Publications by authors named "Fabre P"

Skeletal muscles are predominantly composed of long, multinucleated muscle fibers, classified according to their metabolic and contractile phenotype. The determination of fiber types is influenced by various factors (e.g.

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The length of the snout in mammals has important evolutionary consequences for the functional systems housed within the rostrum. However, whether increased snout lengths lead to expanded olfactory performance has rarely been examined. Here, we investigate inner rostral function among 10 species of myrmecophagous (ant- and/or termite-eating) placental mammals and 10 closely related species.

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Turbinals are key bony elements of the mammalian nasal cavity, involved in heat and moisture conservation as well as olfaction. While turbinals are well known in some groups, their diversity is poorly understood at the scale of placental mammals, which span 21 orders. Here, we investigated the turbinal bones and associated lamellae for one representative of each extant order of placental mammals.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Recent studies have questioned old ideas about turbinals, but there's still a lot we don't know about them, especially in non-mammal animals.
  • * This research brings together information from different studies to better understand turbinals and starts new ideas for future research on them.
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Impaired skeletal muscle stem cell (MuSC) function has long been suspected to contribute to the pathogenesis of muscular dystrophy (MD). Here, we showed that defects in the endothelial cell (EC) compartment of the vascular stem cell niche in mouse models of Duchenne MD, laminin α2-related MD, and collagen VI-related myopathy were associated with inefficient mobilization of MuSCs after tissue damage. Using chemoinformatic analysis, we identified the 13-amino acid form of the peptide hormone apelin (AP-13) as a candidate for systemic stimulation of skeletal muscle ECs.

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Anomaluromorpha is a particularly puzzling suborder of Rodentia. Endemic to Africa, this clade includes the extant genera Idiurus, Anomalurus, Zenkerella, and Pedetes. These rodents present an hystricomorphous condition of the skull, characterized by a large infraorbital foramen, which evolved independently within the mouse-related clade over a span of approximately 57 million years.

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Plastic pollution in the aquatic environment has been assessed for many years by ocean waste collection expeditions around the globe or by river sampling. While the total amount of plastic produced worldwide is well documented, the amount of plastic found in the ocean, the distribution of particles on its surface and its evolution over time are still the subject of much debate. In this article, we propose a general fragmentation model, postulating the existence of a critical size below which particle fragmentation becomes extremely unlikely.

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Olfactory receptor (OR) genes represent the largest multigenic family in mammalian genomes and encode proteins that bind environmental odorant molecules. The OR repertoire is extremely variable among species and is subject to many gene duplications and losses, which have been linked to ecological adaptations in mammals. Although they have been studied on a broad taxonomic scale (i.

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The evolution of endothermy in vertebrates is a major research topic in recent decades that has been tackled by a myriad of research disciplines including paleontology, anatomy, physiology, evolutionary and developmental biology. The ability of most mammals to maintain a relatively constant and high body temperature is considered a key adaptation, enabling them to successfully colonize new habitats and harsh environments. It has been proposed that in mammals the anterior nasal cavity, which houses the maxilloturbinal, plays a pivotal role in body temperature maintenance, via a bony system supporting an epithelium involved in heat and moisture conservation.

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Premise: The use of cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) is an effective and inexpensive method of extracting DNA from plants. The CTAB protocol is frequently modified to optimize DNA extractions, but experimental approaches rarely perturb a single variable at a time to systematically infer their effect on DNA quantity and quality.

Methods And Results: We investigated how chemical additives, incubation temperature, and lysis duration affected DNA quantity and quality.

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Cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB)-based methods are widely used to isolate DNA from plant tissues, but the unique chemical composition of secondary metabolites among plant species has necessitated optimization. Research articles often cite a "modified" CTAB protocol without explicitly stating how the protocol had been altered, creating non-reproducible studies. Furthermore, the various modifications that have been applied to the CTAB protocol have not been rigorously reviewed and doing so could reveal optimization strategies across study systems.

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Linking genes to phenotypes has been a major question in evolutionary biology for the last decades. In the genomic era, few studies attempted to link olfactory-related genes to different anatomical proxies. However, they found very inconsistent results.

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This opinion paper offers a scientific view on the current debate of the place of biodegradable plastics as part of the solution to deal with the growing plastic pollution in the world's soil, aquatic, and marine compartments. Based on the current scientific literature, we focus on the current limits to prove plastic biodegradability and to assess the toxicity of commercially used biobased and biodegradable plastics in natural environments. We also discuss the relevance of biodegradable plastics for selected applications with respect to their use and end of life.

