Search results for "phylogeny"

showing 10 items of 1398 documents

Unusual Assortment of Segments in 2 Rare Human Rotavirus Genomes

2010

Using full-length genome sequence analysis, we investigated 2 rare G3P[9] human rotavirus strains isolated from children with diarrhea. The genomes were recognized as assortments of genes closely related to rotaviruses originating from cats, ruminants, and humans. Results suggest multiple transmissions of genes from animal to human strains of rotaviruses.

DiarrheaMicrobiology (medical)Settore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaSettore MED/17 - Malattie InfettiveEpidemiologySequence analysisvirusesMolecular Sequence DataReassortmentlcsh:Medicineinterspecies transmissionGenome ViralBiologymedicine.disease_causeGenomeRotavirus Infectionslcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesfluids and secretionsPhylogeneticsRotavirusfull genome sequencingmedicineG3P[9]Humanslcsh:RC109-216GeneGenotypingPhylogenyWhole genome sequencingGeneticsSequence Analysis RNAlcsh:RDispatchvirus diseasesVirologyGastroenteritiszoonosesInfectious Diseasesrotavirushuman rotavirugenotypingChild PreschoolVirusesRNA ViralreassortmentgenomesSequence AlignmentEmerging Infectious Diseases
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Identification of a novel VP4 genotype carried by a serotype G5 porcine rotavirus strain

2006

AbstractRotavirus genome segment 4, encoding the spike outer capsid VP4 protein, of a porcine rotavirus (PoRV) strain, 134/04-15, identified in Italy was sequenced, and the predicted amino acid (aa) sequence was compared to those of all known VP4 (P) genotypes. The aa sequence of the full-length VP4 protein of the PoRV strain 134/04-15 showed aa identity values ranging from 59.7% (bovine strain KK3, P8[11]) to 86.09% (porcine strain A46, P[13]) with those of the remaining 25 P genotypes. Moreover, aa sequence analysis of the corresponding VP8* trypsin cleavage fragment revealed that the PoRV strain 134/04-15 shared low identity, ranging from 37.52% (bovine strain 993/83, P[17]) to 73.6% (po…

DiarrheaRotavirusSerotypeP genotypeGenotypeSwineSequence analysisvirusesMolecular Sequence DataViral Nonstructural ProteinsBiologymedicine.disease_causeGenetic diversityRotavirus InfectionsVirologyRotavirusGenetic variationGenotypemedicineAnimalsAmino Acid SequenceSerotypingAntigens ViralPeptide sequenceGenePhylogenyGlycoproteinsToxins BiologicalSwine DiseasesSequence Homology Amino AcidPhylogenetic treeGenetic Variationvirus diseasesSequence Analysis DNAVirologyMolecular biologyItalyVP4PigsCapsid Proteins
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Genetic heterogeneity of porcine enteric caliciviruses identified from diarrhoeic piglets

2008

Enteric caliciviruses (noroviruses and sapoviruses) are responsible for the majority of non-bacterial gastroenteritis in humans of all age groups. Analysis of the polymerase and capsid genes has provided evidence for a huge genetic diversity, but the understanding of their ecology is limited. In this study, we investigated the presence of porcine enteric caliciviruses in the faeces of piglets with diarrhoea. A total of 209 samples from 118 herds were analysed and calicivirus RNA was detected by RT-PCR in 68 sample (32.5%) and in 46 herds (38.9%), alone or in mixed infection with group A and C rotaviruses. Sequence and phylogenetic analysis of the calicivirus-positive samples characterized t…

DiarrheaRotavirusmedicine.medical_specialtySettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaGenes ViralSwineanimal diseasesvirusesMolecular Sequence DataBiologymedicine.disease_causeRotavirus InfectionsEnteritis Porcine calicivirus SapovirusEnteritisMicrobiologyFecesfluids and secretionsMedical microbiologyVirologyGenetic variationGeneticsmedicineAnimalsHumansAmino Acid SequenceMolecular BiologyFecesPhylogenyCaliciviridae InfectionsSwine DiseasesBase SequenceGenetic heterogeneityvirus diseasesOutbreakGenetic VariationSapovirusGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyGastroenteritisNorovirusCaliciviridaeSequence Alignment
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Risk factors for Lyme disease : A scale-dependent effect of host species diversity and a consistent negative effect of host phylogenetic diversity

