Search results for "Molecular sequence"

showing 10 items of 1972 documents

The origin of the serpentine endemic Minuartia laricifolia subsp. ophiolitica by vicariance and competitive exclusion.

2013

Serpentine soils harbour a unique flora that is rich in endemics. We examined the evolution of serpentine endemism in Minuartia laricifolia, which has two ecologically distinct subspecies with disjunct distributions: subsp. laricifolia on siliceous rocks in the western Alps and eastern Pyrenees and subsp. ophiolitica on serpentine in the northern Apennines. We analysed AFLPs and chloroplast sequences from 30 populations to examine their relationships and how their current distributions and ecologies were influenced by Quaternary climatic changes. Minuartia laricifolia was divided into four groups with a BAPS cluster analysis of the AFLP data, one group consisted only of subsp. ophiolitica, …

Genetic diversityChloroplastsBase SequenceEcologyMolecular Sequence DataPopulationDNA ChloroplastGenetic VariationCaryophyllaceaeDisjunctBiologySubspeciesSecologanin Tryptamine AlkaloidsEvolution MolecularPhylogeographyHaplotypesSerpentine soilGeneticsVicarianceBiological dispersalAmplified Fragment Length Polymorphism AnalysisEndemismEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcosystemPhylogenyMolecular ecology
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Clostridium difficile IStron CdISt1: Discovery of a Variant Encoding Two Complete Transposase-Like Proteins

2004

ABSTRACT Screening a Clostridium difficile strain collection for the chimeric element Cd ISt1 , we identified two additional variants, designated Cd ISt1 -0 and Cd ISt1 -III. In in vitro assays, we could prove the self-splicing ribozyme activity of these variants. Structural comparison of all known Cd ISt1 variants led us to define four types of IStrons that we designated Cd ISt1 -0 through Cd ISt1 -III. Since Cd ISt1 -0 encodes two complete transposase-like proteins (TlpA and TlpB), we suggest that it represents the original genetic element, hypothesized before to have originated by fusion of a group I intron and an insertion sequence element.

Genetics0303 health sciencesbiology030306 microbiologyClostridioides difficileStrain (biology)Bacteriophages Transposons and PlasmidsMolecular Sequence DataRibozymeIntronTransposasesClostridium difficilebiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyIntrons03 medical and health sciencesGenes Bacterialbiology.proteinBacteriologyDNA Transposable ElementsClostridiaceaeInsertion sequenceMolecular BiologyTransposase030304 developmental biology
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Identification of two new mutations in TRPS 1 gene leading to the tricho-rhino-phalangeal syndrome type I and III.

2009

GeneticsAdolescentBase SequenceLanger-Giedion SyndromeDNA Mutational AnalysisMolecular Sequence DataInfantBiologymedicine.diseaseDNA-Binding ProteinsRepressor ProteinsSettore MED/38 - Pediatria Generale E SpecialisticaSettore MED/03 - Genetica MedicaMutationGeneticsmedicineTricho–rhino–phalangeal syndromeHumansIdentification (biology)FemaleTRICHO-RHINO-PHALNAGEAL SYNDORME TRPS GENEChildGeneGenetics (clinical)Transcription FactorsAmerican journal of medical genetics. Part A
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Characterization of two globin genes from the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae: Divergent origin of nematoceran haemoglobins

2007

The chironomid midges are the only insects that harbour true haemoglobin in their haemolymph. Here we report the identification of haemoglobin genes in two other nematoceran species. Two paralogous haemoglobin genes (glob1 and glob2) from the malaria mosquito Anopheles gambiae were cloned and sequenced. Furthermore, we identified two orthologous haemoglobin genes in the yellow fever mosquito Aedes aegypti. All four haemoglobins were predicted to be intracellular proteins, with the amino acids required for heme- and oxygen-binding being conserved. In situ-hybridization studies showed that glob1 and glob2 expression in An. gambiae is mainly associated with the tracheal system. This pattern re…

GeneticsAedesbiologyPhylogenetic treeAnopheles gambiaeMolecular Sequence DatafungiIntronSequence Analysis DNAAedes aegyptibiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionChironomidaeHemoglobinsAedesInsect ScienceAnophelesMidgeGeneticsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceGlobinMolecular BiologyGeneInsect Molecular Biology
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Fixation of mutations at the VP1 gene of foot-and-mouth disease virus. Can quasispecies define a transient molecular clock?

1991

The number of nucleotide (nt) substitutions found in the VP1 gene (encoding viral capsid protein) between any two of 16 closely related isolates of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) has been quantified as a function of the time interval between isolations [Villaverde et al.,J. Mol. Biol. 204(1988)771-776]. One of them (isolate C-S12) includes some replacements found in isolates that preceded it and other replacements found in later isolates. The study has revealed alternating periods of rapid evolution and of relative genetic stability of VP1. During a defined period of acute disease, the rate of fixation of replacements at the VP1 coding segment was 6 × 10-3 substitutions per nt per year…

GeneticsAphthovirusbiologyBase SequencevirusesMolecular Sequence DataGeneral MedicineViral quasispeciesbiology.organism_classificationVirologyBiological EvolutionVirusFixation (population genetics)KineticsAphthovirusCapsidMolecular evolutionViral evolutionMutationGeneticsRate of evolutionCapsid ProteinsAmino Acid SequenceFoot-and-mouth disease virusSequence AlignmentGene
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A classification scheme for mobilization regions of bacterial plasmids

