104 results match your criteria: "Center for Molecular Biodiversity Research[Affiliation]"
BMC Evol Biol
November 2018
Center for Northeast Asian Studies, Tohoku University, 41 Kawauchi, Aoba-ku, Sendai, Miyagi, 980-0845, Japan.
Background: Islands have traditionally been the centre of evolutionary biological research, but the dynamics of immigration and differentiation at continental islands have not been well studied. Therefore, we focused on the Japanese archipelago, the continental islands located at the eastern end of the Eurasian continent. While the Japanese archipelago is characterised by high biodiversity and rich freshwater habitats, the origin and formation mechanisms of its freshwater organisms are not clear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Phylogenet Evol
November 2018
Department of Entomology & Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, 3114 Gardner Hall, Raleigh, NC 27695-7613, USA.
The onset of phylogenomics has contributed to the resolution of numerous challenging evolutionary questions while offering new perspectives regarding biodiversity. However, in some instances, analyses of large genomic datasets can also result in conflicting estimates of phylogeny. Here, we present the first phylogenomic scale study of a dipteran parasitoid family, built upon anchored hybrid enrichment and transcriptomic data of 240 loci of 43 ingroup acrocerid taxa.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
June 2018
Department of Integrative Zoology, University of Vienna, Althanstraβe 14, 1090, Vienna, Austria.
In the scorpionfly Panorpa, a recent study suggested monochromatic vision due to evidence of only a single opsin found in transcriptome data. To reconsider this hypothesis, the present study investigates opsin expression using transcriptome data of 21 species including representatives of all major lineages of scorpionflies (Mecoptera) and of three families of their closest relatives, the fleas (Siphonaptera). In most mecopteran species investigated, transcripts encode two opsins with predicted peak absorbances in the green, two in the blue, and one in the ultraviolet spectral region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Rev Camb Philos Soc
November 2018
Center for Molecular Biodiversity Research (zmb), Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig, Adenauerallee 160, Bonn, 53113, Germany.
Mutualistic symbioses are common throughout the animal kingdom. Rather unusual is a form of symbiosis, photosymbiosis, where animals are symbiotic with photoautotrophic organisms. Photosymbiosis is found among sponges, cnidarians, flatworms, molluscs, ascidians and even some amphibians.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Evol Biol
May 2018
Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, Invalidenstraße 43, 10115, Berlin, Germany.
Background: Apoid wasps and bees (Apoidea) are an ecologically and morphologically diverse group of Hymenoptera, with some species of bees having evolved eusocial societies. Major problems for our understanding of the evolutionary history of Apoidea have been the difficulty to trace the phylogenetic origin and to reliably estimate the geological age of bees. To address these issues, we compiled a comprehensive phylogenomic dataset by simultaneously analyzing target DNA enrichment and transcriptomic sequence data, comprising 195 single-copy protein-coding genes and covering all major lineages of apoid wasps and bee families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol Evol
April 2018
Center for Molecular Biodiversity Research, Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig, Bonn, Germany.
It has been experimentally shown that DNA methylation is involved in the regulation of gene expression and the silencing of transposable element activity in eukaryotes. The variable levels of DNA methylation among different insect species indicate an evolutionarily flexible role of DNA methylation in insects, which due to a lack of comparative data is not yet well-substantiated. Here, we use computational methods to trace signatures of DNA methylation across insects by analyzing transcriptomic and genomic sequence data from all currently recognized insect orders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Hered
March 2018
Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, Kyoto University, Yoshida Nihonmatsu, Sakyo, Kyoto, Japan.
Hybridizations on a secondary contact zone between 2 diverged lineages can have various evolutionary consequences, including the genetic replacement of one lineage by another. We detected such a case between 2 lineages (the Central and Western lineages) of the Japanese fire-bellied newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster in the Chugoku district of western Japan. We genotyped 269 individuals from 30 localities using the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene and 11 microsatellite loci.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Appl Acarol
March 2018
Matsuyama Shinonome Junior College, Kuwabara, Matsuyama, Ehime, 790-8531, Japan.
