Search results for "Phylogenetics"

showing 10 items of 777 documents

Insights into the evolutionary history of the subfamily orthotrichoideae (Orthotrichaceae, Bryophyta): new and former supra-specific taxa so far obsc…

2021

Mosses of the subfamily Orthotrichoideae represent one of the main components of the cryptogam epiphytic communities in temperate areas. During the last two decades, this taxonomical group has undergone an extensive revision that has led to its rearrangement at the generic level. However, their phylogenetic relationships and inferences on the evolutionary patterns that have driven the present diversity have little advanced. In this study, we present a dated molecular phylogenetic reconstruction at the subfamily level, including 130 samples that represent the 12 genera currently recognized within the subfamily, and the analysis of four molecular markers: ITS2, rps4, trnG, and trnL-F. We also…

Character evolutionSubfamilybiologyBotánicaOrthotrichinaePlant cultureCharacter EvolutionPlant ScienceAustraloriaphylogenybiology.organism_classificationTribe (biology)LewinskyinaeSB1-1110OrthotrichumGenusEvolutionary biologyPhylogeneticsZygodonteaePolyphylyAtlantichellaZygodonPhylogenyOriginal Research
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Increased circulating and intrahepatic T-cell-specific chemokines in chronic hepatitis C: relationship with the type of virological response to pegin…

2004

Summary Aims : To determine the serum and intrahepatic levels of T-helper-1-associated chemokines in patients with chronic hepatitis C before, during and after peginterferon plus ribavirin combination therapy and to search for correlations with baseline characteristics of hepatitis C virus-related chronic liver disease and type of therapeutic response. Methods : Serum chemokine levels were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and intrahepatic chemokine messenger RNA and protein levels were tested by ribonuclease protection assay and immunohistochemistry. Results : Serum and intrahepatic chemokine levels were elevated in all patients with chronic hepatitis C and showed a marked d…

ChemokineHepatologybiologyCombination therapybusiness.industryRibavirinGastroenterologyHepatitis Cmedicine.diseaseChronic liver diseasechemistry.chemical_compoundBasal (phylogenetics)chemistryFibrosisImmunologyGenotypebiology.proteinMedicinePharmacology (medical)businessAlimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics
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The Chemokine Networks in Sponges: Potential Roles in Morphogenesis, Immunity and Stem Cell Formation

2003

Porifera (sponges) are now well accepted as the phylum which branched off first from the common ancestor of all metazoans, the Urmetazoa. The transition to the Metazoa became possible because during this phase, cell-cell as well as cell-matrix adhesion molecules evolved which allowed the formation of a colonial stage of animals. The next prerequisite for the evolution to the Urmetazoa was the establishment of an effective immune system which, flanked by apoptosis, allowed the formation of a first level of individuation.

ChemokineImmune systembiologyPhylumImmunityPhylogeneticsCell adhesion moleculebiology.proteinMorphogenesisStem cellCell biology
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Phylogeny of long-tailed tits and allies inferred from mitochondrial and nuclear markers (Aves: Passeriformes, Aegithalidae)

2010

Abstract In this paper we provide a molecular phylogeny based on three mitochondrial and three nuclear markers for all long-tailed tit species of the genus Aegithalos including several doubtful subspecies (17 taxa) plus three close allies of SE Asian Leptopoecile and North American Psaltriparus . Genus Aegithalos is divided into three major clades, two of them showing only minor differentiation. Separation of two mitchondrial haploytpe clusters in the N Palearctic Long-tailed Tit, Ae. caudatus , was dated back to the Late Pleistocene, however, descendants from both lineages underwent a rapid post-Pleistocene range expansion and largely mixed over the entire distribution area. The Chinese po…

ChinaRange (biology)ZoologyBiologySubspeciesDNA MitochondrialEvolution MolecularGeneticsAnimalsPasseriformesCladeMolecular BiologyPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsCell NucleusGeographyModels GeneticLeptopoecileAegithalidaeEcologySequence Analysis DNAAegithalosbiology.organism_classificationTaxonHaplotypesNorth AmericaMolecular phylogeneticsMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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Chromosome painting of the pygmy tree shrew shows that no derived cytogenetic traits link primates and scandentia.

2012

We hybridized human chromosome paints on metaphases of the pygmy tree shrew (<i>Tupaia minor</i>, Scandentia). The lack of the ancestral mammalian 4/8 association in both Primates and Scandentia was long considered a cytogenetic landmark that phylogenetically linked these mammalian orders. However, our results show that the association 4/8 is present in <i>Tupaia </i>along with not previously reported associations for 1/18 and 7/10. Altogether there are 11 syntenic associations of human chromosome segments in the pygmy tree shrew karyotype: 1/18, 2/21, 3/21, 4/8, 7/10, 7/16, 11/20, 12/22 (twice), 14/15 and 16/19. Our data remove any cytogenetic evidence that Scandent…

Chromosome paintsMalePrimatesTupaiaZoologySettore BIO/08 - AntropologiaCell LineChromosome PaintingMolecular cytogeneticsTree shrewPhylogeneticsGeneticsAnimalsHumansTupaia minorMolecular BiologyGenetics (clinical)PhylogenyAncestral associations Molecular cytogeneticsPhylogeny TupaiabiologyTupaiidaebiology.organism_classificationChromosome BandingScandentiaKaryotypingChromosome paintingCytogenetic and genome research
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Positive selection in development and growth rate regulation genes involved in species divergence of the genus Radix

