Publications by authors named "J Tomkins"

Human DNA licensing initiates replication fork assembly and DNA replication. This reaction promotes the loading of the hMCM2-7 complex on DNA, which represents the core of the replicative helicase that unwinds DNA during S-phase. Here, we report the reconstitution of human DNA licensing using purified proteins.

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Sperm competition is known to favor the evolution of male traits that confer an advantage in gaining fertilizations when females mate multiply. Ejaculate production can be costly and the strategic allocation of sperm in relation to the sperm competition environment is a taxonomically widespread phenomenon. However, variation among males in their ability to adjust ejaculate allocation has rarely been explored.

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Diethylene glycol dimethacrylate (DEG)-crosslinked polystyrene (PS) resin offers a promising alternative to traditional divinyl benzene (DVB)-PS resin for solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS), particularly for challenging sequences with hydrophobic or bulky amino acids. DEG-PS resin's reduced hydrophobicity and enhanced flexibility improve synthesis efficiency, yielding peptides up to 28 residues with higher purities and yields compared to DVB-PS. In various syntheses, DEG-PS outperformed DVB-PS resin, with higher purities and yields for challenging peptides such as ABC analogue (73.

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Article Synopsis
  • Anthropogenic environmental changes are threatening global species, with translocation causing unintentional hybridisation that can lead to declines, yet hybridisation also has the potential to boost the adaptability of vulnerable species.* -
  • A study on the hybridisation between two marine gastropods over 27 years used genetic markers and growth measurements, revealing no signs of outbreeding depression despite significant genetic differences between the species.* -
  • The research found initial benefits from hybridisation, indicated by heterosis, but the introduction of Bembicium vittatum alleles decreased over time, although a small percentage showed signs of adaptive introgression, suggesting hybridisation can be beneficial in conservation management.*
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Seasonal variation in birth rates is a ubiquitous property of human populations. Although the general birth rate is dependent on relatively few parameters-sexual behavior, zygote survival, and the number of ova released-the quantitative influence of the effects of each is difficult to estimate. Research has been directed more towards seasonal variation in physiology and less towards behavioral effects such as preferences for birthing in particular seasons.

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