948 resultados para Nuclear genome evolution
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A series of vectors for the over-expression of tagged proteins in Dictyostelium were designed, constructed and tested. These vectors allow the addition of an N- or C-terminal tag (GFP, RFP, 3xFLAG, 3xHA, 6xMYC and TAP) with an optimized polylinker sequence and no additional amino acid residues at the N or C terminus. Different selectable markers (Blasticidin and gentamicin) are available as well as an extra chromosomal version; these allow copy number and thus expression level to be controlled, as well as allowing for more options with regard to complementation, co- and super-transformation. Finally, the vectors share standardized cloning sites, allowing a gene of interest to be easily transfered between the different versions of the vectors as experimental requirements evolve. The organisation and dynamics of the Dictyostelium nucleus during the cell cycle was investigated. The centromeric histone H3 (CenH3) variant serves to target the kinetochore to the centromeres and thus ensures correct chromosome segregation during mitosis and meiosis. A number of Dictyostelium histone H3-domain containing proteins as GFP-tagged fusions were expressed and it was found that one of them functions as CenH3 in this species. Like CenH3 from some other species, Dictyostelium CenH3 has an extended N-terminal domain with no similarity to any other known proteins. The targeting domain, comprising α-helix 2 and loop 1 of the histone fold is required for targeting CenH3 to centromeres. Compared to the targeting domain of other known and putative CenH3 species, Dictyostelium CenH3 has a shorter loop 1 region. The localisation of a variety of histone modifications and histone modifying enzymes was examined. Using fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) and CenH3 chromatin-immunoprecipitation (ChIP) it was shown that the six telocentric centromeres contain all of the DIRS-1 and most of the DDT-A and skipper transposons. During interphase the centromeres remain attached to the centrosome resulting in a single CenH3 cluster which also contains the putative histone H3K9 methyltransferase SuvA, H3K9me3 and HP1 (heterochromatin protein 1). Except for the centromere cluster and a number of small foci at the nuclear periphery opposite the centromeres, the rest of the nucleus is largely devoid of transposons and heterochromatin associated histone modifications. At least some of the small foci correspond to the distal telomeres, suggesting that the chromosomes are organised in a Rabl-like manner. It was found that in contrast to metazoans, loading of CenH3 onto Dictyostelium centromeres occurs in late G2 phase. Transformation of Dictyostelium with vectors carrying the G418 resistance cassette typically results in the vector integrating into the genome in one or a few tandem arrays of approximately a hundred copies. In contrast, plasmids containing a Blasticidin resistance cassette integrate as single or a few copies. The behaviour of transgenes in the nucleus was examined by FISH, and it was found that low copy transgenes show apparently random distribution within the nucleus, while transgenes with more than approximately 10 copies cluster at or immediately adjacent to the centromeres in interphase cells regardless of the actual integration site along the chromosome. During mitosis the transgenes show centromere-like behaviour, and ChIP experiments show that transgenes contain the heterochromatin marker H3K9me2 and the centromeric histone variant H3v1. This clustering, and centromere-like behaviour was not observed on extrachromosomal transgenes, nor on a line where the transgene had integrated into the extrachromosomal rDNA palindrome. This suggests that it is the repetitive nature of the transgenes that causes the centromere-like behaviour. A Dictyostelium homolog of DET1, a protein largely restricted to multicellular eukaryotes where it has a role in developmental regulation was identified. As in other species Dictyostelium DET1 is nuclear localised. In ChIP experiments DET1 was found to bind the promoters of a number of developmentally regulated loci. In contrast to other species where it is an essential protein, loss of DET1 is not lethal in Dictyostelium, although viability is greatly reduced. Loss of DET1 results in delayed and abnormal development with enlarged aggregation territories. Mutant slugs displayed apparent cell type patterning with a bias towards pre-stalk cell types.