2021

Biodiversity can influence disease risk. One example of a diversity-disease relationship is the dilution effect, which suggests higher host species diversity (often indexed by species richness) reduces disease risk. While numerous studies support the dilution effect, its generality remains controversial. Most studies of diversity-disease relationships have overlooked the potential importance of phylogenetic diversity. Furthermore, most studies have tested diversity-disease relationships at one spatial scale, even though such relationships are likely scale dependent. Using Lyme disease as a model system, we investigated the effects of host species richness and phylogenetic relatedness on the…

Dilution effecthabitaattizoonoositisäntälajitMicrobiologyRisk Factorsdilution effectLymen borrelioosiClimatic variablesHumansLyme diseaseHost species richnesshost species richnessPhylogeny1172 Environmental sciencesHost phylogenetic diversityhost phylogenetic diversityfylogenetiikkailmastonmuutoksetluonnon monimuotoisuusbiodiversiteettiInfectious Diseasesclimatic variablesborrelioosiInsect Science1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyParasitologyHabitat fragmentationhabitat fragmentationpirstoutuminen
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An extension of the Burrows-Wheeler Transform and applications to sequence comparison and data compression

2005

We introduce a generalization of the Burrows-Wheeler Transform (BWT) that can be applied to a multiset of words. The extended transformation, denoted by E, is reversible, but, differently from BWT, it is also surjective. The E transformation allows to give a definition of distance between two sequences, that we apply here to the problem of the whole mitochondrial genome phylogeny. Moreover we give some consideration about compressing a set of words by using the E transformation as preprocessing.

Discrete mathematicsMultisetBurrows-Wheeler transform; Data Compression; Mitochondrial genome phylogenyBurrows–Wheeler transformMultiplicity (mathematics)Mitochondrial genome phylogenyBurrows-Wheeler transformData CompressionSurjective functionConjugacy classSequence comparisonPreprocessorAlgorithmMathematicsData compression
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Sequencing, De Novo Assembly and Annotation of the Colorado Potato Beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata, Transcriptome

2012

Background. The Colorado potato beetle (Leptinotarsa decemlineata) is a major pest and a serious threat to potato cultivation throughout the northern hemisphere. Despite its high importance for invasion biology, phenology and pest management, little is known about L. decemlineata from a genomic perspective. We subjected European L. decemlineata adult and larval transcriptome samples to 454-FLX massively-parallel DNA sequencing to characterize a basal set of genes from this species. We created a combined assembly of the adult and larval datasets including the publicly available midgut larval Roche 454 reads and provided basic annotation. We were particularly interested in diapause-specific g…

Drug ResistanceGene Identification and AnalysisSequence assemblylcsh:MedicineGenes InsectDiapause InsectTranscriptomesTranscriptomeGenome Sequencinglcsh:ScienceLeptinotarsaPhylogenyvieraslajiGeneticsMultidisciplinarybiologytulokaslajitHigh-Throughput Nucleotide SequencingAgricultureGenomicsta4111ColeopteraLarvaInsect ProteinsSequence AnalysisResearch ArticlePesticide resistanceSequence analysisdiapaussiPolymorphism Single NucleotideDNA sequencingMolecular GeneticsGenome Analysis ToolsAnimalsPesticidesBiologySerpinsta1184Colorado potato beetlefungilcsh:RkoloradonkuoriainenComputational BiologyBayes TheoremMolecular Sequence AnnotationSequence Analysis DNA15. Life on landbiology.organism_classificationActinsdiapauseMicroRNAsGene OntologyPyrosequencingta1181lcsh:QPest ControltranskriptomiIntroduced SpeciesTranscriptomeZoologyEntomologyPLOS ONE
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Early entry events in Echovirus 30 infection

