Search results for "phylogeny"

showing 10 items of 1398 documents

A new Diplura species from Georgia caves, Plusiocampa (Plusiocampa) imereti (Diplura, Campodeidae), with morphological and molecular data

2021

A new dipluran species, Plusiocampa (Plusiocampa) imereti Sendra & Barjadze sp. nov., from the deep zone in three caves in the Imereti region, Georgia, is described. This new troglobitic Plusiocampa is an addition to four others known Diplura from around the Black Sea region, two Dydimocampa and two Plusiocampa s. str. The present study also provides the first CO1 sequences for the Plusiocampinae taxa and the first molecular data for cave-dwelling Plusiocampa species. Although bootstrap values were low, the maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree grouped Plusiocampa (P.) imereti Sendra & Barjadze sp. nov. with two Plusiocampa s. str. species from Eastern Europe. Morphologically, P. (P.…

CampodeidaeArthropodaBiogeographyPlusiocampinae taxonomyDipluraPermafrostphylogenyddc:590CaveCampodeidaeAnimaliacave-dwellingGlacial periodEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiogeographyTaxonomygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPhylogenetic treebiologyEcologyBotanyEntognathaBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationTaxonQL1-991BiogeografiaQK1-989DipluraZoology
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Sequence and evolution of a hexamerin from the ant Camponotus festinatus.

2000

In the ant Camponotus festinatus, two different hexamerins accumulate stage-specifically during the late larval period and at various times in adults. These hexamerins serve as storage proteins and play important roles in brood nourishment and colony founding. We report an analysis of the cDNA sequence of C. festinatus hexamerin 2 (CfeHex2). The native protein contains 732 amino acids, which are moderately enriched in aromatic amino acids, aspartate and asparagine. Phylogenetic analyses show a close relationship of CfeHex2 to a putative toxin of the braconid wasp, Bracon hebetor. The divergence of Formicidae and Braconidae hexamerins was calculated to have begun 187 MYA, an estimate consist…

Camponotus festinatusDNA ComplementarySequence analysisBracon hebetormedia_common.quotation_subjectMolecular Sequence DataZoologyInsectEvolution MolecularPhylogeneticsGeneticsAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyPeptide sequencePhylogenymedia_commonbiologyBase SequenceSequence Homology Amino AcidEcologyAntsfungibiology.organism_classificationBroodInsect ScienceInsect ProteinsBraconidaeSequence AnalysisInsect molecular biology
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Insights into the relationships of Palearctic and Nearctic lymnaeids (Mollusca : Gastropoda) by rDNA ITS-2 sequencing and phylogeny of stagnicoline i…

2003

Fascioliasis by Fasciola hepatica is the vector-borne disease presenting the widest latitudinal, longitudinal and altitudinal distribution known. F. hepatica shows a great adaptation power to new environmental conditions which is the consequence of its own capacities together with the adaptation and colonization abilities of its specific vector hosts, freshwater snails of the family Lymnaeidae. Several lymnaeid species only considered as secondary contributors to the liver fluke transmission have, however, played a very important role in the geographic expansion of this disease. Many of them belong to the so-called "stagnicoline" type group. Stagnicolines have, therefore, a very important a…

CanadaVeterinary (miscellaneous)SnailsZoologyDisease VectorsDNA RibosomalRibotypingrDNA ITS-2 sequenceslymnaea occultalcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesHolarcticSpecies SpecificityPhylogeneticsHepaticaSequence Homology Nucleic AcidOmphiscola glabraAnimalslcsh:RC109-216PhylogenyLymnaeaGalba truncatulabiologyPhylogenetic treeArctic RegionsIntermediate hostHolarctic stagnicolinesFasciola hepaticabiology.organism_classificationEuropeInfectious DiseasesInsect ScienceAnimal Science and ZoologyParasitologyTaxonomy (biology)L. palustris turriculaParasite
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Type I keratin cDNAs from the rainbow trout: independent radiation of keratins in fish

2002

Five different type I keratins from a teleost fish, the rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss, have been sequenced by cDNA cloning and identified at the protein level by peptide mass mapping using MALDI-MS. This showed that the entire range of type I keratins detected biochemically in this fish has now been sequenced. Three of the keratins are expressed in the epidermis (subtype Ie), whereas the other two occur in simple epithelia and mesenchymal cells (subtype Is). Among the Is keratins is an ortholog of human K18; the second Is polypeptide is clearly distinct from K18. We raised a new monoclonal antibody (F1F2, subclass IgG1) that specifically recognizes trout Is keratins, with negative react…

