10 results match your criteria: "Switzerland Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB)[Affiliation]"
Biol Lett
October 2016
Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia, 37005 Ceske Budejovice, Czech Republic.
Macroevolutionary studies recently shifted from only reconstructing the past state, i.e. the species phylogeny, to also infer the past speciation and extinction dynamics that gave rise to the phylogeny.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci
July 2016
Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering, Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich, 4058 Basel, Switzerland Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB), Lausanne, Switzerland.
Recent advances have allowed for both morphological fossil evidence and molecular sequences to be integrated into a single combined inference of divergence dates under the rule of Bayesian probability. In particular, the fossilized birth-death tree prior and the Lewis-Mk model of discrete morphological evolution allow for the estimation of both divergence times and phylogenetic relationships between fossil and extant taxa. We exploit this statistical framework to investigate the internal consistency of these models by producing phylogenetic estimates of the age of each fossil in turn, within two rich and well-characterized datasets of fossil and extant species (penguins and canids).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDevelopment
May 2016
Department of Biosystems, Science and Engineering (D-BSSE), ETH Zurich, Mattenstraße 26, Basel 4058, Switzerland Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB), Mattenstraße 26, Basel 4058, Switzerland
The size and shape of organs is species specific, and even in species in which organ size is strongly influenced by environmental cues, such as nutrition or temperature, it follows defined rules. Therefore, mechanisms must exist to ensure a tight control of organ size within a given species, while being flexible enough to allow for the evolution of different organ sizes in different species. We combined computational modeling and quantitative measurements to analyze growth control in the Drosophila eye disc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleic Acids Res
April 2016
Laboratory of Molecular Modeling & Drug Discovery, Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia, Via Morego 30, 16163 Genoa, Italy IAS-5 / INM-9 Computational Biomedicine Forschungszentrum Jülich, Wilhelm-Johnen-Straße 52428 Jülich, Germany
Trans-lesion synthesis polymerases, like DNA Polymerase-η (Pol-η), are essential for cell survival. Pol-η bypasses ultraviolet-induced DNA damages via a two-metal-ion mechanism that assures DNA strand elongation, with formation of the leaving group pyrophosphate (PPi). Recent structural and kinetics studies have shown that Pol-η function depends on the highly flexible and conserved Arg61 and, intriguingly, on a transient third ion resolved at the catalytic site, as lately observed in other nucleic acid-processing metalloenzymes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol Evol
May 2015
CMPG, Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Berne, Switzerland Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics SIB, Lausanne, Switzerland
Because natural selection is likely to act on multiple genes underlying a given phenotypic trait, we study here the potential effect of ongoing and past selection on the genetic diversity of human biological pathways. We first show that genes included in gene sets are generally under stronger selective constraints than other genes and that their evolutionary response is correlated. We then introduce a new procedure to detect selection at the pathway level based on a decomposition of the classical McDonald-Kreitman test extended to multiple genes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Biol Sci
May 2015
Department of Computer Science, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand Allan Wilson Centre for Molecular Ecology and Evolution, Palmerston North, New Zealand
One of the central objectives in the field of phylodynamics is the quantification of population dynamic processes using genetic sequence data or in some cases phenotypic data. Phylodynamics has been successfully applied to many different processes, such as the spread of infectious diseases, within-host evolution of a pathogen, macroevolution and even language evolution. Phylodynamic analysis requires a probability distribution on phylogenetic trees spanned by the genetic data.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Biol Evol
June 2015
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester.
Influenza A virus (IAV) has a segmented genome that allows for the exchange of genome segments between different strains. This reassortment accelerates evolution by breaking linkage, helping IAV cross species barriers to potentially create highly virulent strains. Challenges associated with monitoring the process of reassortment in molecular detail have limited our understanding of its evolutionary implications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Cancer Res
April 2015
Lymphoma and Genomics Research Program, IOR Institute of Oncology Research, Bellinzona, Switzerland. IOSI Oncology Institute of Southern Switzerland, Bellinzona, Switzerland.
Purpose: In cancer cells, the epigenome is often deregulated, and inhibition of the bromodomain and extra-terminal (BET) family of bromodomain-containing proteins is a novel epigenetic therapeutic approach. Preliminary results of an ongoing phase I trial have reported promising activity and tolerability with the new BET bromodomain inhibitor OTX015.
Experimental Design: We assessed the preclinical activity of OTX015 as single agent and in combination in mature B-cell lymphoma models and performed in vitro and in vivo experiments to identify the mechanism of action and the genetic features associated with sensitivity to the compound.
Mol Biol Evol
January 2015
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA.
Mutations are the source of evolutionary variation. The interactions of multiple mutations can have important effects on fitness and evolutionary trajectories. We have recently described the distribution of fitness effects of all single mutations for a nine-amino-acid region of yeast Hsp90 (Hsp82) implicated in substrate binding.
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December 2014
Department of Biosystems, Science and Engineering (D-BSSE), ETH Zurich, Mattenstraße 26, 4058 Basel, Switzerland Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics (SIB), Mattenstraße 26, 4058 Basel, Switzerland
Early branching events during lung development are stereotyped. Although key regulatory components have been defined, the branching mechanism remains elusive. We have now used a developmental series of 3D geometric datasets of mouse embryonic lungs as well as time-lapse movies of cultured lungs to obtain physiological geometries and displacement fields.
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