Search results for "PHYLOGENY"

showing 10 items of 1398 documents

Cetacean Morbillivirus: Current Knowledge and Future Directions

2014

We review the molecular and epidemiological characteristics of cetacean morbillivirus (CeMV) and the diagnosis and pathogenesis of associated disease, with six different strains detected in cetaceans worldwide. CeMV has caused epidemics with high mortality in odontocetes in Europe, the USAand Australia. It represents a distinct species within the Morbillivirusgenus. Although most CeMV strains are phylogenetically closely related, recent data indicate that morbilliviruses recovered from Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus), from Western Australia, and a Guiana dolphin (Sotalia guianensis), from Brazil, are divergent. The signaling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM) cell rec…

diagnosisSotalia guianensisSecondary infectionQH301 Biologylcsh:QR1-502ReviewPathogenesisphylogenyendemic infectionsVirusepidemicslcsh:MicrobiologyQH301Dolphin MorbillivirusMorbillivirusmass strandingVirologyDiagnosismedicineAnimalsTursiops aduncusCD150/SLAMMorillivirusEpidemicsPhylogenyQR355CetaceansbiologyTransmission (medicine)Dolphin Morbillivirus; immunity; Pathogenesis; CD150/SLAM; CetaceanspathogenesisCetacean MorbillivirusCetacean morbillivirusbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyimmunityMass strandingCetacean morbillivirusEndemic infectionsInfectious DiseasesMorbillivirusSLAMCetaceaQR355 VirologyMorbillivirus InfectionsEncephalitisMorillivirus; Cetacean Morbillivirus; Cetaceans
researchProduct

Zoonotic Dirofilaria immitis and Dirofilaria repens infection in humans and an integrative approach to the diagnosis

2021

Abstract Dirofilariosis by Dirofilaria immitis and Dirofilaria repens is endemic in dogs from countries of the Mediterranean basin. Both species may infect humans, with most of the infected patients remaining asymptomatic. Based on the recent description of the southernmost hyperendemic European focus of heartworm disease in dogs from the Pelagie archipelagos, we performed a serological and molecular survey in human population of that area. Human blood samples were collected in the islands of Linosa (n=101) and Lampedusa (n=296) and tested by ELISA and molecular test for the detection of D. immitis and D. repens. Samples were also screened for filarioid-associated endosymbionts, Wolbachia s…

dogsDirofilaria immitisVeterinary (miscellaneous)PopulationDirofilaria immitisDirofilariasiCanine heartworm disease; Dirofilariasis; Dogs; Humans; One Health; Vector-borne zoonosis; Animals; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Humans; Islands; Italy; Phylogeny; Seroepidemiologic Studies; Dirofilaria immitis; Dirofilaria repens; Dirofilariasis; ZoonosesRepensVector-borne zoonosis.one healthdirofilariasisSeroepidemiologic StudiesZoonosesDirofilariasisparasitic diseasesDogcanine heartworm disease; dirofilariasis; dogs; humans; one health; vector-borne zoonosismedicineAnimalsSeroprevalenceDog DiseaseshumanseducationPhylogenyDirofilariaIslandseducation.field_of_studybiologycanine heartworm diseasebiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyDirofilaria repensInfectious DiseasesItalyInsect ScienceDirofilaria repensParasitologyWolbachiavector-borne zoonosisHumanActa Tropica
researchProduct

Consistent phenological shifts in the making of a biodiversity hotspot: the Cape flora

2011

Abstract Background The best documented survival responses of organisms to past climate change on short (glacial-interglacial) timescales are distributional shifts. Despite ample evidence on such timescales for local adaptations of populations at specific sites, the long-term impacts of such changes on evolutionary significant units in response to past climatic change have been little documented. Here we use phylogenies to reconstruct changes in distribution and flowering ecology of the Cape flora - South Africa's biodiversity hotspot - through a period of past (Neogene and Quaternary) changes in the seasonality of rainfall over a timescale of several million years. Results Forty-three dist…

ecological nichesFloraEvolutionClimate ChangeBiodiversityClimate changesequence dataevolutionary responsesBiology580 Plants (Botany)MagnoliopsidaSouth AfricaCapeAdaptive radiationQH359-425Survival responsesskin and connective tissue diseasesrapid evolutionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyEcological nicheEvolutionary BiologyEcologyheterogeneous environmentsPhenologyEcologyEPS-4flowering timeBiodiversityBiological EvolutionBiosystematiekfossil recordBiodiversity hotspot10121 Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany1105 Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicssouthern africaclimate-changeBiosystematicssense organsadaptive radiationResearch ArticleBMC Evolutionary Biology
researchProduct

Type II keratin cDNAs from the rainbow trout: implications for keratin evolution.

