Publications by authors named "M C Poiret"

Article Synopsis
  • Natal dispersal is a crucial stage in an animal's life, with female bonobos leaving their groups earlier than female chimpanzees despite both species showing female-biased dispersal patterns.
  • The study focused on understanding how sexual swelling, hormone levels, and behavior correlate with this early dispersal, measuring hormone levels and mating activity among 14 female bonobos in the wild.
  • Findings revealed that female bonobos experience early dispersal before establishing regular ovulation, possibly allowing them to adapt to new groups and delay reproduction-related costs until they’re more settled.
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Article Synopsis
  • - Adoption, while rare, is seen in many mammal species and can benefit both the adoptee's survival and the adoptive mother’s evolutionary fitness, especially in social animals like bonobos.
  • - Researchers documented two instances of wild bonobos adopting infants from different social groups, marking the first known cases of cross-group adoption among great apes.
  • - The adoptive mothers provided nurturing behaviors such as carrying and nursing without showing aggression toward the adoptee, indicating that traits like strong attraction to infants and tolerance towards unrelated young may drive these adoption behaviors in bonobos.
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High-density genetic maps were constructed for loci involved in nuclear male sterility (NMS1-locus) and sporophytic self-incompatibility (S-locus) in chicory (Cichorium intybus L.). The mapping population consisted of 389 F1' individuals derived from a cross between two plants, K28 (male-sterile) and K59 (pollen-fertile), both heterozygous at the S-locus.

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Several proteins that may regulate c-myc mRNA post-transcriptionally were previously isolated and characterized. Two of them, HuR and AUF1, bind specifically to the 3' untranslated region (UTR) of c-myc mRNA. Because c-myc is regulated post-transcriptionally in various mouse tissues, including quiescent tissues, fetal liver and regenerating liver, we investigated whether HuR and AUF1 expression was also regulated in these tissues.

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Rhizobium meliloti can interact symbiotically with Medicago plants, thereby inducing root nodules. However, certain Medicago plants can form nodules spontaneously, in the absence of rhizobia. A differential screening was performed using spontaneous nodule versus root cDNAs from Medicago sativa ssp.

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