903 results match your criteria: "Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity[Affiliation]"
Sci Rep
October 2022
Faculty of Biology and Chemistry, Department of Marine Ecology, University of Bremen, UFT Building, Leobener Str. 6, 28359, Bremen, Germany.
The resistance of hard corals to warming can be negatively affected by nitrate eutrophication, but related knowledge for soft corals is scarce. We thus investigated the ecophysiological response of the pulsating soft coral Xenia umbellata to different levels of nitrate eutrophication (control = 0.6, medium = 6, high = 37 μM nitrate) in a laboratory experiment, with additional warming (27.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell
September 2022
Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics, Berlin, Germany; Institute for Medical and Human Genetics, Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany; Medical Research Council Human Genetics Unit, Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK. Electronic address:
Regulatory landscapes drive complex developmental gene expression, but it remains unclear how their integrity is maintained when incorporating novel genes and functions during evolution. Here, we investigated how a placental mammal-specific gene, Zfp42, emerged in an ancient vertebrate topologically associated domain (TAD) without adopting or disrupting the conserved expression of its gene, Fat1. In ESCs, physical TAD partitioning separates Zfp42 and Fat1 with distinct local enhancers that drive their independent expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Math Biol
September 2022
Faculty of Mathematics, University of Vienna, Oskar-Morgenstern-Platz 1, 1090, Wien, Austria.
We present a unifying, tractable approach for studying the spread of viruses causing complex diseases requiring to be modeled using a large number of types (e.g., infective stage, clinical state, risk factor class).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Hist Sci
September 2022
Rainer Buschmann, California State University Channel Islands, Camarillo, USA.
The permanent preservation of objects in global custodianship is a captivating ideal that informs countless museums' corporate identities and governs collection guidelines as well as politics. Recent research has challenged the alleged perpetuity of collections and collected items, revealing their coherence as fragile and dependent on historically, politically and culturally specific conditions. Duplicates offer an instructive point of entry to explore the idea of collection permanence, museum politics, and the mobility of museum objects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
December 2023
Island Ecology and Evolution Research Group, Institute of Natural Products and Agrobiology (IPNA-CSIC), San Cristóbal de la Laguna, Spain.
Zootaxa
April 2022
Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig, Leibniz Institute for Animal Biodiversity, Adenauerallee 160, 53113 Bonn, Germany. .
The Oxynoemacheilus bergianus species group is revised based on tree topology (ML, NJ, MP), distance (K2P and ASAP) and Poisson tree process analyses of DNA barcode data tested against morphometric and morphological characters including colour patterns. The O. bergianus species group is distinguished from other Oxynoemacheilus groups based on morphological characters: its constituent species have a slender caudal peduncle, a suborbital flap in the male, a mottled or blotched colour pattern, and lack bold, black spots on the caudal-fin base.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZootaxa
May 2022
Museum fr Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
The Oxynoemacheilus angorae species group is revised and 10 species are recognised, two of which are described herein as new. Oxynoemacheilus anatolicus, O. angorae, O.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrob Biotechnol
November 2022
Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.
Directed evolution (DE) is a widely used method for improving the function of biomolecules via multiple rounds of mutation and selection. Microfluidic droplets have emerged as an important means to screen the large libraries needed for DE, but this approach was so far partially limited by the need to lyse cells, recover DNA, and retransform into cells for the next round, necessitating the use of a high-copy number plasmid or oversampling. The recently developed live cell recovery avoids some of these limitations by directly regrowing selected cells after sorting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZootaxa
July 2022
Museum fr Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, 10115 Berlin, Germany. .
Zootaxa
August 2022
Institut fr Integrierte Naturwissenschaften, Abteilung Biologie, AG Zoologie, Universitt Koblenz-Landau, Universittsstrae 1, 56070 Koblenz, Germany.
The geographically widespread species Afrixalus laevis (Anura: Hyperoliidae) currently has a disjunct distribution in western Central Africa (Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, and possibly adjacent countries) and the area in and near the Albertine Rift in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo and neighboring countries. At least two herpetologists have previously suggested that these disjunct populations represent distinct species, and herein, we utilize an integrative taxonomic approach with molecular and morphological data to reconcile the taxonomy of these spiny reed frogs. We sequenced 1554 base pairs of the 16S and RAG1 genes from 34 samples of A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZootaxa
August 2022
5Museum fr Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science, 10115 Berlin, Germany. .
The two species hypothesis for S. cephaloides and S. cii, both occurring in the southern Marmara Sea basin, is tested.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZootaxa
August 2022
Unit for Environmental Sciences and Management, North-West University, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
Cells
August 2022
Department of Biology and Evolution of Marine Organisms, Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn, 80121 Naples, Italy.
Molecular research on the evolution of extraocular photoreception has drawn attention to photosensitive animals lacking proper eye organs. Outside of vertebrates, little is known about this type of sensory system in any other deuterostome. In this study, we investigate such an extraocular photoreceptor cell (PRC) system in developmental stages of the sea urchin .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
September 2022
Department of Human Genetics, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2022
Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, 94720.