2002

From a teleost fish, the rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, we have cloned and sequenced cDNAs encoding five different type II keratins. The corresponding protein spots, as separated by 2D-PAGE of trout cytoskeletal preparations, have been identified by peptide mass mapping using MALDI mass spectrometry. Three of the sequenced keratins are expressed in the epidermis (subtype IIe), and two in simple epithelia and mesenchymal cells (subtype IIs). The IIs keratins are both orthologs of human K8. This leaves unsequenced only the trace component S3 of the biochemically established trout keratin catalog. A phylogenetic tree has been constructed from a multiple alignment of the rod domains of the …

endocrine systemCancer Researchanimal structuresDNA ComplementaryMolecular Sequence Datamacromolecular substancesPeptide MappingType II keratinEvolution MolecularMesodermSpecies SpecificityAntibody SpecificityKeratinAnimalsHumansProtein IsoformsAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularMolecular BiologyZebrafishPhylogenyZebrafishchemistry.chemical_classificationGeneticsMammalsMultiple sequence alignmentintegumentary systembiologyPhylogenetic treeSequence Homology Amino AcidLampreyAntibodies MonoclonalLampreysEpithelial CellsCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationProtein Structure TertiaryTroutchemistryOrgan SpecificityOncorhynchus mykissSpectrometry Mass Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-IonizationSharksKeratinsRainbow troutEpidermisSequence AlignmentDevelopmental BiologyDifferentiation; research in biological diversity
researchProduct

Origin of Insulin Receptor-Like Tyrosine Kinases in Marine Sponges

1999

One autapomorphic character restricted to all Metazoa including Porifera [sponges] is the existence of transmembrane receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs). In this study we screened for molecules from one subfamily within the superfamily of the insulin receptors. The subfamily includes the insulin receptors (InsR), the insulin-like growth factor I receptors, and the InsR-related receptors--all found in vertebrates--as well as the InsR-homolog from Drosophila melanogaster. cDNAs encoding putative InsRs were isolated from the hexactinellid sponge Aphrocallistes vastus, the demosponge Suberites domuncula, and the calcareous sponge Sycon raphanus. Phylogenetic analyses of the catalytic domains of th…

endocrine systemDNA ComplementarySubfamilyMolecular Sequence DataReceptor tyrosine kinaseEvolution MolecularMiceDemospongeCatalytic DomainBotanyAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceSycon raphanusCloning MolecularPhylogenyCephalochordateBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino Acidbiologygeodia cydonium; adhesion receptors; evolutionnutritional and metabolic diseasesSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationReceptor InsulinPoriferaRatsSuberites domunculaInsulin receptorSpongeBiochemistrybiology.proteinGeneral Agricultural and Biological Scienceshormones hormone substitutes and hormone antagonistsThe Biological Bulletin
researchProduct

New biological aspects of Chromogranin A-derived peptides: Focus on vasostatins

2007

Chromogranin A (CgA), one component of the granin family, represents the major soluble protein co-stored and co-released with catecholamines, within chromaffin cells secretory granules. It is considered a diagnostic and prognostic marker of several diseases, including a variety of tumours and cardiac heart failure. It also represents a precursor of biologically active fragments, generated after proteolytic cleavage at the level of the multiple pairs of dibasic sites which enrich its sequence. CgA, and its derived fragments show an old evolutionary history being ubiquitously present throughout the animal word, from mammals to invertebrates. Their biological functions include control of hormo…

endocrine systemPhysiologyMolecular Sequence DataBiologyModels BiologicalBiochemistryParacrine signallingChromogranine AAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceAutocrine signallingMolecular BiologyPeptide sequencePhylogenyInnate immune systemSettore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaGraninChromogranin APeptide FragmentsBiochemistrybiology.proteinChromogranin AParathyroid hormone secretionNeuroendocrine tumorsCalreticulinHomeostasisComparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Molecular & Integrative Physiology
researchProduct

In situ analysis of the bacterial communities associated to farmed eel by whole-cell hybridization.

