Search results for "phylogenetic"
showing 10 items of 1179 documents
The evolutionary origin of Xanthomonadales genomes and the nature of the horizontal gene transfer process.
2006
Determining the influence of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) on phylogenomic analyses and the retrieval of a tree of life is relevant for our understanding of microbial genome evolution. It is particularly difficult to differentiate between phylogenetic incongruence due to noise and that resulting from HGT. We have performed a large-scale, detailed evolutionary analysis of the different phylogenetic signals present in the genomes of Xanthomonadales, a group of Proteobacteria. We show that the presence of phylogenetic noise is not an obstacle to infer past and present HGTs during their evolution. The scenario derived from this analysis and other recently published reports reflect the confound…
2004
Background Genetic variability in viral populations is usually estimated by means of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) based methods in which the relative abundance of each amplicon is assumed to be proportional to the frequency of the corresponding template in the initial sample. Although bias in template-to-product ratios has been described before, its relevance in describing viral genetic variability at the intrapatient level has not been fully assessed yet.
Inter- and intraspecific chromosome pattern variation in the yeast genusKluyveromyces
1998
The analysis of the electrophoretic chromosome patterns of the species of the genus Kluyveromyces, reveals a high polymorphism in size, number and intensity of bands. DiVerent sets of electrophoresis running conditions were used to establish species-specific patterns and also to detect intraspecific variation. According to their karyotypes, the species of this genus can be divided into two major groups. The first group includes the species K. africanus, K. bacillisporus, K. delphensis, K. lodderae, K. phaY, K. polysporus and K. yarrowii, composing the so-called ‘Saccharomyces cerevisiae-like’ group, because their karyotypes resemble that of the species S. cerevisiae. The second group compri…
Molecular evolution of P transposable elements in the Genus drosophila. II. The obscura species group.
1998
A phylogenetic analysis of P transposable elements in the Drosophila obscura species group is described. Multiple P sequences from each of 10 species were obtained using PCR primers that flank a conserved region of exon 2 of the transposase gene. In general, the P element phylogeny is congruent with the species phylogeny, indicating that the dominant mode of transmission has been vertical, from generation to generation. One manifestation of this is the distinction of P elements from the Old World obscura and subobscura subgroups from those of the New World affinis subgroup. However, the overall distribution of elements within the obscura species group is not congruent with the phylogenetic …
A Phylogenetic Analysis of Human Syntenies Revealed by Chromosome Painting in Euarchontoglires Orders
2010
To search for cytogenetic signatures that can help to clarify evolutionary affinities among the five orders within the Euarchontoglires clade, we focused on associations of conserved syntenic blocks that have been accumulated in the karyotypes of Primates (Strepsirhini and Haplorhini), five families of Rodentia, Scandentia (Tupaia belangeri), Dermoptera (Galeopterus variegatus) and Lagomorpha (Oryctolagus cuniculus). We examined available chromosome painting data to identify conserved chromosomes and chromosomal segments, and syntenic associations likely to have characterized the ancestral eutherian karyotype. The data set includes 161 characters that have been subjected to a concatenated a…
Phylogenetic relationships between Drosophila subobscura, D. guanche and D. madeirensis based on Southern analysis of heat shock genes.
2004
A Southern analysis of genomic DNA using Drosophila melanogaster probes for the major heat shock protein genes (Hsp82, Hsp 70, Hsps encoding small proteins) was made to study the phylogenetic relationships between three Drosophila species belonging to the obscura group (D. subobscura, D. guanche, and D. madeirensis). The phylogenetic trees showed that D. madeirensis and D. subobscura are the most closely related species in the triad, while D. guanche is the most distantly related one. As in other Drosophila species, Hsp82 is a single copy gene in D. subobscura, D. guanche, and D. madeirensis, while Hsp 70 and Hsps, which encode small proteins, are genie families. At least four sequences hom…
An assessment of genetic relationships within the genus Digitalis based on PCR-generated RAPD markers
2000
RAPD markers were used to study inter-specific variation among six species of the genus Digitalis: D. obscura, D. lanata, D. grandiflora, D. purpurea, D. thapsi and D. dubia, and the hybrid D. excelsior (D. purpurea×D. grandiflora). A total of 91 highly reproducible bands amplified with four arbitrarily chosen decamer primers were obtained. Homology of the co-emigrating RAPD markers was tested by blot hybridisation and sequencing of selected bands. The application of a range of statistical approaches for RAPD data analysis, including distance and parsimony methods, family clustering and the analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA), indicated that these molecular markers were taxonomically inf…
Evolutionary analysis of Citrus tristeza virus outbreaks in Calabria, Italy: two rapidly spreading and independent introductions of mild and severe i…
2014
The evolution of citrus tristeza virus (CTV) from outbreaks occurred in Calabria, Italy, was compared with that of CTV outbreaks reported previously in another two proximal Italian regions, Sicily and Apulia. Examination of four genomic regions (genes p20, p25 and p23, and one fragment of open reading frame 1) showed two recombination events, and phylogenetic analysis disclosed two divergent CTV groups in Calabria: one formed by severe and the other by mild isolates. This analysis, together with others involving population genetic parameters, revealed a low migration rate of CTV between the three Italian regions, as well as significant differences in selective pressures, epidemiology and de…
Genetic diversity ofMelon necrotic spot virusandOlpidiumisolates from different origins
2010
The geographic incidence, genetic diversity and phylogenetic relationships of Melon necrotic spot virus (MNSV) and Olpidium isolates were studied in three cucurbit species from several Latin American and European countries on different collecting dates. Of the 112 cucurbit samples analysed, 69 from Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Panama and Spain were DAS-ELISA-positive for MNSV. Olpidium bornovanus and O. virulentus infections, and MNSV infections mixed with these Olpidium species, were observed for all these countries. Twenty-nine MNSV isolates from all the origins where the virus was detected were selected and amplified by RT-PCR. The resulting RT-PCR of the p29, p89, p7A, p7B and p42 prote…
Gene encoding capsid protein VP1 of foot-and-mouth disease virus A quasispecies model of molecular evolution
1988
A phylogenetic tree relating the VP1 gene of 15 isolates of foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) of serotypes A, C, and O has been constructed. The most parsimonious tree shows that FMDV subtypes and isolates within subtypes constitute sets of related, nonidentical genomes, in agreement with a quasispecies mode of evolution of this virus. The average number of nucleotide replacements per site for all possible pairs of VP1 coding segments is higher among representatives of serotype A than serotype C or O. In comparing amino acid sequences, the values of dispersion index (variance/mean value) are greater than 1, with the highest values scored when all sequences are considered. This indicates a…