67 resultados para intervarietal crosses


Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The interleukin-6 cytokines, acting via gp130 receptor pathways, play a pivotal role in the reduction of cardiac injury induced by mechanical stress or ischemia and in promoting subsequent adaptive remodeling of the heart. We have now identified the small proline-rich repeat proteins (SPRR) 1A and 2A as downstream targets of gp130 signaling that are strongly induced in cardiomyocytes responding to biomechanical/ischemic stress. Upregulation of SPRR1A and 2A was markedly reduced in the gp130 cardiomyocyte-restricted knockout mice. In cardiomyocytes, MEK1/2 inhibitors prevented SPRR1A upregulation by gp130 cytokines. Furthermore, binding of NF-IL6 (C/EBPbeta) and c-Jun to the SPRR1A promoter was observed after CT-1 stimulation. Histological analysis revealed that SPRR1A induction after mechanical stress of pressure overload was restricted to myocytes surrounding piecemeal necrotic lesions. A similar expression pattern was found in postinfarcted rat hearts. Both in vitro and in vivo ectopic overexpression of SPRR1A protected cardiomyocytes against ischemic injury. Thus, this study identifies SPRR1A as a novel stress-inducible downstream mediator of gp130 cytokines in cardiomyocytes and documents its cardioprotective effect against ischemic stress.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The shift from solitary to social organisms constitutes one of the major transitions in evolution. The highest level of sociality is found in social insects (ants, termites and some species of bees and wasps). Division of labor is central to the organization of insect societies and is thought to be at the root of their ecological success. There are two main levels of division of labor in social insect colonies. The first relates to reproduction and involves the coexistence of queen and worker castes: while reproduction is usually monopolized by one or several queens, functionally sterile workers perform all the tasks to maintain the colony, such as nest building, foraging or brood care. The second level of division of labor, relating to such non-reproductive duties, is characterized by the performance of different tasks or roles by different groups of workers. This PhD aims to better understand the mechanisms underlying division of labor in insect societies, by investigating how genes and physiology influence caste determination and worker behavior in ants. In the first axis of this PhD, we studied the nature of genetic effects on division of labor. We used the Argentine ant Linepithema humile to conduct controlled crosses in the laboratory, which revealed the existence of non-additive genetic effects, such as parent-of-origin and genetic compatibility effects, on caste determination and worker behavior. In the second axis, we focused on the physiological regulation of division of labor. Using Pogonomyrmex seed- harvester ants, we performed experimental manipulation of hibernation, hormonal treatments, gene expression analyses and protein quantification to identify the physiological pathways regulating maternal effects on caste determination. Finally, comparing gene expression between nurses and foragers allowed us to reveal the association between vitellogenin and worker behavior in Pogonomyrmex ants. This PhD provides important insights into the role of genes and physiology in the regulation of division of labor in social insect colonies, helping to better understand the organization, evolution and ecological success of insect societies. - L'une des principales transitions évolutives est le passage de la vie solitaire à la vie sociale. La socialité atteint son paroxysme chez les insectes sociaux que sont les fourmis, les termites et certaines espèces d'abeilles et de guêpes. La division du travail est la clé de voûte de l'organisation de ces sociétés d'insectes et la raison principale de leur succès écologique. La division du travail s'effectue à deux niveaux dans les colonies d'insectes sociaux. Le premier niveau concerne la reproduction et implique la coexistence de deux castes : les reines et les ouvrières. Tandis que la reproduction est le plus souvent monopolisée par une ou plusieurs reines, les ouvrières stériles effectuent les tâches nécessaires au bon fonctionnement de la colonie, telles que la construction du nid, la recherche de nourriture ou le soin au couvain. Le second niveau de division du travail, qui concerne les tâches autres que la reproduction, implique la réalisation de différents travaux par différents groupes d'ouvrières. Le but de ce doctorat est de mieux comprendre les mécanismes sous-jacents de la division du travail dans les sociétés d'insectes en étudiant comment les gènes et la physiologie influencent la détermination de la caste et le comportement des ouvrières chez les fourmis. Dans le premier axe de ce doctorat, nous avons étudié la nature des influences génétiques sur la division du travail. Nous avons utilisé la fourmi d'Argentine, Linepithema humile, pour effectuer des croisements contrôlés en laboratoire. Cette méthode nous a permis de révéler l'existence d'influences génétiques non additives, telles que des influences dépendantes de l'origine parentale ou des effets de compatibilité génétique, sur la détermination de la caste et le comportement des ouvrières. Dans le second axe, nous nous sommes intéressés à la régulation physiologique de la division du travail. Nous avons utilisé des fourmis moissonneuses du genre Pogonomyrmex pour effectuer des hibernations artificieHes, des traitements hormonaux, des analyses d'expression de gènes et des mesures de vitellogénine, ce qui nous a permis d'identifier les mécanismes physiologiques régulant les effets maternels sur la détermination de la caste. Enfin, la comparaison d'expression de gènes entre nourrices et fourrageuses suggère un rôle de la vitellogénine dans la régulation du comportement des ouvrières chez les fourmis moissonneuses. En détaillant les influences des gènes et de la physiologie dans la régulation de la division du travail dans les colonies d'insectes sociaux, ce doctorat fournit d'importantes informations permettant de mieux comprendre l'organisation, l'évolution et le succès écologique des sociétés d'insectes.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