Field biology is an area of research that involves working directly with living organisms in situ through a practice known as "fieldwork." Conducting fieldwork often requires complex logistical planning within multiregional or multinational teams, interacting with local communities at field sites, and collaborative research led by one or a few of the core team members. However, existing power imbalances stemming from geopolitical history, discrimination, and professional position, among other factors, perpetuate inequities when conducting these research endeavors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
October 2022
Australian National Wildlife Collection, CSIRO National Research Collections Australia, Canberra, Australia.
Plumage divergence can function as a strong premating barrier when species come into secondary contact. When it fails to do so, the results are often genome homogenization and phenotypic hybrids at the zone of contact. This is not the case in the largely sympatric masked woodswallow and white-browed woodswallow species (Passeriformes: Artamidae: Artamus spp) complex in Australia where phenotypic integrity is sustained despite no discernible mitochondrial structure in earlier work.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Biol Sci
August 2022
IFM Biology, Linköping University, 581 83 Linköping, Sweden.
General evolutionary theory predicts that individuals in low condition should invest less in sexual traits compared to individuals in high condition. Whether this positive association between condition and investment also holds between young (high condition) and senesced (low condition) individuals is however less clear, since elevated investment into reproduction may be beneficial when individuals approach the end of their life. To address how investment into sexual traits changes with age, we study genes with sex-biased expression in the brain, the tissue from which sexual behaviours are directed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
October 2022
Zoology/Evolutionary Biology, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany.
The ecological success of social Hymenoptera (ants, bees, wasps) depends on the division of labour between the queen and workers. Each caste exhibits highly specialized morphology, behaviour, and life-history traits, such as lifespan and fecundity. Despite strong defences against alien intruders, insect societies are vulnerable to social parasites, such as workerless inquilines or slave-making ants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein Sci
August 2022
Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, University of Muenster, Münster, Germany.
Over the past decade, evidence has accumulated that new protein-coding genes can emerge de novo from previously non-coding DNA. Most studies have focused on large scale computational predictions of de novo protein-coding genes across a wide range of organisms. In contrast, experimental data concerning the folding and function of de novo proteins are scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOpen Biol
July 2022
UMR IRD 242, UPEC, CNRS 7618, UPMC 113, INRAE 1392, Institute of Ecology and Environmental Sciences of Paris, Paris 7 113, Bondy, France.
The reproductive castes of eusocial insects are often characterized by extreme lifespans and reproductive output, indicating an absence of the fecundity/longevity trade-off. The role of DNA methylation in the regulation of caste- and age-specific gene expression in eusocial insects is controversial. While some studies find a clear link to caste formation in honeybees and ants, others find no correlation when replication is increased across independent colonies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Evol Biol
October 2022
Univ. Lille, CNRS, UMR 8198 - Evo-Eco-Paleo, Lille, France.
Under gametophytic self-incompatibility (GSI), plants are heterozygous at the self-incompatibility locus (S-locus) and can only be fertilized by pollen with a different allele at that locus. The last century has seen a heated debate about the correct way of modelling the allele diversity in a GSI population that was never formally resolved. Starting from an individual-based model, we derive the deterministic dynamics as proposed by Fisher (The genetical theory of natural selection - A complete, Variorum edition, Oxford University Press, 1958) and compute the stationary S-allele frequency distribution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlob Chang Biol
October 2022
GeoZentrum Nordbayern, Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.
Anthropogenic global warming is redistributing marine life and may threaten tropical benthic invertebrates with several potential extinction mechanisms. The net impact of climate change on geographical extinction risk nevertheless remains uncertain. Evidence of widespread climate-driven extinctions and of potentially unidentified mechanisms exists in the fossil record.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
July 2022
Department of Plant Pathology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Recent advancements in high-throughput sequencing have provided scientists with vastly enhanced tools to diagnose unknown tree diseases. One of these techniques is referred to as metabarcoding, which uses phylogenetically informative reference genes to taxonomically classify short DNA sequences amplified from environmental samples. Using metabarcoding, we are able to compare the microbiota of symptomatic and asymptomatic (including presumably naïve) samples and identify microbe(s) that are only present in symptomatic samples and could therefore be responsible for the undiagnosed disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsect Mol Biol
December 2022
Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, University of Münster, Münster, Germany.
Intergenerational effects from fathers to offspring are increasingly reported from diverse organisms, but the underlying mechanisms remain speculative. Paternal trans-generational immune priming (TGIP) was demonstrated in the red flour beetle Tribolium castaneum: non-infectious bacterial exposure of fathers protects their offspring against an infectious challenge for at least two generations. Epigenetic processes, such as cytosine methylation of nucleic acids, have been proposed to enable transfer of information from fathers to offspring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell lines have become an integral resource and tool for conducting biological experiments ever since the Hela cell line was first developed (Scherer et al. in J Exp Med 97:695-710, 1953). They not only allow detailed investigation of molecular pathways but are faster and more cost-effective than most in vivo approaches.
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