR1 and PRLHR2. Analysis of a number of vertebrate sequences using phylogeny, pharmacology, and paralogon analysis indicates that the PRLHRs are likely to share a common ancestry with the neuropeptide Y (NPY) receptors. Moreover, a micromolar level of NPY was able to bind and inhibit completely the PRLH-evoked response in PRLHR1-expressing cells. We suggest that an ancestral PRLH peptide started coevolving with a redundant NPY binding receptor, which then became PRLHR, approximately 500 million years ago. The PRLHR1 subtype was shown to have…

Prolactin-releasing hormoneGeneticsBase SequenceMolecular Sequence DataBiologyNeuropeptide Y receptorProlactinReceptors G-Protein-CoupledReceptors Neuropeptide YEvolution MolecularPhylogeneticsMolecular evolutionHormone receptorGene DuplicationGene duplicationVertebratesGeneticsAnimalsHumansReceptorPhylogenyGenomics
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Reading the Evolution of Compartmentalization in the Ribosome Assembly Toolbox: The YRG Protein Family.

2016

Reconstructing the transition from a single compartment bacterium to a highly compartmentalized eukaryotic cell is one of the most studied problems of evolutionary cell biology. However, timing and details of the establishment of compartmentalization are unclear and difficult to assess. Here, we propose the use of molecular markers specific to cellular compartments to set up a framework to advance the understanding of this complex intracellular process. Specifically, we use a protein family related to ribosome biogenesis, YRG (YlqF related GTPases), whose evolution is linked to the establishment of cellular compartments, leveraging the current genomic data. We analyzed orthologous proteins …

ProteomesArchaeal ProteinsMycologyBioenergeticsResearch and Analysis MethodsBiochemistryMicrobiologyMolecular EvolutionGTP PhosphohydrolasesEvolution MolecularFungal ProteinsEukaryotic EvolutionBacterial ProteinsFungal EvolutionAnimalsMolecular Biology TechniquesMolecular BiologyEnergy-Producing OrganellesCell NucleusEvolutionary BiologyMolecular Biology Assays and Analysis TechniquesBacterial EvolutionBiology and Life SciencesProteinsPhylogenetic AnalysisBacteriologyNucleolusCell BiologyOrganismal EvolutionCell CompartmentationMitochondriaProtein TransportMicrobial EvolutionCellular Structures and OrganellesRibosomesResearch ArticlePloS one
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Phylointeractomics reconstructs functional evolution of protein binding

2017

Molecular phylogenomics investigates evolutionary relationships based on genomic data. However, despite genomic sequence conservation, changes in protein interactions can occur relatively rapidly and may cause strong functional diversification. To investigate such functional evolution, we here combine phylogenomics with interaction proteomics. We develop this concept by investigating the molecular evolution of the shelterin complex, which protects telomeres, across 16 vertebrate species from zebrafish to humans covering 450 million years of evolution. Our phylointeractomics screen discovers previously unknown telomere-associated proteins and reveals how homologous proteins undergo functiona…

Proteomics0301 basic medicineLineage (evolution)ScienceTelomere-Binding ProteinsGeneral Physics and AstronomyGenomicsBiologyProteomicsArticleGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyConserved sequenceEvolution Molecular03 medical and health sciencesPhylogeneticsMolecular evolutionPhylogenomicsAnimalsCells CulturedConserved SequencePhylogenyGeneticsGenomeMultidisciplinaryQComputational BiologyGenomicsSequence Analysis DNAGeneral ChemistryTelomereProtein superfamily030104 developmental biologyEvolutionary biologyVertebratesSequence AlignmentProtein Binding
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