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The origins and evolution of the outstanding Neotropical biodiversity are a matter of intense debate. A comprehensive understanding is hindered by the lack of deep-time comparative data across wide phylogenetic and ecological contexts. Here, we quantify the prevailing diversification trajectories and drivers of Neotropical diversification in a sample of 150 phylogenies (12,512 species) of seed plants and tetrapods, and assess their variation across Neotropical regions and taxa.

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Sahul unites the world's largest and highest tropical island and the oldest and most arid continent on the backdrop of dynamic environmental conditions. Massive geological uplift in New Guinea is predicted to have acted as a species pump from the late Miocene onward, but the impact of this process on biogeography and diversification remains untested across Sahul as a whole. To address this, we reconstruct the assembly of a recent and diverse radiation of rodents (Murinae: Hydromyini) spanning New Guinea, Australia, and oceanic islands.

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Fate decisions in the embryo are controlled by a plethora of microenvironmental interactions in a three-dimensional niche. To investigate whether aspects of this microenvironmental complexity can be engineered to direct myogenic human-induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) differentiation, we here screened murine cell types present in the developmental or adult stem cell niche in heterotypic suspension embryoids. We identified embryonic endothelial cells and fibroblasts as highly permissive for myogenic specification of hiPSCs.

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Muscular dystrophies are caused by genetic variants in genes encoding for proteins important for muscle structure or function, leading to a loss of muscle integrity and muscle wasting. To this day, no cure has been found for these diseases. Different therapeutic approaches are under intensive investigation.

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Skeletal muscle possesses a remarkable regenerative capacity that relies on the activity of muscle stem cells, also known as satellite cells. The presence of non-myogenic cells also plays a key role in the coordination of skeletal muscle regeneration. Particularly, fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) emerged as master regulators of muscle stem cell function and skeletal muscle regeneration.

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Article Synopsis
  • The developing vertebrate eye cup consists of three main parts: the neural retina (NR), retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE), and ciliary margin (CM).
  • Single-cell analysis indicates that fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling is crucial for maintaining the stem cell-like properties of the CM, while Wnt signaling plays a pivotal role in differentiating the NR into CM or RPE based on FGF levels.
  • The research highlights that the relationship between FGF and Wnt signaling is essential for the transition from NR to CM during eye development, revealing a complex regulatory system that influences retinal formation.
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Intercontinental disjunct distributions can arise from vicariance, long distance dispersal, or both. Tecomeae (Bignoniaceae) are a nearly cosmopolitan clade of flowering plants providing us with an excellent opportunity to investigate global distribution patterns. While the tribe contains only about 57 species, it has achieved a distribution that is not only pantropical, but also extends into the temperate zones in both the Northern and Southern hemispheres.

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Article Synopsis
  • Lack of dystrophin in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) leads to muscle degeneration, worsened by inflammation and weak muscle stem cell regeneration, with glucocorticoids being the current main treatment despite their side effects.
  • Research on Resolvin-D2 shows it can reduce inflammation and promote muscle cell growth by encouraging macrophages to shift to an anti-inflammatory state and enhancing muscle cell differentiation.
  • In mouse models, Resolvin-D2 demonstrates better muscle function improvement than glucocorticoids, making it a promising new treatment option for DMD.
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Biotic interactions between Africa and Eurasia across the Levant have invoked particular attention among scientists aiming to unravel early human dispersals. However, it remains unclear whether behavioral capacities enabled early modern humans to surpass the Saharo-Arabian deserts or if climatic changes triggered punctuated dispersals out of Africa. Here, we report an unusual subfossil assemblage discovered in a Judean Desert's cliff cave near the Dead Sea and dated to between ∼42,000 and at least 103,000 y ago.

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Article Synopsis
  • Zootaxa emerged as a key publication for taxonomy, gaining prominence in the field of mammalogy over its 20-year history, particularly noted for its contribution of 76 new mammalian species.
  • Despite expectations for its impact to be limited given the existing specialized journals, Zootaxa has become the second most prolific journal for new species descriptions, following the Journal of Mammalogy.
  • The journal utilizes an integrative taxonomic approach, has a broad geographic representation in its publications, and is positioned to address a growing demand for taxonomic research without publication fees, while facing challenges in future engagement and research variety.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluates how the characteristics of plastics (size, shape, chemical composition) and environmental events (like phytoplankton blooms) influence the microbial community, or "plastisphere," on plastics in oceans.
  • Results showed that while plastic size and shape didn't significantly affect the overall abundance or diversity of bacteria, they did influence bacterial activity, with smaller plastics (100 μm) hosting the most active communities.
  • The appearance of a diatom bloom profoundly altered the diversity and activity within the plastisphere, indicating that environmental factors are more impactful than the physical attributes of the plastics themselves.
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