Publications by authors named "Gregorio Linchangco"

Article Synopsis
  • * We found 17 genetic loci associated with sleep duration impacting lipid levels, with 10 of them being newly identified and linked to sleep-related disturbances in lipid metabolism.
  • * The research points to potential drug targets that could lead to new treatments for lipid-related issues in individuals with sleep problems, highlighting the connection between sleep patterns and cardiovascular health.
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Obesity is a heritable disease, characterised by excess adiposity that is measured by body mass index (BMI). While over 1,000 genetic loci are associated with BMI, less is known about the genetic contribution to adiposity trajectories over adulthood. We derive adiposity-change phenotypes from 24.

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  • HIV consensus sequences play a crucial role in bioinformatics, evolutionary studies, and vaccine research, with a significant update from the previous sequences constructed in 2002.
  • Researchers reconstructed 90 new consensus sequences from a large dataset of 3,470 high-quality HIV-1 genomes, representing 89 countries, revealing changes in genetic material over time.
  • The 2021 consensus sequences, which are generally shorter and more representative of worldwide HIV-1 genetic diversity, highlight uneven geographical distribution and the impact of epidemiological dynamics on subtype sampling.
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Multi-locus phylogenetic studies of echinoderms based on Sanger and RNA-seq technologies and the fossil record have provided evidence for the Asterozoa-Echinozoa hypothesis. This hypothesis posits a sister relationship between asterozoan classes (Asteroidea and Ophiuroidea) and a similar relationship between echinozoan classes (Echinoidea and Holothuroidea). Despite this consensus around Asterozoa-Echinozoa, phylogenetic relationships within the class Asteroidea (sea stars or starfish) have been controversial for over a century.

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Zika virus was previously considered to cause only a benign infection in humans. Studies of recent outbreaks of Zika virus in the Pacific, South America, Mexico and the Caribbean have associated the virus with severe neuropathology. Viral evolution may be one factor contributing to an apparent change in Zika disease as it spread from Southeast Asia across the Pacific to the Americas.

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  • TIMPs (tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases) regulate the extracellular matrix (ECM) mainly by inhibiting matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), playing a significant role in mutable collagenous tissue (MCT) in echinoderms and in cancer research for humans.
  • To explore TIMP evolution, researchers analyzed 405 TIMPs from a dataset of echinoderm specimens, comparing them with sequences from protostomes and chordates through phylogenetic analyses.
  • Results showed that TIMPs diversified from a single ancestral chordate copy in vertebrates, with echinoderms having more TIMPs to support their unique needs, indicating that ECM regulation remains the main function of TIMP genes despite their
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Background: One of our goals for the echinoderm tree of life project (http://echinotol.org) is to identify orthologs suitable for phylogenetic analysis from next-generation transcriptome data. The current dataset is the largest assembled for echinoderm phylogeny and transcriptomics.

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Background: Recent genomic information has revealed that neuroglobin and cytoglobin are the two principal lineages of vertebrate hemoglobins, with the latter encompassing the familiar myoglobin and α-globin/β-globin tetramer hemoglobin, and several minor groups. In contrast, very little is known about hemoglobins in echinoderms, a phylum of exclusively marine organisms closely related to vertebrates, beyond the presence of coelomic hemoglobins in sea cucumbers and brittle stars. We identified about 50 hemoglobins in sea urchin, starfish and sea cucumber genomes and transcriptomes, and used Bayesian inference to carry out a molecular phylogenetic analysis of their relationship to vertebrate sequences, specifically, to assess the hypothesis that the neuroglobin and cytoglobin lineages are also present in echinoderms.

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It has been proposed that supertree approaches should be applied to large multilocus datasets to achieve computational tractability. Large datasets such as those derived from phylogenomics studies can be broken into many locus-specific tree searches and the resulting trees can be stitched together via a supertree method. Using simulated data, workers have reported that they can rapidly construct a supertree that is comparable to the results of heuristic tree search on the entire dataset.

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