4,534 research outputs found
A recent whole-genome duplication divides populations of a globally-distributed microsporidian
This is the final version of the article. Available from Oxford University Press via the DOI in this record.The Microsporidia are a major group of intracellular fungi and important parasites of animals including insects, fish, and immunocompromised humans. Microsporidian genomes have undergone extreme reductive evolution but there are major differences in genome size and structure within the group: some are prokaryote-like in size and organisation (<3 Mb of gene-dense sequence) whilst others have more typically eukaryotic genome architectures. To gain fine-scale, population-level insight into the evolutionary dynamics of these tiny eukaryotic genomes, we performed the broadest microsporidian population genomic study to date, sequencing geographically isolated strains of Spraguea, a marine microsporidian infecting goosefish worldwide. Our analysis revealed that population structure across the Atlantic Ocean is associated with a conserved difference in ploidy, with American and Canadian isolates sharing an ancestral whole genome duplication that was followed by widespread pseudogenisation and sorting-out of paralogue pairs. Whilst past analyses have suggested de novo gene formation of microsporidian-specific genes, we found evidence for the origin of new genes from noncoding sequence since the divergence of these populations. Some of these genes experience selective constraint, suggesting the evolution of new functions and local host adaptation. Combining our data with published microsporidian genomes, we show that nucleotide composition across the phylum is shaped by a mutational bias favouring A and T nucleotides, which is opposed by an evolutionary force favouring an increase in genomic GC content. This work reveals ongoing dramatic reorganisation of genome structure and the evolution of new gene functions in modern microsporidians despite extensive genomic streamlining in their common ancestor.The authors would like to thank John Brookfield and David Studholme for helpful discussions. This work
was supported by a Marie Curie Intra-European postdoctoral fellowship (T.A.W.) and the European
Research Council Advanced Investigator Programme and the Wellcome Trust (grant numbers ERC- 2010-
AdG-268701 045404 to T.M.E.) It is also supported by a Royal Society University Research Fellowship
(B.A.P.W.)
Intellectual disability, coarse face, relative macrocephaly, and cerebellar hypotrophy in two sisters
We report on two Portuguese sisters with a very similar phenotype characterized by severe intellectual disability, absent speech, relative macrocephaly, coarse face, cerebellar hypotrophy, and severe ataxia. Additional common features include increased thickness of the cranial vault, delayed dental eruption, talipes equino-varus, clinodactyly, and camptodactyly of the fifth finger. The older sister has retinal dystrophy and the younger sister has short stature. Their parents are consanguineous. We suggest this condition constitutes a previously unreported autosomal recessive entity
By hook or by crook? Morphometry, competition and cooperation in rodent sperm
Background
Sperm design varies enormously across species and sperm competition is thought to be a major factor influencing this variation. However, the functional significance of many sperm traits is still poorly understood. The sperm of most murid rodents are characterised by an apical hook of the sperm head that varies markedly in extent across species. In the European woodmouse Apodemus sylvaticus (Muridae), the highly reflected apical hook of sperm is used to form sperm groups, or “trains,” which exhibited increased swimming velocity and thrusting force compared to individual sperm.
Methodology/Principal Findings
Here we use a comparative study of murine rodent sperm and demonstrate that the apical hook and sperm cooperation are likely to be general adaptations to sperm competition in rodents. We found that species with relatively larger testes, and therefore more intense sperm competition, have a longer, more reflected apical sperm hook. In addition, we show that sperm groups also occur in rodents other than the European woodmouse.
Conclusions
Our results suggest that in rodents sperm cooperation is more widespread than assumed so far and highlight the importance of diploid versus haploid selection in the evolution of sperm design and function
"Reconceptualising the Consumer Journey in the Digital Age – An Exploratory Study of the United Kingdom Retail Sector"
This extended conceptual abstract which describes research that is still in progress provides an analysis of the evolving factors that influence buyer behaviour in the vitally important retail sector. The research originated as a consultancy project concerned with buyer behaviour undertaken on behalf of a specialist Pay Per Click advertising agency in a UK university business school/commercial sector collaboration which then evolved into a research project in its own right
Early and efficient detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in sputum by microscopic observation of broth cultures.
