Publications by authors named "Z L P Simoes"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how the bean beetle, Zabrotes subfasciatus, adapts to new host plants through changes in gene expression, focusing on the early stages of this adaptation.
  • Researchers conducted a short-term selection experiment with populations that shifted from their usual host to Cicer arietinum, revealing significant differences in gene expression related to stimuli, signaling, and development.
  • The findings suggest that specific genes, such as those involved in histone methylation and reproductive functions, play a crucial role in the insect's adaptation process, laying the groundwork for further genomic studies on insect evolution.
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Honey bee () adult workers change behaviors and nutrition according to age progression. Young workers, such as nurses, perform in-hive tasks and consume protein-rich pollen, while older workers (foragers) leave the colony to search for food, and consume carbohydrate-rich nectar. These environmentally stimulated events involve transcriptional and DNA epigenetic marks alterations in worker tissues.

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Pollinator populations, including bees, are in rapid decline in many parts of the world, raising concerns over the future of ecosystems and food production. Among the factors involved in these declines, poor nutrition deserves attention. The diet consumed by adult worker honeybees (Apis mellifera) is crucial for their behavioral maturation, i.

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Background: Much of the complex anatomy of a holometabolous insect is built from disc-shaped epithelial structures found inside the larva, i.e., the imaginal discs, which undergo a rapid differentiation during metamorphosis.

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Background: Meiotic recombination is a fundamental genetic process that shuffles allele combinations and promotes accurate segregation of chromosomes. Analyses of the ubiquitous variation of recombination rates within and across species suggest that recombination is evolving adaptively. All studied insects with advanced eusociality have shown exceptionally high recombination rates, which may represent a prominent case of adaptive evolution of recombination.

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