2015

AbstractBackgroundLife history traits like developmental time, age and size at maturity are directly related to fitness in all organisms and play a major role in adaptive evolution and speciation processes. Comparative genomic or transcriptomic approaches to identify positively selected genes involved in species divergence can help to generate hypotheses on the driving forces behind speciation. Here we use a bottom-up approach to investigate this hypothesis by comparative analysis of orthologous transcripts of four closely related EuropeanRadixspecies.ResultsSnails of the genusRadixoccupy species specific distribution ranges with distinct climatic niches, indicating a potential for natural …

ClimateSnailsZoologyLife history theorySpecies SpecificityPhylogeneticsAnimalsRNA-SeqAdaptationSelection GeneticTranscriptomicsEcosystemPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcological nicheMollusksNatural selectionbiologyPhylogenetic treeGene Expression ProfilingReproductive isolationbiology.organism_classificationReproductive isolationBiological EvolutionReproductive isolation ; RNA-Seq ; Transcriptomics ; Adaptive sequence evolution ; Positive selection ; Mollusks ; AdaptationPositive selectionEuropeGene Expression RegulationEvolutionary biologyAdaptationAdaptive sequence evolutionResearch ArticleRadix (gastropod)BMC Evolutionary Biology
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Evolutionary analysis of G-proteins in early metazoans: Cloning of α- and β-subunits from the sponge Geodia cydonium1The sequences reported here have…

1998

G-protein-coupled (seven-transmembrane segment)-receptors represent a major group of metazoan receptors, involved in transduction of extracellular signals. The G-proteins, which are made up of Galpha/beta/gamma-subunits, link the receptors to the effector system(s). To analyze the phylogenetic relationships among the metazoan alpha-subunits of G-proteins, cDNAs of alpha-subunits were isolated from Geodia cydonium, a marine sponge belonging to the lowest metazoan phylum, Porifera. One encodes a putative isotype of a stimulator of the adenylyl cyclase (Galpha s), another one a putative inhibitor of the adenylyl cyclase (Galpha i/o) and the third one a putative activator of phospholipase C (Ga…

CloningGeneticsPhospholipase CPhylogenetic treeEvolutionG proteinEffectorMolecular phylogenyCell BiologyAnatomyBiologyPoriferaAdenylyl cyclasechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistrySpongePhylogenetics(Geodia cydonium)MonophylyMolecular BiologyPeptide sequenceBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Cell Research
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Cloning of sponge heat shock proteins: evolutionary relationships between the major kingdoms

2009

In the present study we have cloned from sponges (Porifera) those molecules which are involved in the protection of organisms against physiological and stress conditions; the inducible heat shock protein Mr 70,000, hsp70, from the marine sponge Geodia cydonium, its interacting hsp40, a DnaJ-like protein (from G. cydonium) and the constitutively expressed counterpart the glucose-regulated protein Mr 78,000, GRP78 from Suberites domuncula. Alignments of the sequences revealed that the deduced aa sequences of all sponge hsp's share high homology to other metazoan sequences, and are separated from related sequences from plants and fungi (hsp70, GRP78, DnaJ) as well as Bacteria (DnaK, the hsp70 …

CloningGeneticsPhylogenetic treeBiologybiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologySuberites domunculaPhylogeneticsHeat shock proteinGenBankGeneticsAnimal Science and ZoologyMolecular BiologyGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsArchaeaJournal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research
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<p><strong>SEM study of species of <em>Oswaldella</em> Stechow, 1919 (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, </strong><br /><stro…

2015

Oswaldella is the most speciose genus, and one of the most characteristic, of hydrozoans inhabiting the Antarctic benthic marine ecosystem. Its species have relatively many important taxonomic characters allowing for their identification. Some of them, however, are difficult to study properly with a compound microscope. With the aim of improving scientific knowledge concerning species of the genus, a SEM survey of species of Oswaldella was carried out to study key morphological characters. Fourteen out of the 27 known nominal species were considered. The study has revealed unknown important characters, such as the presence of nematothecae associated with the nematophores at the cauline apop…

CnidariabiologyPhylogeneticsZoologyOswaldellaAnimal Science and ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)Marine ecosystemKirchenpaueriidaebiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsChecklistHydrozoaZootaxa
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Plant facilitation and phylogenetics

2013

The relationship between facilitation and evolutionary ecology is poorly understood. We review five issues elucidating how the phylogenetic relatedness of species provides insight into the role of facilitation in community assembly: (a) Are the facilitative interactions more common between species that differ in a regeneration niche? (b) Are facilitative interactions more common between distantly related species? (c) Do communities governed by facilitation (rather than competition) have higher phylogenetic diversity? (d) As facilitated juvenile plants mature, do they compete with their nurses more often if they are closely related to them? (e) How does the phylogenetic signature in a commun…

CoextinctionEcologyPhylogenetic treeEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectNetworkBiologyCompetition (biology)Historical effectsPhylogenetic diversityIndirect effectsPhylogeneticsNicheFacilitationEvolutionary ecologyRegeneration (ecology)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcological interactionsmedia_common
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