Publications by authors named "Federica Di-Palma"

Article Synopsis
  • Cichlid fishes of the genus Oreochromis, or tilapia, are crucial for inland fisheries and aquaculture, but hybridization with non-native species threatens local biodiversity.
  • Researchers studied hybridization patterns in tilapia by analyzing the genomes of 575 individuals from 23 species in Tanzania, where both ancient and recent hybridization occurs.
  • Their findings reveal significant historical gene flow and the hybrid speciation of a specific species, highlighting concerns for conservation and the future of aquaculture practices.
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Bananas (Musa spp.) are an essential fruit worldwide and rank as the fourth most significant food crop for addressing malnutrition due to their rich nutrients and starch content. The potential of their genetic diversity remains untapped due to limited molecular breeding tools.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the genetic and brain features linked to vocal learning in mammals by comparing data from the Egyptian fruit bat and 215 other placental mammals.* -
  • Researchers found that certain proteins evolve more slowly in vocal learners and identified a specific brain region responsible for vocal motor control in the Egyptian fruit bat.* -
  • Using machine learning, they uncovered 50 regulatory elements that are associated with vocal learning, suggesting that losses in these elements played a role in the evolution of vocal learning in mammals.*
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Background: Bananas and plantains (Musa spp.) are among the most important crops worldwide. The cultivated varieties are vegetatively propagated, so their genetic diversity is essentially fixed over time.

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The Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) accounts for ∼9% of global freshwater finfish production however, extreme cold weather and decreasing freshwater resources has created the need to develop resilient strains. By determining the genetic bases of aquaculture relevant traits, we can genotype and breed desirable traits into farmed strains. We generated ATAC-seq and gene expression data from O.

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The European polecat (Mustela putorius) is a mammalian predator which occurs across much of Europe east to the Ural Mountains. In Great Britain, following years of persecution the range of the European polecat contracted and by the early 1900s was restricted to unmanaged forests of central Wales. The European polecat has recently undergone a population increase due to legal protection and its range now overlaps that of feral domestic ferrets (Mustela putorius furo).

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The divergence of regulatory regions and gene regulatory network (GRN) rewiring is a key driver of cichlid phenotypic diversity. However, the contribution of miRNA-binding site turnover has yet to be linked to GRN evolution across cichlids. Here, we extend our previous studies by analyzing the selective constraints driving evolution of miRNA and transcription factor (TF)-binding sites of target genes, to infer instances of cichlid GRN rewiring associated with regulatory binding site turnover.

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In adaptive radiations, single lineages rapidly diversify by adapting to many new niches. Little is known yet about the genomic mechanisms involved, that is, the source of genetic variation or genomic architecture facilitating or constraining adaptive radiation. Here, we investigate genomic changes associated with repeated invasion of many different freshwater niches by threespine stickleback in the Haida Gwaii archipelago, Canada, by resequencing single genomes from one marine and 28 freshwater populations.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Cichlid fish are vital for tilapia aquaculture and fisheries, but distinguishing between species is challenging due to morphological similarities and hybridization with non-native populations in Africa.
  • - A new genotyping panel using SNPs has been developed to accurately identify species and hybrids in tilapia, proving to be more effective than traditional methods like microsatellites and phenotype classification.
  • - Case studies reveal that introduced tilapia species are increasingly becoming established in the wild, posing risks to native species, highlighting the need for better broodstock management to conserve biodiversity.
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The 2016 Peace Agreement has increased access to Colombia's unique ecosystems, which remain understudied and increasingly under threat. The Colombian government has recently announced its National Bioeconomic Strategy (NBS), founded on the sustainable characterization, management, and conservation of the nation's biodiversity as a means to achieve sustainability and peace. Molecular tools will accelerate such endeavors, but capacity remains limited in Colombia.

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A global international initiative, such as the Earth BioGenome Project (EBP), requires both agreement and coordination on standards to ensure that the collective effort generates rapid progress toward its goals. To this end, the EBP initiated five technical standards committees comprising volunteer members from the global genomics scientific community: Sample Collection and Processing, Sequencing and Assembly, Annotation, Analysis, and IT and Informatics. The current versions of the resulting standards documents are available on the EBP website, with the recognition that opportunities, technologies, and challenges may improve or change in the future, requiring flexibility for the EBP to meet its goals.

