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Τρίτη 18 Αυγούστου 2020

 

Adaptation is influenced by the complexity of environmental change during evolution in a dynamic environment [NEW RESULTS]
The environmental conditions of microorganisms' habitats may fluctuate in unpredictable ways, such as changes in temperature, carbon source, pH, and salinity to name a few. Environmental heterogeneity presents a challenge to microorganisms, as they have to adapt not only to be fit under a specific condition, but they must also be robust across many conditions and be able to deal with the switch between conditions itself. While experimental evolution has been used to gain insight into the adaptive...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Tue Aug 18, 2020 03:00
Trophic shift and the origin of birds [NEW RESULTS]
Birds are characterized by evolutionary specializations of both locomotion (e.g., flapping flight) and digestive system (toothless, crop, and gizzard), while the potential selection pressures responsible for these evolutionary specializations remain unclear. Here we used a recently developed molecular phyloecological method to reconstruct the diets of the ancestral archosaur and of the common ancestor of living birds (CALB). Our results showed that the ancestral archosaur exhibited a predominant...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Tue Aug 18, 2020 03:00
Ascorbate peroxidase neofunctionalization at the origin of APx-R and APx-L: evidences from basal Archaeplastida [NEW RESULTS]
Ascorbate peroxidases (APx) are class I members of the non-animal peroxidases superfamily, a large group of evolutionarily related enzymes. Through mining in public databases, our group has previously identified two unusual subsets of APx homologs, disclosing the existence of two uncharacterized families of class I peroxidases, which were named ascorbate peroxidase-related (APx-R) and ascorbate peroxidase-like (APx-L). As APx, APx-R proteins possess all catalytic residues required for peroxidase...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Tue Aug 18, 2020 03:00
Museomics of a rare taxon: placing Whalleyanidae in the Lepidoptera Tree of Life [NEW RESULTS]
Museomics is a valuable tool that utilises the diverse biobanks that are natural history museums. The ability to sequence genomes from old specimens has expanded not only the variety of interesting taxa available to study but also the scope of questions that can be investigated in order to further knowledge about biodiversity. Here we present whole genome sequencing results from the enigmatic genus Whalleyana, as well as the families Callidulidae and Hyblaeidae. Library preparation was carried out...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Tue Aug 18, 2020 03:00
Invasive freshwater snails form novel microbial relationships [NEW RESULTS]
Resident microbes (microbiota) can shape host organismal function and adaptation in the face of environmental change. Invasion of new habitats exposes hosts to novel selection pressures, but little is known about the impact of invasion on microbiota and the host-microbiome relationship after this transition (e.g., how rapidly symbioses are formed, whether microbes influence invasion success). We used high-throughput 16S rRNA sequencing of New Zealand (native) and European (invasive) populations of...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Tue Aug 18, 2020 03:00
Vector and cell-culture passaging of dengue clinical samples for virus isolation and amplification does not significantly change genome consensus or frequencies of intra-host viral variants [NEW RESULTS]
Intra-host single nucleotide variants (iSNVs) have been increasingly used in genomic epidemiology to increase phylogenetic resolution and reconstruct fine-scale outbreak dynamics. These analyses are preferably done on sequence data from direct clinical samples, but in many cases due to low viral loads, there might not be enough genetic material for deep sequencing and iSNV determination. Isolation of the virus from clinical samples with low passage number increases viral load, but to date, no studies...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Tue Aug 18, 2020 03:00
A highly diverged ancient interface plays a key role in the origin and evolution of Methionine AdenosylTransferase superfamily [NEW RESULTS]
Methionine adenosyltransferase (MAT), which catalyzes the biosynthesis of S-adenosylmethionine from L-methionine and ATP, is an ancient, highly conserved enzyme present in all three domains of life. Although the MAT enzymes of each domain are believed to share a common ancestor, the sequences of archaeal MATs show a high degree of divergence from the sequences of bacterial and eukaryotic MATs. However, the structural and functional consequences of this sequence divergence are not well understood....
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Tue Aug 18, 2020 03:00
Quantifying Evolutionary Importance of Protein Sites: A Tale of Two Measures [NEW RESULTS]
A key challenge in evolutionary biology is the accurate quantification of selective pressure on proteins and other biological macromolecules at single-site resolution. The evolutionary importance of a protein site under purifying selection is typically measured by the degree of conservation of the protein site itself. A possible alternative measure is the strength of the site-induced conservation gradient in the rest of the protein structure. However, the quantitative relationship between these two...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Mon Aug 17, 2020 03:00
Spotting genome-wide pigmentation variation in a brown trout admixture context [NEW RESULTS]
Colour and pigmentation variation attracted fish biologists for a while, but high-throughput genomic studies investigating the molecular basis of body pigmentation remain still limited to few species and associated conservation biology issues ignored. Using 75,684 SNPs, we explored the genomic basis of pigmentation pattern variation among individuals of the Atlantic and Mediterranean clades of the brown trout (Salmo trutta), a polytypic species in which Atlantic hatchery individuals are commonly...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Mon Aug 17, 2020 03:00
P-elements strengthen reproductive isolation within the Drosophila simulans species complex [NEW RESULTS]
Determining mechanisms that underlie reproductive isolation is key to understanding how species boundaries are maintained in nature. Transposable elements (TEs) are ubiquitous across eukaryotic genomes. However, the role of TEs in modulating the strength of reproductive isolation between species is poorly understood. Several species of Drosophila have been found to harbor P-elements (PEs), yet only D. simulans is known to be polymorphic for their presence in wild populations. PEs can cause reproductive...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Mon Aug 17, 2020 03:00
Adaptive evolution of nontransitive fitness in yeast [NEW RESULTS]
Nontransitivity, commonly illustrated by the rock-paper-scissors game, is well documented among extant species as a contributor to biodiversity. However, it is unclear if nontransitive interactions also arise by way of genealogical succession, and if so, through what mechanisms. Here we identify a nontransitive evolutionary sequence in the context of yeast experimental evolution in which a 1,000-generation evolved clone outcompetes a recent ancestor but loses in direct competition with a distant...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Mon Aug 17, 2020 03:00

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