The red mite Balaustium murorum (Hermann) inhabits the Western Palaearctic realm and is well adapted to man-made structures. In Japan, B. murorum had been reported more frequently after the 1980s.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsect Biochem Mol Biol
March 2018
Department of Entomology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, 61801, IL, USA. Electronic address:
Brochosomes (BS) are secretory granules resembling buckyballs, produced intracellularly in specialized glandular segments of the Malpighian tubules and forming superhydrophobic coatings on the integuments of leafhoppers (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae). Their composition is poorly known. Using a combination of SDS-PAGE, LC-MS/MS, next-generation sequencing (RNAseq) and bioinformatics we demonstrate that the major structural component of BS of the leafhopper Graphocephala fennahi Young is a novel family of 21-40-kDa secretory proteins, referred to herein as brochosomins (BSM), apparently cross-linked by disulfide bonds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Evol Biol
December 2017
Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Food Nutrition and Human Health, China Agricultural University, Beijing, 100193, China.
Background: The primary energy-producing pathway in eukaryotic cells, the oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) system, comprises proteins encoded by both mitochondrial and nuclear genes. To maintain the function of the OXPHOS system, the pattern of substitutions in mitochondrial and nuclear genes may not be completely independent. It has been suggested that slightly deleterious substitutions in mitochondrial genes are compensated by substitutions in the interacting nuclear genes due to positive selection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Phylogenet Evol
March 2018
Entomologie, Staatliches Museum für Naturkunde Stuttgart, 70191 Stuttgart, Germany. Electronic address:
Chalcidoidea are a megadiverse group of mostly parasitoid wasps of major ecological and economical importance that are omnipresent in almost all extant terrestrial habitats. The timing and pattern of chalcidoid diversification is so far poorly understood and has left many important questions on the evolutionary history of Chalcidoidea unanswered. In this study, we infer the early divergence events within Chalcidoidea and address the question of whether or not ancestral chalcidoids were small egg parasitoids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Genomics
October 2017
Landcare Research, Private Bag, Auckland, 92170, New Zealand.
Background: The New Zealand collembolan genus Holacanthella contains the largest species of springtails (Collembola) in the world. Using Illumina technology we have sequenced and assembled a draft genome and transcriptome from Holacanthella duospinosa (Salmon). We have used this annotated assembly to investigate the genetic basis of a range of traits critical to the evolution of the Hexapoda, the phylogenetic position of H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGigascience
October 2017
Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Food Nutrition and Human Health, China Agricultural University, 2 West Yuanmingyuan Rd., Haidian District, Beijing 100193, China.
The evolution of powered flight is a major innovation that has facilitated the success of insects. Previously, studies of birds, bats, and insects have detected molecular signatures of differing selection regimes in energy-related genes associated with flight evolution and/or loss. Here, using DNA sequences from more than 1000 nuclear and mitochondrial protein-coding genes obtained from insect transcriptomes, we conduct a broader exploration of which gene categories display positive and relaxed selection at the origin of flight as well as with multiple independent losses of flight.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
October 2017
Center for Molecular Biodiversity Research (ZMB), Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig Adenauerallee 160 Bonn, Germany.
Sacoglossan sea slugs are the only metazoans known to perform functional kleptoplasty, the sequestration and retention of functional chloroplasts within their digestive gland cells. Remarkably, a few species with this ability can survive starvation periods of 3-12 months likely due to their stolen chloroplasts. There are no reports of kleptoplast transfer from mother slug to either eggs or juveniles, demonstrating that each animal must independently acquire its kleptoplasts and develop the ability to maintain them within its digestive gland.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Phylogenet Evol
November 2017
Center for Molecular Biodiversity Research, Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig, Adenauerallee 160, 53113 Bonn, Germany; Department of Evolutionary Biology and Ecology, Institute for Biology I (Zoology), University of Freiburg, Hauptstraße 1, 79104 Freiburg, Germany. Electronic address:
The wasp family Vespidae comprises more than 5000 described species which represent life history strategies ranging from solitary and presocial to eusocial and socially parasitic. The phylogenetic relationships of the major vespid wasp lineages (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
April 2017
Center for Molecular Biodiversity Research, Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig, 53113 Bonn, Germany; Department of Evolutionary Biology and Ecology, Institute for Biology I (Zoology), University of Freiburg, 79104 Freiburg (Brsg.), Germany; School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA. Electronic address:
Mol Ecol
June 2017
Department of Ecological Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1085, 1081 HV, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Beta-lactam biosynthesis was thought to occur only in fungi and bacteria, but we recently reported the presence of isopenicillin N synthase in a soil-dwelling animal, Folsomia candida. However, it has remained unclear whether this gene is part of a larger beta-lactam biosynthesis pathway and how widespread the occurrence of penicillin biosynthesis is among animals. Here, we analysed the distribution of beta-lactam biosynthesis genes throughout the animal kingdom and identified a beta-lactam gene cluster in the genome of F.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Bioinformatics
February 2017
Center for Molecular Biodiversity Research, Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig, Adenauerallee 160, Bonn, 53113, Germany.
