Publications by authors named "Maria Martin-Pecina"

Background: The full catalog of satellite DNA (satDNA) within a same genome constitutes the satellitome. The Library Hypothesis predicts that satDNA in relative species reflects that in their common ancestor, but the evolutionary mechanisms and pathways of satDNA evolution have never been analyzed for full satellitomes. We compare here the satellitomes of two Oedipodine grasshoppers (Locusta migratoria and Oedaleus decorus) which shared their most recent common ancestor about 22.

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Article Synopsis
  • Eukaryote genomes often contain extra B chromosomes alongside the standard A chromosomes, thought to arise from genome changes, but their evolutionary significance across species is largely unexplored.
  • Research reveals that large B chromosomes in Astyanax fish originated from a common ancestor over 4 million years ago, with shared genes across different species suggesting a conserved genetic basis.
  • The study found that the B chromosome's nobox gene, crucial for egg development, is highly overexpressed in B-carrying females, potentially altering inheritance patterns and demonstrating the resilience of B chromosomes even during species divergence.
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Parasitism evokes adaptive physiological changes in the host, many of which take place through gene expression changes. This response can be more or less local, depending on the organ or tissue affected by the parasite, or else systemic when the parasite affects the entire host body. The most extreme of the latter cases is intragenomic parasitism, where the parasite is present in all host nuclei as any other genomic element.

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Most supernumerary (B) chromosomes are parasitic elements carrying out an evolutionary arms race with the standard (A) chromosomes. A variety of weapons for attack and defense have evolved in both contending elements, the most conspicuous being B chromosome drive and A chromosome drive suppression. Here, we show for the first time that most microspermatids formed during spermiogenesis in two grasshopper species contain expulsed B chromosomes.

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