RESUME: Une zone tectonique large et complexe, connue sous le nom de ligne des Centovalli, traverse le secteur des Alpes Centrales compris entre Domodossola et Locarno. Cette région, formée par le Val Vigezzo et la vallée des Centovalli, constitue la terminaison méridionale du dôme Lepontin et représente une portion de la zone des racines des nappes alpines. Elle fait partie d’une grande et complexe zone de cisaillement, en partie associée à des phénomènes hydrothermaux d’âge alpin (<20 Ma), qui comprend le système tectonique Insubrien et celui du Simplon. Le Val Vigezzo et les Centovalli constituent un vrai carrefour entre les principaux accidents tectoniques des Alpes ainsi qu'une zone de juxtaposition du socle Sudalpin avec la zone des racines de l’Austroalpin et du Pennique. Les phases de déformation et les structures géologiques qui peuvent être étudiées s'étalent sur une période comprise entre environ 35 Ma et l'actuel. L’étude détaillée de terrain a mis en évidence la présence de nombreuses roches et structures de déformation de type ductile et cassant tels que des mylonites, des cataclasites, des pseudotachylites, des kakirites, des failles minéralisées, des gouges de faille et des plis. Sur le terrain on a pu distinguer au moins quatre générations de plis liés aux différentes phases de déformation. Le nombre et la complexité de ces structures indiquent une histoire très compliquée, selon plusieurs étapes distinctes, parfois liées, voire même superposées. Une partie de ces structures de déformation affectent aussi les dépôts sédimentaires d’âge quaternaire, notamment des limons et des sables lacustres. Ces sédiments constituent les restes d'un bassin lacustre attribué à l'époque interglaciaire Riss/Würm (éemien, 67.000-120.000 ans) et ils affleurent dans la partie centrale de la zone étudiée, à l'Est de la plaine de Santa Maria Maggiore. Ces sédiments montrent en leur sein toute une série de structures de déformation tels que des plans de faille inverses, des structures conjuguées de raccourcissement et des véritables plis. Ces failles et ces plis représenteraient les évidences de surface d’une déformation probablement active en époque quaternaire. Une autre formation rocheuse a retenu tout notre attention; il s'agit d'un corps de brèches péridotitiques monogéniques qui affleure en discontinuité le long du versant méridional et le long du fond de la vallée Vigezzo sur environ 20 km. Ces brèches se posent indifféremment sur le socle (unités Finero, Orselina) ou sur les sédiments lacustres. Elles sont traversées par des plans de failles qui développent des véritables stries de faille et des gouges de faille; l’orientation de ces plans est la même que celle affectant les failles à gouges du socle. La genèse de cette brèche est liée à l'altération et au modelage glacier (rock-glaciers) d'une brèche tectonique originelle qui borde la partie externe du Corps de Finero. Les structures de déformation de cette brèche, pareillement à celles des sédiments lacustres, ont été considérées comme les évidences de surface d'une tectonique quaternaire active dans la région. La dernière phase de déformation cassante qui affecte cette région peut donc être considérée comme active en époque quaternaire. Une vue d’ensemble de la région étudiée nous permet de reconnaître à l’échelle régionale une zone de cisaillement complexe orientée E-W, parallèlement à l’axe de la vallée Centovalli-Val Vigezzo. Les données de terrain, indiquent que cette zone de cisaillement débute sous conditions ductiles et évolue en plusieurs étapes jusqu’à des conditions de failles cassantes de surface. La reconstruction de l'évolution géodynamique de la région a permis de définir trois étapes distinctes qui marquent le passage, de ce secteur de socle cristallin, de conditions P-T profondes à des conditions de surface. Dans ce contexte, on a reconnu trois phases principales de déformation à l’échelle régionale qui caractérisent ces trois étapes. La phase la plus ancienne est constituée par des mylonites en faciès amphibolite, associées à des mouvements de cisaillement dextre, qui sont ensuite remplacés par des mylonites en faciès schistes verts et des plis rétrovergentes liés au rétrocharriage des nappes alpines. Une deuxième étape est identifiée par le développement d’une phase hydrothermale liée à un système de failles extensives et décrochantes dextres à direction principale E-W, NE-SW et NW-SE. Leur caractérisation minéralogique a permis la mise en évidence des phases cristallines de néoformation liées à cet événement constituées par : K-feldspath (microcline), chlorites (Fe+Mg), épidotes, prehnite, zéolites (laumontite), sphène, calcite. Dans ce contexte, pour obtenir une meilleure caractérisation de cet événement