Cancer ResearchDNA Complementaryanimal structuresType I keratinMolecular Sequence Datamacromolecular substancesBiologyPeptide MappingEvolution MolecularMesodermSpecies SpecificityAntibody SpecificityKeratinAnimalsHumansProtein IsoformsAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularMolecular BiologyZebrafishPhylogenyZebrafishMammalschemistry.chemical_classificationGeneticsMultiple sequence alignmentSequence Homology Amino Acidintegumentary systemPhylogenetic treeLampreyAntibodies MonoclonalLampreysEpithelial CellsCell Biologybiology.organism_classificationProtein Structure TertiaryTroutchemistryOrgan SpecificityOncorhynchus mykissSpectrometry Mass Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-IonizationSharksKeratinsRainbow troutEpidermisSequence AlignmentDevelopmental BiologyDifferentiation
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The Compass-like Locus, Exclusive to the Ambulacrarians, Encodes a Chromatin Insulator Binding Protein in the Sea Urchin Embryo

2013

Chromatin insulators are eukaryotic genome elements that upon binding of specific proteins display barrier and/or enhancer-blocking activity. Although several insulators have been described throughout various metazoans, much less is known about proteins that mediate their functions. This article deals with the identification and functional characterization in Paracentrotus lividus of COMPASS-like (CMPl), a novel echinoderm insulator binding protein. Phylogenetic analysis shows that the CMPl factor, encoded by the alternative spliced Cmp/Cmpl transcript, is the founder of a novel ambulacrarian-specific family of Homeodomain proteins containing the Compass domain. Specific association of CMPl…

Cancer ResearchEmbryo Nonmammalianchromatin insulators genome evolution alternative splicing sea urchin embryolcsh:QH426-470RepressorSettore BIO/11 - Biologia MolecolareRegulatory Sequences Nucleic AcidHistonesGene clusterGeneticsAnimalsPromoter Regions GeneticEnhancerMolecular BiologyPhylogenyGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsMessenger RNAbiologyBinding proteinGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalFusion proteinChromatinNucleosomesChromatinlcsh:GeneticsEnhancer Elements GeneticNucleoproteinsHistoneSea UrchinsParacentrotusbiology.proteinInsulator ElementsCarrier ProteinsResearch ArticleProtein BindingPLoS Genetics
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Comparison of vaccine strains and the virus causing the 1986 foot-and-mouth disease outbreak in Spain: epizootiological analysis

1990

RNAs of the most recent foot-and-mouth disease virus isolated in Spain (A5Sp86) during the 1986 outbreak, and of the three vaccine strains in use at that time in that country, have been compared. Although these viruses are serologically indistinguishable, differences have been found among them by T1 fingerprinting. This genetic heterogeneity affects the immunogenic VP1 gene, with amino acid changes located at the carboxyterminal end of the molecule. VP1-coding sequences obtained have been compared with those previously reported for European A5 FMDVs and it has been possible to trace their phylogenetic origin. The most parsimonious evolutionary tree obtained shows that the viruses analyzed a…

Cancer ResearchGenes ViralvirusesMolecular Sequence DataCattle DiseasesVirusDisease OutbreaksAphthovirusCapsidVirologymedicineAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceGenetic variabilityPhylogenyGeneticsAphthovirusBase SequencebiologyPhylogenetic treeFoot-and-mouth diseaseFoot-and-mouth disease virusGenetic heterogeneityOutbreakViral VaccinesRNA analysisbiology.organism_classificationmedicine.diseaseVirologyInfectious DiseasesSpainMolecular epizootiologyFoot-and-Mouth DiseaseRNA ViralGenetic variabilityCapsid ProteinsCattleFoot-and-mouth disease virusVirus Research
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Serratia symbiotica from the aphid Cinara cedri: a missing link from facultative to obligate insect endosymbiont.

2011

The genome sequencing of Buchnera aphidicola BCc from the aphid Cinara cedri, which is the smallest known Buchnera genome, revealed that this bacterium had lost its symbiotic role, as it was not able to synthesize tryptophan and riboflavin. Moreover, the biosynthesis of tryptophan is shared with the endosymbiont Serratia symbiotica SCc, which coexists with B. aphidicola in this aphid. The whole-genome sequencing of S. symbiotica SCc reveals an endosymbiont in a stage of genome reduction that is closer to an obligate endosymbiont, such as B. aphidicola from Acyrthosiphon pisum, than to another S. symbiotica, which is a facultative endosymbiont in this aphid, and presents much less gene decay…

Cancer ResearchSerratialcsh:QH426-470RiboflavinPseudogeneGenomeDNA sequencingBacterial ProteinsBuchneraEnterobacteriaceaePhylogeneticsBotanyGeneticsAnimalsAmino AcidsSymbiosisMolecular BiologyPhylogenyGenetics (clinical)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsComparative genomicsObligatebiologyTryptophanbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionAcyrthosiphon pisumlcsh:GeneticsAphidsBuchneraGenome BacterialMetabolic Networks and PathwaysPseudogenesPLoS Genetics
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Novel recombinant GII.P16_GII.13 and GII.P16_GII.3 norovirus strains in Italy.