2020

Echovirus 30 (E30), a member of the enterovirus B species, is a major cause of viral meningitis, targeting children and adults alike. While it is a frequently isolated enterovirus and the cause of several outbreaks all over the world, surprisingly little is known regarding its entry and replication strategy within cells. In this study, we used E30 strain Bastianni (E30B) generated from an infectious cDNA clone in order to study early entry events during infection in human RD cells. E30B required the newly discovered Fc echovirus receptor (FcRn) for successful infection, but not the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CAR) or decay-accelerating factor (DAF), although an interaction with …

EchovirusvirusesReceptors FcVirus Replicationmedicine.disease_causeDisease OutbreaksPhylogenyEnterovirus0303 health sciencesbiologyenterovirusechovirusEnterovirus B HumanVirus-Cell InteractionsenteroviruksetCapsidaivokalvotulehdusRNA ViralECHO-viruksetEndosomeImmunologyEchovirus InfectionsCHO CellsCoxsackievirusMicrobiologyClathrininfektiotVirusCell Line03 medical and health sciencesCricetulusVirologyEnterovirus InfectionsViral meningitismedicineAnimalsHumans030304 developmental biologyearly entry030306 microbiologySequence Analysis DNAVirus Internalizationmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyaseptic meningitisA549 CellsInsect Sciencebiology.proteinEnterovirus
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Niche filling slows the diversification of Himalayan songbirds.

2013

In Himalayan songbirds, the speciation rate is ultimately set by ecological competition, rather than by the rate of acquisition of reproductive isolation. The beginnings of adaptive radiation and speciation have been widely studied — in Darwin's finches, sticklebacks and cichlid fish, for example — but relatively little is known about what happens next. Specifically, what is the rate-limiting step for the establishment of new species? This seven-year study of the 358 songbird species found on the Himalayan slopes suggests that it is the rates at which new niches are created and occupied that limits diversification, not the rate at which new species form through reproductive isolation. Speci…

Ecological nicheChinaMultidisciplinaryEcologyRange (biology)Genetic Speciationmedia_common.quotation_subjectAltitudeReproductionIndiaReproductive isolationBiologyTibetCompetition (biology)Ecological speciationSongbirdsAdaptive radiationGenetic algorithmCharacter displacementAnimalsBody SizeEcosystemPhylogenymedia_commonNature
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Multi-Locus Phylogenetic Analyses of the Almadablennius Clade Reveals Inconsistencies with the Present Taxonomy of Blenniid Fishes

2022

We used a multi-locus phylogenetic approach (i.e., combining both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA fragments) to address some long-standing taxonomic inconsistencies within the diverse fish clade of Combtooth Blennies (Blenniidae—unranked clade Almadablennius). The obtained phylogenetic trees revealed some major inconsistencies in the current taxonomy of Parablennini, such as the paraphyletic status of the Salaria and Parablennius genera, casting some doubt regarding their actual phylogenetic relationship. Furthermore, a scarce-to-absent genetic differentiation was observed among the three species belonging to the genus Chasmodes. This study provides an updated taxonomy and phylogeny of the fo…

Ecology<i>Parablennius</i>SalariaQH301-705.5Ecological Modeling<i>Salaria</i>Settore BIO/05 - ZoologiaParablenniusBiology (General)Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)BlenniidaePhylogenyNature and Landscape Conservation
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Testing alternative vicariance scenarios in Western Mediterranean discoglossid frogs

2004

Dated molecular phylogenies are often used to interpret evolutionary history with respect to paleogeographic events. Where more than one interpretation is possible, it is desirable but difficult to assess the alternatives in an objective manner. The present work demonstrates a formalized method for testing molecular clock calibrations and biogeographic scenarios based on them. We assessed the plausibility of several previously published biogeographic hypotheses, using the frog genera Alytes, Discoglossus, and Bombina as model groups. Our data set comprised ca. 900bp of partial mitochondrial 16S and 12S rRNA gene sequences (both genes evolved in a clock-like manner across genera) from nearly…

EcologyMediterranean RegionMolecular Sequence DataSubspeciesBiologybiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionModels BiologicalEvolution MolecularTaxonPhylogeneticsRNA RibosomalRNA Ribosomal 16SGeneticsVicarianceDiscoglossusAnimalsBombinatoridaeAnuraMolecular clockMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyStatistical hypothesis testingMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
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