hydrothermal on a utilisé des géothermomètres sur chlorites, sensible aussi à la pression et a la a(H2O), qui ont donné des valeurs descendantes comprises entre 450-200°C. Les derniers mouvements sont mis en évidence par le développement d’une série de plans majeurs de failles à gouge, qui forment une structure en sigmoïdes d’épaisseur kilométrique reconnaissable à l’échelle de la vallée et caractérisée par des mouvements transpressifs avec une composante décrochante dextre toujours importante. Cette phase de déformation forme un système conjugué de failles avec direction moyenne E-W qui coupent la zone des racines des nappes alpines, la zone du Canavese et le corps ultramafique de Finero. Ce système se déroule de manière subparallèle à l'axe de la vallée le long de plusieurs dizaines de kilomètres. Une analyse complète et détaillée des gouges de faille par XRD a montré que la fraction argileuse (<2 µm) de ces gouges contient une partie de néoformation très importante constituée par, des illites, des chlorites et des interstratifiés de type illite/smectite ou chlorite/smectite. Des datations avec méthode K-Ar sur ces illites ont donné des valeurs comprises entre 12 et 4 Ma qui représentent l'âge de cette dernière déformation cassante. L'application de la méthode de la cristallinité de l'illite (C.I.) a permis d'évaluer les conditions thermiques qui caractérisent le déroulement de cette dernière phase tectonique qui se produit sous conditions de température caractéristiques de l'anchizone et de la diagenèse. L'ensemble des structures de déformation qu'on vient de décrire s'insère parfaitement dans le contexte de convergence oblique entre la plaque adriatique et celle européenne qui à produit l'orogène alpin. On peut considérer les structures tectoniques du Val Vigezzo-Centovalli comme l'expression d'une zone majeure de cisaillement "Simplo-Insubrienne". L'empilement structural et les structures tectoniques affleurantes dans la région sont le résultat de l'interaction entre un régime tectonique transpressif et un régime transtensif. Ces deux champs de tension sont antagonistes entre eux mais sont reliés, de toute façon, à une seule phase décrochante dextre principale, due à une convergence oblique entre deux plaques. À l'échelle de l'évolution géodynamique on peut distinguer différentes étapes au cours desquelles les structures de ces deux régimes tectoniques interagissent en manière différente. En accord avec les données géophysiques et les reconstructions paléodynamiques prises dans la littérature on considère que la ligne Rhône-Simplon-Centovalli représente l'évidence de surface de la suture majeure profonde entre la plaque Adriatique et celle Européenne. Les vitesses de soulèvement qui ont été calculées dans cette étude pour cette région des Alpes donnent une valeur moyenne de 0.8 mm/a qui est tout à fait comparable avec les données proposées par la littérature sur cette zone. La zone Val Vigezzo-Centovalli peut être donc considérée comme un carrefour géologique où se croisent différentes phases tectoniques qui représentent les évidences de surface d'une suture profonde majeure entre deux plaques dans un contexte de collision continentale. ABSTRACT: A wide and complex tectonic zone known as Centovalli line, crosses the Central Alps sector between Domodossola and Locarno. This area, formed by the Vigezzo Valley and Centovalli valley, constitutes the southernmost termination of the Lepontin dome and represents a portion of the alpine nappes root zone. It belongs to a large and complex shear-zone, partly associated with hydrothermal phenomena of alpine age (<20 My), which includes the Insubric Line and the Simplon fault zone. Vigezzo Valley and Centovalli constitute a real crossroads between the mains alpines tectonics lines as well as a zone of juxtaposition of the Southalpine basement with the Austroalpin and Pennique root zone. The deformation phases and the geological structures that can be studied between approximately 35 My and the present. The detailed field study showed the presence of many brittle and ductile deformation structures and fault rocks such as mylonites, cataclasites, pseudotachylites, kakirites, mineralized faults, fault gouges and folds. In the field we could distinguish at least four folds generations related to the various deformation phases. The number and the complexity of these structures indicate a very complicated history, comprising several different stages, that sometimes are related and even superimposed. Part of these deformation structures affect also the sedimentary deposits of quaternary age, in particular the silts and sands lake deposit. These sediments constitute the remainders of a lake basin ascribed to the interglacial Riss/Würm (Eemien, 67.000-120.000 years) and outcroping in the central part of the studied area, in the Eastern part of Santa Maria Maggiore plain. These sediments show a whole series of deformation structures such as inverse fault planes, combined shortening structures and true folds. These faults and folds would represent the surface evidence of a probably active tectonic deformation in quaternary time. Another rock formation attracted all our attention. It is a body of monogenic peridotite breccia which outcrops in discontinuity along the southernmost slope and the bottom of the Vigezzo valley on approximately 20 km. This breccia lies indifferently on the basement (Finero and Orselina units) or on the lake sediments. They are crossed by fault planes which developed slikenside and fault gouges whose