1999

Bacterial communities in water samples and eel slime were investigated by fluorescence in situ hybridization of whole bacterial cells in an eel intensive culture system over 1 year. A newly developed probe, matching 27 Vibrio spp., and a specific probe for Vibrio vulnificus were used. Phylogenetic probes complementary to selected regions of the 16S and 23S ribosomal RNA revealed that Proteobacteria of the alpha and beta subclass were predominant in water and eel slime. Members of the gamma subclass (e.g. vibrios and aeromonads) were more abundant in eel slime, although no V. vulnificus was detected.

endocrine systemanimal structuresColony Count MicrobialVibrio vulnificusAquacultureApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyVibrionaceae23S ribosomal RNARNA Ribosomal 16SmedicineAnimalsIn Situ Hybridization FluorescencePhylogenyAlphaproteobacteriaVibrioEelsbiologymedicine.diagnostic_testBacteriafungiBetaproteobacteriaequipment and suppliesbiology.organism_classificationVibrioRNA BacterialRNA Ribosomal 23SbacteriaProteobacteriaMolecular probeOligonucleotide ProbesWater MicrobiologyBacteriaFluorescence in situ hybridizationLetters in applied microbiology
researchProduct

High‐resolution 3D forest structure explains ecomorphological trait variation in assemblages of saproxylic beetles

2022

1. Climate, topography and the 3D structure of forests are major drivers affecting local species communities. However, little is known about how the specific functional traits of saproxylic (wood-living) beetles, involved in the recycling of wood, might be affected by those environmental characteristics. 2. Here, we combine ecological and morphological traits available for saproxylic beetles and airborne laser scanning (ALS) data in Bayesian trait-based joint species distribution models to study how traits drive the distributions of more than 230 species in temperate forests of Europe. 3. We found that elevation (as a proxy for temperature and precipitation) and the proportion of conifers p…

environmental gradientLiDARairborne laser scanning; Bayesian modelling; Coleoptera; environmental gradient; functional traits; HMSC; LiDAR; phylogenyDIVERSITYMELANISMairborne laser scanningECOLOGYphylogenyfunctional traits3D-mallinnusPREDICTORSEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicskovakuoriaisetlajistokartoitusfylogeniaEcologybayesilainen menetelmäeliöyhteisötilmastonmuutoksetHMSCmetsätEVOLUTIONColeopteraMORPHOLOGICAL TRAITSFUNCTIONAL TRAITS1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyBIODIVERSITYABUNDANCEBayesian modellingympäristönmuutoksetlaserkeilausRESPONSESFunctional Ecology
researchProduct

Tras la pista del VIH: los estudios evolutivos y la comprensión del sida.

2013

El VIH o virus de la inmunodeficiencia humana tiene un gran impacto sanitario, social y económico; las terapias actuales permiten controlar la infección pero no se ha encontrado tratamiento curativo ni vacuna efectiva. Para conseguir estos objetivos, debe tenerse en cuenta la gran variabilidad genética y rápida evolución del VIH, asociadas, por ejemplo, a la aparición de variantes de resistencia a fármacos o de cambios antigénicos.

filogeniaevoluciónBiologíavirusphylogenybiodiversidadbiologia; evolució; genèticaphylogeny; biodiversity; genetic variation; mutation; public health; virussalud públicavariabilitat genèticaevolutionvariabilidad genéticafilogènia; biodiversitat; variabilitat genètica; mutació; salut pública; virusgeneticsmutaciónfilogenia; biodiversidad; variabilidad genética; mutación; salud pública; virusbiodiversityfilogèniagenèticabiologypublic healthBiología; evolución; genéticagenéticasalut públicabiodiversitatevoluciógenetic variationmutationbiology; evolution; geneticsbiologiamutació
researchProduct

Isolation, characterization and determination of biotechnological potential of oil-degrading bacteria from Algerian centre coast

2019

Aims The Algerian coastline is exposed to several types of pollution, including hydrocarbons. The aim of this work was to isolate oil-degrading bacteria and to explore the intrinsic bioremediation potential of part of its contaminated harbour. Methods and results A collection of 119 strains, capable to grow on mineral medium supplemented with hydrocarbons, were obtained from polluted sediment and seawater collected from Sidi Fredj harbour (Algiers). Twenty-three strains were selected for further studies. Sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene showed that most isolates belong to genera of hydrocarbonoclastic bacteria (Alcanivorax), generalist hydrocarbons degraders (Marinobacter, Pseudomonas, Gordo…

food.ingredientAlkBGordoniaApplied Microbiology and Biotechnology03 medical and health scienceshydrocarbonBioremediationfoodalkBbioremediationRNA Ribosomal 16SBotanySeawaterPhylogeny030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesHalomonasBacteriabiology030306 microbiologyBrevibacteriumGeneral MedicineMarinobacterbiology.organism_classificationHydrocarbonsoil-degrading bacteriaBiodegradation EnvironmentalPetroleumAlgeriabiology.proteinAlcanivoraxBacteriaBiotechnologyJournal of Applied Microbiology
researchProduct