2014

Novel norovirus strains are continuously emerging worldwide. Molecular investigation and phylogenetic analysis identified GII.P16 recombinant noroviruses from the stools of four Italian children with gastroenteritis. The capsid gene was characterized as either GII.13 or GII.3. The GII.P16_GII.13 Italian strains were closely related to German strains involved in a large outbreak in the second half of 2012 and the Italian strains are the first recorded occurrence of GII.P16_GII.13 in Europe.

Cancer ResearchSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaGenotypevirusesMolecular Sequence DataBiologymedicine.disease_causelaw.inventionfluids and secretionslawVirologymedicineCluster AnalysisHumansGenePhylogenyCaliciviridae InfectionsRecombination GeneticNoroviruPhylogenetic treeGastroenteritiNorovirusvirus diseasesOutbreakGII.P16_GII.3InfantSequence Analysis DNAVirologyRecombinationGastroenteritisInfectious DiseasesCapsidItalyChild PreschoolRecombinant DNANorovirusRNA ViralCapsid ProteinsGII.P16_GII.13Virus research
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Geographical distribution and oncogenic risk association of human papillomavirus type 58 E6 and E7 sequence variations.

2013

Human papillomavirus (HPV) 58 accounts for a notable proportion of cervical cancers in East Asia and parts of Latin America, but it is uncommon elsewhere. The reason for such ethnogeographical predilection is unknown. In our study, nucleotide sequences of E6 and E7 genes of 401 HPV58 isolates collected from 15 countries/cities across four continents were examined. Phylogenetic relationship, geographical distribution and risk association of nucleotide sequence variations were analyzed. We found that the E6 genes of HPV58 variants were more conserved than E7. Thus, E6 is a more appropriate target for type-specific detection, whereas E7 is more appropriate for strain differentiation. The frequ…

Cancer ResearchSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia Clinicacervical cancerSettore MED/06 - Oncologia MedicaPapillomavirus E7 ProteinsUterine Cervical NeoplasmsCervix UteriphylogenyPolymerase Chain ReactionViralPapillomaviridaePapillomaviridaePhylogenyCancerOncogene ProteinsCervical cancerGeneticsTumorGeographybiologyNucleic acid sequenceDNA NeoplasmPrognosisInfectious DiseasesOncologyHIV/AIDSFemaleHPVhuman papillomavirus type 58 E6 and E7 sequence variationsOncology and CarcinogenesisCervical intraepithelial neoplasiaRisk AssessmentArticleVaccine Relatedoncogenic riskClinical ResearchPhylogeneticsGenetic variationGeneticsBiomarkers TumormedicineHumansOncology & CarcinogenesisGenePreventionPapillomavirus InfectionsGenetic VariationInternational AgenciesDNAOncogene Proteins ViralOdds ratioUterine Cervical Dysplasiamedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyvariantNeoplasmSexually Transmitted InfectionsCapsid ProteinsBiomarkersFollow-Up Studies
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cDNA sequences of the authentic keratins 8 and 18 in zebrafish

2003

From the zebrafish Danio rerio, we have cDNA cloned and sequenced a novel type II and a novel type I keratin, termed DreK8 and DreK18, respectively. We identified DreK8/18 as the true orthologs of the human keratin pair K8/18 as follows: (i) MALDI-MS assignment to the biochemically identified K8 and K18 candidates that are co-expressed in simple epithelia and absent in epidermal keratinocytes; (ii) multiple sequence alignments and phylogenetic tree analysis, showing that DreK8, within the phylogenetic tree of type II keratins, forms a highly bootstrap-supported branch together with K8 from goldfish and rainbow trout, whereas DreK18, within the phylogenetic tree of type I keratins, groups wi…

Cancer Researchanimal structuresType I keratinMolecular Sequence DataDaniomacromolecular substancesBiologyType II keratinComplementary DNAKeratinAnimalsHumansTissue DistributionAmino Acid SequenceCloning MolecularMolecular BiologyZebrafishPhylogenyZebrafishGeneticschemistry.chemical_classificationKeratin-18integumentary systemPhylogenetic treeKeratin-8Nucleic acid sequenceCell BiologyZebrafish Proteinsbiology.organism_classificationchemistryKeratinsSequence AlignmentDevelopmental BiologyDifferentiation
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