orientation is the same of the faults gouges in the alpine basement. This breccia results from the weathering and the surface modelling of an original tectonic breccia which borders the external part of Finero peridotite body. This breccia deformation structures, like those of the lake sediments, were regarded as the surface interaction of active quaternary tectonics in the area. So the last brittle deformation phases which affects this area seems to be actives in quaternary time. Theoverall picture of the studied area on a regional scale enables us to point out a complex shear-zone directed E-W, parallel to the axis of the Centovalli and Vigezzo Valley. The field analysis indicates that this shear-zone began under ductile conditions and evolved in several stages to brittle faulting under surface conditions. The analysis of the geodynamic evolution of the area allows to define three different stages which mark the transition of this alpine basement root zone, from deep P-T conditions to P-T surface conditions. In this context on regional scale three principal deformation phases, which characterize these three stages can be distinguished. The oldest phase consisted of the amphibolitie facies mylonites, associated to dextral strikeslip movements. They are then replaced by green-schists facies mylonites and backfolds related to the backthrusting of the alpines nappes. A second episode is caracterized by the development of an hydrothermal phase bound to an extensive fault and dextral strike-slip fault system, with E-W, NW-SE and SE-NW principal directionsThe principal neoformed mineral phases related to this event are: K-feldspar (microcline), chlorites (Fe+Mg), epidotes prehnite, zéolites (laumontite), sphene and calcite. In this context, to obtain a better characterization of this hydrothermal event, we have used an chlorite geothermometer, sensitive also to the pressure and has the a(H2O), which gave downward values ranging between 450-200°C. The last movements are caracterized by the development of important gouge fault plans, which form a sigmoid structure of kilometric thickness which is recognizable at the valley scale, and is characterized by transpressive movements always with a significant dextral strike-slip component. This deformation phase forms a combined faults system with an average E-W direction, which cuts trough the alpine root zone, the Canavese zone and the Finero ultramafic body. This fault system takes place subparallel to the axis of the valley over several tens of kilometers. A complete and detailed XRD analysis of the gouges fault showed that the clay fraction (<2µm) contains a very significant neo-formation of illite, chlorites and mixed layered clays such as illite/smectite or chlorite/smectite. The K-Ar datings of the illite fraction <2µm gave values ranging between 12 and 4 My and the illite fraction <0.2µm gave more recents values until to 2,4-0 My.This values represent the age of this last brittle deformation. The application of the illite crystallinity method (C.I.) allowed evaluating the thermal conditions which characterize this tectonic phase that occured under temperature conditions of the anchizone and diagenesis. The whole set of deformation structures which we just described, perfectly fit the context of oblique convergence between the Adriatic and the European plate that produced the alpine orogen. We can regard the Vigezzo valley and Centovalli tectonic structures as the expression of a major "Simplo-Insubric" shear-zone. Structural stacking and tectonic structures that outcrop in the studied area, are the result of the interaction between a transpressive and a transtensve tectonic phases. These two tension fields are antagonistic but they are also connected, in any event, with only one principal dextral strike-slip movement, caused by an oblique convergence between two plates. On the geodynamic evolution scale we can distinguish various stages during which these two tectonic structures fields interact in various ways. In agreement with the geophysical data and the paleodynamic recostructions taken in the literature we considers that the Rhone-Simplon-Centovalli line are the surface feature of the major collision between the Adriatique and the European plate at depth. The uplift speeds we calculated in this study for this Alpine area give an average value of 0.8 mm/a, which is in good agreement with the data suggested by the literature on this zone. TheVigezzo Valley and Centovalli zone can therefore be regarded as a geological crossroad where various tectonic phases are superimposed. They represent the evidences of a major and deeper suture between two plates in a continental collision context.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Maternal effects often affect fitness traits, but there is little experimental evidence pertaining to their contribution to response to selection imposed by novel environments. We studied the evolution of maternal effects in Drosophila populations selected for tolerance to chronic larval malnutrition. To this end, we performed pairwise reciprocal F1 crosses between six selected (malnutrition tolerant) populations and six unselected control populations and assessed the effect of cross direction on larval growth and developmental rate, adult weight and egg-to-adult viability expressed under the malnutrition regime. Each pair of reciprocal crosses revealed large maternal effects (possibly including cytoplasmic genetic effects) on at least one trait, but the magnitude, sign and which traits were affected varied among populations. Thus, maternal effects contributed significantly to the response to selection imposed by the malnutrition regime, but these changes were idiosyncratic, suggesting a rugged adaptive landscape. Furthermore, although the selected populations evolved both faster growth and higher viability, the maternal effects on growth rate and viability were negatively correlated across populations. Thus, genes mediating maternal effects can evolve to partially counteract the response to selection mediated by the effects of alleles on their own carriers' phenotype, and maternal effects may contribute to evolutionary trade-offs between components of offspring fitness.