2003

Transmissible plasmids can be classified according to their mobilization ability, as being conjugative (self-transmissible) or mobilizable (transmissible only in the presence of additional conjugative functions). Naturally occurring mobilizable plasmids carry the genetic information necessary for relaxosome formation and processing, but lack the functions required for mating pair formation. Mobilizable plasmids have a tremendous impact in horizontal gene transfer in nature, including the spread of antibiotic resistance. However, analysis of their promiscuity and diversity has attracted less attention than that of conjugative plasmids. This review will focus on the analysis of the diversity …

GeneticsBacteriaPhylogenetic treeBacterial conjugationMolecular Sequence DataBiologyRelaxaseRelaxosomeMicrobiologyInfectious DiseasesPlasmidHorizontal gene transferAmino Acid SequenceGene poolTransfer techniquePlasmidsFEMS Microbiology Reviews
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Vibrio pelagius: differences of the type strain deposited at various culture collections.

2000

A critical evaluation of published and own taxonomic and phylogenetic studies on Vibrio pelagius showed substantial diversity of strains received as type strains from various Culture Collections. The comparison of data based upon 16S rRNA sequence analyses, earlier genomic DNA-DNA similarity studies as well as physiological investigations and the original description indicate that Vibrio pelagius strains CECT 4202T and ATCC 25916T really represent the originally described type species whereas strains NCIMB 1900T and CIP 102762T highly likely are representatives of Vibrio natriegens.

GeneticsBacteriological TechniquesbiologyMolecular Sequence DataVibrio natriegensRibosomal RNAbiology.organism_classification16S ribosomal RNAApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyVibrioMicrobiologyType speciesPhylogeneticsVibrionaceaeTaxonomy (biology)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsBiological Specimen BanksVibrioSystematic and applied microbiology
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Why Nuclear Ribosomal DNA Spacers (ITS) Tell Different Stories in Quercus

2001

The molecular systematics of Quercus (Fagaceae) was recently assessed by two teams using independently generated ITS sequences. Although the results disagreed in several remarkable features, the phylogenetic trees for either hypothesis were highly supported by bootstrap resampling. We have reanalyzed the ITS sequences used by both teams (eight taxa) to reveal the underlying patterns of this divergence. Within species, conspicuous length and G + C% divergence were evident in most sequence comparisons. In addition, a high rate of substitutions and deletions involving highly conserved motifs in both ITS spacers were present in a set of sequences. This was coupled with a less thermodynamic stab…

GeneticsBase CompositionBase SequenceDatabases FactualPhylogenetic treePseudogeneMolecular Sequence DataRNABiologyTreesConserved sequenceRNA RibosomalEvolutionary biologyDNA Ribosomal SpacerMolecular phylogeneticsGeneticsNucleic Acid ConformationNucleic acid structureMolecular BiologyRibosomal DNAPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsSequence (medicine)Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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Interplay between RNA structure and protein evolution in HIV-1.

2010

The genomes of many RNA viruses contain abundant secondary structures that have been shown to be important for understanding the evolution of noncoding regions and synonymous sites. However, the consequences for protein evolution are less well understood. Recently, the secondary structure of the HIV-1 RNA genome has been experimentally determined. Using this information, here we show that RNA structure and proteins do not evolve independently. A negative correlation exists between the extent of base pairing in the genomic RNA and amino acid variability. Relaxed RNA structures may favor the accumulation of genetic variation in proteins and, conversely, sequence changes driven by positive sel…

GeneticsBase SequenceBase pairMolecular Sequence DataRNAGenome ViralBiologyGenomeBiological EvolutionReverse transcriptaseViral ProteinsGenetic variationGeneticsHIV-1HumansNucleic Acid ConformationRNANucleic acid structureMolecular BiologyGeneProtein secondary structureEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMolecular biology and evolution
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The cis-regulatory sequences required for expression of the Drosophila melanogaster adult cuticle gene ACP65A.

2009

Post-embryonic development in insects requires successive molts. Molts are triggered by ecdysteroids, and the nature of the molt (larval, pupal or adult) is determined by juvenile hormones. The genes encoding cuticle proteins are targets of both classes of hormones, and therefore are interesting models to study hormone action at the molecular level. The Drosophila ACP65A cuticle gene is expressed exclusively during the synthesis of the adult exoskeleton, in epidermal domains synthesising flexible cuticle. We have examined the cis -regulatory sequences of ACP65A using phylogenetic comparisons and functional analysis, and find that only about 180 bp are essential, including an 81 bp intron. T…

GeneticsBase SequenceCuticlefungiMolecular Sequence DataIntronBiologyRegulatory Sequences Nucleic Acidbiology.organism_classificationDrosophila melanogasterGene Expression RegulationRegulatory sequenceInsect ScienceJuvenile hormoneGene expressionGeneticsAnimalsInsect ProteinsRegulatory Elements TranscriptionalDrosophila melanogasterMolecular BiologyGeneFunctional genomicsPhylogenyInsect molecular biology
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