Genome Biol Evol
December 2016
Animal Ecology, Department of Ecological Sciences, VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Trait loss is a widespread phenomenon with pervasive consequences for a species’ evolutionary potential. The genetic changes underlying trait loss have only been clarified in a small number of cases. None of these studies can identify whether the loss of the trait under study was a result of neutral mutation accumulation or negative selection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZoolog Sci
February 2017
5 Department of Natural Sciences, Faculty of Education, University of the Ryukyus, 1 Senbaru, Nishihara, Okinawa 903-0213, Japan.
Chinese populations of the endangered Siberian salamander Ranodon sibiricus are reported to have diverged only about 120 years ago, and to have the lowest genetic diversity of any amphibian. However, these conclusions require verification, as the main range of the species is in Kazakhstan. Moreover, the generation time used for estimating divergence time has a weak ground.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol Evol
February 2017
Department of Genetic Medicine and Development, University of Geneva Medical School, Geneva, Switzerland.
Insects comprise the most diverse and successful animal group with over one million described species that are found in almost every terrestrial and limnic habitat, with many being used as important models in genetics, ecology, and evolutionary research. Genome sequencing projects have greatly expanded the sampling of species from many insect orders, but genomic resources for species of certain insect lineages have remained relatively limited to date. To address this paucity, we sequenced the genome of the banded demoiselle, Calopteryx splendens, a damselfly (Odonata: Zygoptera) belonging to Palaeoptera, the clade containing the first winged insects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFParasitol Int
June 2017
Center for Molecular Biodiversity Research, National Museum of Nature and Science, Tsukuba 305-0005, Japan.
Praobdellid leech species have been known to infest vertebrate mucous-membrane; some of them have been assumed to be invertebrate bloodsuckers. Praobdellid individuals were found feeding on the Japanese freshwater crab, Geothelphusa dehaani, at Mt. Tsukuba, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZootaxa
September 2016
Faculty of Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0810, Japan.; Email:
We describe three new species of brackish-water ostracods representing two genera in the ostracod tribe Thalassocypridini from mangrove forests in the Ryukyu Islands, subtropical southwestern Japan, and provide their barcoding sequences for the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) gene. Mangalocypria ryukyuensis sp. nov.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZootaxa
April 2016
Kitanagaike 1198-1, Nagano, Nagano, 381-0025 Japan; Email: unknown.
Based on field observations and rearing experiments in Nagano and Tochigi prefectures in central Honshu, Japan, host plants and life history of a leaf-rolling sawfly, Pamphilius ishikawai Shinohara, 1979, are recorded for the first time. The larva is a solitary leaf-roller on Astilbe. This is the first record of the Saxifragaceae as a host plant of the Pamphiliidae.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Evol
July 2016
Center for Molecular Biodiversity Research, Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig, Bonn, Germany
Target DNA enrichment combined with high-throughput sequencing technologies is a powerful approach to probing a large number of loci in genomes of interest. However, software algorithms that explicitly consider nucleotide sequence information of target loci in multiple reference species for optimizing design of target enrichment baits to be applicable across a wide range of species have not been developed. Here we present an algorithm that infers target DNA enrichment baits from multiple nucleotide sequence alignments.
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