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The interplay between selection and aspects of the genetic architecture of traits (such as linkage, dominance, and epistasis) can either drive or constrain speciation [1-3]. Despite accumulating evidence that speciation can progress to "intermediate" stages-with populations evolving only partial reproductive isolation-studies describing selective mechanisms that impose constraints on speciation are more rare than those describing drivers. The stick insect Timema cristinae provides an example of a system in which partial reproductive isolation has evolved between populations adapted to different host plant environments, in part due to divergent selection acting on a pattern polymorphism [4, 5]. Here, we demonstrate how selection on a green/melanistic color polymorphism counteracts speciation in this system. Specifically, divergent selection between hosts does not occur on color phenotypes because melanistic T. cristinae are cryptic on the stems of both host species, are resistant to a fungal pathogen, and have a mating advantage. Using genetic crosses and genome-wide association mapping, we quantify the genetic architecture of both the pattern and color polymorphism, illustrating their simple genetic control. We use these empirical results to develop an individual-based model that shows how the melanistic phenotype acts as a "genetic bridge" that increases gene flow between populations living on different hosts. Our results demonstrate how variation in the nature of selection acting on traits, and aspects of trait genetic architecture, can impose constraints on both local adaptation and speciation.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Postmating but prezygotic (PMPZ) interactions are increasingly recognized as a potentially important early-stage barrier in the evolution of reproductive isolation. A recent study described a potential example between populations of the same species: single matings between Drosophila montana populations resulted in differential fertilisation success because of the inability of sperm from one population (Vancouver) to penetrate the eggs of the other population (Colorado). As the natural mating system of D. montana is polyandrous (females remate rapidly), we set up double matings of all possible crosses between the same populations to test whether competitive effects between ejaculates influence this PMPZ isolation. We measured premating isolation in no-choice tests, female fecundity, fertility and egg-to-adult viability after single and double matings as well as second-male paternity success (P-2). Surprisingly, we found no PMPZ reproductive isolation between the two populations under a competitive setting, indicating no difficulty of sperm from Vancouver males to fertilize Colorado eggs after double matings. While there were subtle differences in how P-2 changed over time, suggesting that Vancouver males' sperm are somewhat less competitive in a first-male role within Colorado females, these effects did not translate into differences in overall P-2. Fertilisation success can thus differ dramatically between competitive and noncompetitive conditions, perhaps because the males that mate second produce higher quality ejaculates in response to sperm competition. We suggest that unlike in more divergent species comparisons, where sperm competition typically increases reproductive isolation, ejaculate tailoring can reduce the potential for PMPZ isolation when recently diverged populations interbreed.

Relevância:

10.00% 10.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The Argentina National Road 7 that crosses the Andes Cordillera within the Mendoza province to connect Santiago de Chile and Buenos Aires is particularly affected by natural hazards requiring risk management. Integrated in a research plan that intends to produce landslide susceptibility maps, we aimed in this study to detect large slope movements by applying a satellite radar interferometric analysis using Envisat data, acquired between 2005 and 2010. We were finally able to identify two large slope deformations in sandstone and clay deposits along gentle shores of the Potrerillos dam reservoir, with cumulated displacements higher than 25mm in 5years and towards the reservoir. There is also a body of evidences that these large slope deformations are actually influenced by the seasonal reservoir level variations. This study shows that very detailed information, such as surface displacements and above all water level variation, can be extracted from spaceborne remote sensing techniques; nevertheless, the limitations of InSAR for the present dataset are discussed here. Such analysis can then lead to further field investigations to understand more precisely the destabilising processes acting on these slope deformations.