Early, efficient and inexpensive methods for the detection of pulmonary tuberculosis are urgently needed for effective patient management as well as to interrupt transmission. These methods to detect M. tuberculosis in a timely and affordable way are not yet widely available in resource-limited settings. In a developing-country setting, we prospectively evaluated two methods for culturing and detecting M. tuberculosis in sputum. Sputum samples were cultured in liquid assay (micro broth culture) in microplate wells and growth was detected by microscopic observation, or in Löwenstein-Jensen (LJ) solid media where growth was detected by visual inspection for colonies. Sputum samples were collected from 321 tuberculosis (TB) suspects attending Bugando Medical Centre, in Mwanza, Tanzania, and were cultured in parallel. Pulmonary tuberculosis cases were diagnosed using the American Thoracic Society diagnostic standards. There were a total of 200 (62.3%) pulmonary tuberculosis cases. Liquid assay with microscopic detection detected a significantly higher proportion of cases than LJ solid culture: 89.0% (95% confidence interval [CI], 84.7% to 93.3%) versus 77.0% (95% CI, 71.2% to 82.8%) (p = 0.0007). The median turn around time to diagnose tuberculosis was significantly shorter for micro broth culture than for the LJ solid culture, 9 days (interquartile range [IQR] 7-13), versus 21 days (IQR 14-28) (p<0.0001). The cost for micro broth culture (labor inclusive) in our study was US 11.35 per sample for the LJ solid culture. The liquid assay (micro broth culture) is an early, feasible, and inexpensive method for detection of pulmonary tuberculosis in resource limited settings
Observation of An Evolving Magnetic Flux Rope Prior To and During A Solar Eruption
Explosive energy release is a common phenomenon occurring in magnetized
plasma systems ranging from laboratories, Earth's magnetosphere, the solar
corona and astrophysical environments. Its physical explanation is usually
attributed to magnetic reconnection in a thin current sheet. Here we report the
important role of magnetic flux rope structure, a volumetric current channel,
in producing explosive events. The flux rope is observed as a hot channel prior
to and during a solar eruption from the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA)
telescope on board the Solar Dynamic Observatory (SDO). It initially appears as
a twisted and writhed sigmoidal structure with a temperature as high as 10 MK
and then transforms toward a semi-circular shape during a slow rise phase,
which is followed by fast acceleration and onset of a flare. The observations
suggest that the instability of the magnetic flux rope trigger the eruption,
thus making a major addition to the traditional magnetic-reconnection paradigm.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figure
Galaxy Harassment and the Evolution of Clusters of Galaxies
Disturbed spiral galaxies with high rates of star formation pervaded clusters
of galaxies just a few billion years ago, but nearby clusters exclude spirals
in favor of ellipticals. ``Galaxy harassment" (frequent high speed galaxy
encounters) drives the morphological transformation of galaxies in clusters,
provides fuel for quasars in subluminous hosts and leaves detectable debris
arcs. Simulated images of harassed galaxies are strikingly similar to the
distorted spirals in clusters at observed by the Hubble Space
Telescope.Comment: Submitted to Nature. Latex file, 7 pages, 10 photographs in gif and
jpeg format included. 10 compressed postscript figures and text available
using anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp-hpcc.astro.washington.edu/pub/hpcc/moore/
(mget *) Also available at http://www-hpcc.astro.washington.edu/papers
Characteristics of C-4 photosynthesis in stems and petioles of C-3 flowering plants
Most plants are known as C-3 plants because the first product of photosynthetic CO2 fixation is a three-carbon compound. C-4 plants, which use an alternative pathway in which the first product is a four-carbon compound, have evolved independently many times and are found in at least 18 families. In addition to differences in their biochemistry, photosynthetic organs of C-4 plants show alterations in their anatomy and ultrastructure. Little is known about whether the biochemical or anatomical characteristics of C-4 photosynthesis evolved first. Here we report that tobacco, a typical C-3 plant, shows characteristics of C-4 photosynthesis in cells of stems and petioles that surround the xylem and phloem, and that these cells are supplied with carbon for photosynthesis from the vascular system and not from stomata. These photosynthetic cells possess high activities of enzymes characteristic of C-4 photosynthesis, which allow the decarboxylation of four-carbon organic acids from the xylem and phloem, thus releasing CO2 for photosynthesis. These biochemical characteristics of C-4 photosynthesis in cells around the vascular bundles of stems of C-3 plants might explain why C-4 photosynthesis has evolved independently many times
Counting Exceptional Instantons
We show how to obtain the instanton partition function of N=2 SYM with
exceptional gauge group EFG using blow-up recursion relations derived by
Nakajima and Yoshioka. We compute the two instanton contribution and match it
with the recent proposal for the superconformal index of rank 2 SCFTs with E6,
E7 global symmetry.Comment: 16 pages, references adde
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