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Article Synopsis
  • Life on Earth has evolved from simple beginnings to complex systems, with bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes contributing through metabolic and morphological innovations.
  • The Earth BioGenome Project aims to sequence the genomes of all 2 million named eukaryotic species to create a comprehensive digital library of life, enabling deeper understanding of evolution and biodiversity.
  • Sequencing all eukaryotic species will provide essential data to address key questions in phylogenetics, ecology, and conservation, while also enhancing knowledge in agriculture, bioindustry, and medicine.
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Article Synopsis
  • * Whole genome sequencing of Brown Swiss cattle revealed important candidate genes, particularly TLR2, which plays a role in recognizing these pathogens and has different single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) between breeds.
  • * The study shows that the SNP H326Q enhances the immune response to mycobacterial antigens in Brown Swiss cattle, suggesting that genetic differences in TLR2 impact susceptibility to infections among cattle breeds.
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Acute infection is known to induce rapid expansion of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), but the mechanisms supporting this expansion remain incomplete. Using mouse models, we show that inducible CD36 is required for free fatty acid uptake by HSCs during acute infection, allowing the metabolic transition from glycolysis towards β-oxidation. Mechanistically, high CD36 levels promote FFA uptake, which enables CPT1A to transport fatty acyl chains from the cytosol into the mitochondria.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how certain genetic traits reemerge in nature, specifically looking at stickleback fish transitioning from marine to freshwater habitats.
  • Researchers identified numerous genomic regions that consistently evolve during this colonization, demonstrating that these changes can occur rapidly due to existing genetic variations and connections between beneficial traits.
  • The findings not only show predictable patterns in sticklebacks but also suggest similar evolutionary mechanisms may apply to other species, like Darwin's finches, highlighting common features across different organisms.
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Article Synopsis
  • * The type of genome structure present in an organism is linked to the presence of condensin II, a protein complex involved in chromosome organization.
  • * Depleting condensin II in humans leads to a genome architecture similar to simpler organisms, suggesting a conserved mechanism from our common ancestor that impacts how genomes are structured during cell division.
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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists need good reference genomes to study biology, diseases, and protect wildlife, but there are only a few for non-microbial species.
  • The Genome 10K (G10K) group worked for five years to improve the way they create these high-quality genomes and gathered information from 16 different animal species.
  • Their work showed that special long-read technology improves genome quality, fixed errors in old genome sequences, and discovered new things about genes and chromosomes, leading to a new project to create complete genomes for about 70,000 vertebrate species.
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Coronaviruses silently circulate in human and animal populations, causing mild to severe diseases. Therefore, livestock are important components of a "One Health" perspective aimed to control these viral infections. However, at present there is no example that considers pig genetic resources in this context.

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Background: Seminal studies of vertebrate protein evolution speculated that gene regulatory changes can drive anatomical innovations. However, very little is known about gene regulatory network (GRN) evolution associated with phenotypic effect across ecologically diverse species. Here we use a novel approach for comparative GRN analysis in vertebrate species to study GRN evolution in representative species of the most striking examples of adaptive radiations, the East African cichlids.

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Toxic concentrations of aluminium cations and low phosphorus availability are the main yield-limiting factors in acidic soils, which represent half of the potentially available arable land. Brachiaria grasses, which are commonly sown as forage in the tropics because of their resilience and low demand for nutrients, show greater tolerance to high concentrations of aluminium cations (Al3+) than most other grass crops. In this work, we explored the natural variation in tolerance to Al3+ between high and low tolerant Brachiaria species and characterized their transcriptional differences during stress.

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Article Synopsis
  • Invasive Nile tilapia are hybridizing with native Korogwe tilapia in southern Tanzania, threatening unique genetic resources.
  • Research shows that southern Korogwe tilapia populations are genetically distinct from those in northern Tanzania, having diverged around 140,000 years ago.
  • Findings indicate the need for conservation efforts to protect these unique and vulnerable fish populations from hybridization and genetic dilution.
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Background: Natural and artificial directional selection in cosmopolitan and autochthonous pig breeds and wild boars have shaped their genomes and resulted in a reservoir of animal genetic diversity. Signatures of selection are the result of these selection events that have contributed to the adaptation of breeds to different environments and production systems. In this study, we analysed the genome variability of 19 European autochthonous pig breeds (Alentejana, Bísara, Majorcan Black, Basque, Gascon, Apulo-Calabrese, Casertana, Cinta Senese, Mora Romagnola, Nero Siciliano, Sarda, Krškopolje pig, Black Slavonian, Turopolje, Moravka, Swallow-Bellied Mangalitsa, Schwäbisch-Hällisches Schwein, Lithuanian indigenous wattle and Lithuanian White old type) from nine countries, three European commercial breeds (Italian Large White, Italian Landrace and Italian Duroc), and European wild boars, by mining whole-genome sequencing data obtained by using a DNA-pool sequencing approach.

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Background: East African lake cichlids are one of the most impressive examples of an adaptive radiation. Independently in Lake Victoria, Tanganyika, and Malawi, several hundreds of species arose within the last 10 million to 100,000 years. Whereas most analyses in cichlids focused on nucleotide substitutions across species to investigate the genetic bases of this explosive radiation, to date, no study has investigated the contribution of structural variants (SVs) in the evolution of adaptive traits across the three Great Lakes of East Africa.

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Background: Whilst much sequencing effort has focused on key mammalian model organisms such as mouse and human, little is known about the relationship between genome sequencing techniques for non-model mammals and genome assembly quality. This is especially relevant to non-model mammals, where the samples to be sequenced are often degraded and of low quality. A key aspect when planning a genome project is the choice of sequencing data to generate.

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