Molekulare Systematik der Gattung Suaeda (Chenopodiaceae) und Evolution des C4-Photosynthesesyndroms
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Mit der vorliegenden Arbeit wird eine Synthese aus molekularer Phylogenie und Merkmalsentwicklung für die Unterfamilie Suaedoideae der Chenopodiaceae präsentiert. Anhand von rekonstruierten Stammbäumen aus den Sequenzunterschieden von DNA-Abschnitten zweier unabhängiger Genome (Kern, Chloroplast) werden monophyletische Gruppen herausgearbeitet und die Variabilität der molekularen Merkmale in Bezug auf die bekannten Arten diskutiert. Insgesamt wurden für alle molekularen Analysen 294 Sequenzen ausgewertet. Mit 254 Sequenzen von Arten der Unterfamilie Suaedoideae und 18 Sequenzen von Arten der Unterfamilie Salicornioideae wurde eine vergleichende molekulare Analyse mit den DNA-Regionen ITS, atpB-rbcL und psbB-psbH durchgeführt. Mit der Einbeziehung von ca. 65 bekannten Suaeda-Arten sind damit je nach Artauffassung bis zu 80% aller Arten der Gattung berücksichtigt. Mittels Fossildaten werden die wichtigsten Divergenzereignisse zeitlich fixiert. Die molekularen Stammbäume dienen weiterhin als Grundlage für die Bewertung der Arten sowie ihrer morphologischen und anatomischen Merkmale. Ein wichtiger Aspekt bildet dabei die Entwicklung der C4-Photosynthese mit den zugehörigen Blatttypen. Die folgenden vier Themenkomplexe bzw. Fragestellungen sollten bearbeitet werden (für ausführliche Darstellung vgl. Kap. 1.3): 1. Monophyletische Gruppen und ihre Beziehungen 2. Prinzipien der Evolution und Artbildung in der untersuchten Gruppe, Abgrenzung der Arten. 3. Entwicklung des C4-Photosynthesesyndroms 4. Entwicklung und Variabilität systematisch relevanter Merkmale Die Ergebnisse der auf vergleichender DNA-Sequenzierung beruhenden molekularen Analyse und die Synthese mit weiteren Daten führen als Resultat der vorliegenden Arbeit zusammenfassend zu folgenden Ergebnissen: 1.) Die drei sequenzierten DNA-Regionen ITS, atpB-rbcL und psbB-psbH zeigen im Vergleich eine sehr unterschiedliche Variabilität, ITS ist die variabelste aller Regionen. Die in den Alignments gefundenen Merkmale in Form von Punkt- und Längenmutationen zwischen den Einzelsequenzen waren zahlenmäßig ausreichend und qualitativ geeignet, um mit den drei Verfahren Maximum Parsimony, Maximum Likelihood und Bayes’scher Analyse aussagekräftige und in wesentlichen Aussagen kongruente molekulare Phylogenien zu rekonstruieren. Die Chloroplasten-Daten wurden für die Berechnungen kombiniert. 2.) Die beiden DNA-Regionen ITS und atpB-rbcL evolvieren mit sehr unterschiedlichen Geschwindigkeiten. Die mit der Glättungsmethode PL berechneten durchschnittlichen Substitutionsraten weisen für ITS eine 5,5fach höhere Substitutionsrate gegenüber atpB-rbcL nach. Die ITS-Sequenzen sind daher wesentlich diverser und für einige Sippen, bei identischen atpB-rbcL-Sequenzen, unterschiedlich. Eine direkte Homologisierung von molekularer und morphologischer Variabilität oder die molekulare Limitierung von Arten ist daher nur in einigen Fällen möglich. 3.) Die Gattungen Suaeda, Alexandra und Borszczowia bilden eine monophyletische Gruppe, die den Salicornioideae als Schwestergruppe gegenübersteht. Dies bestätigt die Ergebnisse der Phylogenie der Chenopodiaceae (Kadereit et al. 2003). Im traditionellen Verständnis ist damit die Gattung Suaeda paraphyletisch. Durch taxonomische Umkombination (Schütze et al. 2003. Kapralov et al. 2006) werden die Gattungen Alexandra und Borszczowia in Suaeda eingegliedert, womit das Monophylie-Kriterium für die Gattung wieder erfüllt ist. Die molekularen Daten unterstützen diese nomenklatorische Neubewertung. Der nachfolgend verwendete Gattungsname Suaeda bezieht sich auf die neue Fassung. 4.) Bienertia gehört nicht in die unter 2.) beschriebene monophyletische Gruppe. Die Stellung dieser Gattung ist intermediär. Im ITS-Baum bildet sie die Schwestergruppe zu den Salicornioideae, im Chloroplasten-Baum diejenige zu Suaeda. Da Bienertia aufgrund morphologischer Merkmale Suaeda ähnlicher ist als den Salicornioideae wird sie in die intern neu gegliederte Unterfamilie der Suaedoideae einbezogen, die weitgehend der in Ulbrich (1934) vertretenen Auffassung entspricht. 5.) Suaeda teilt sich in zwei sehr deutlich getrennte Gruppen, die in einer neuen Gliederung als Untergattungen Brezia und Suaeda definiert werden. Die Trennung datiert mit etwa 30 Mio. Jahren in das Oligozän. Zur Untergattung Brezia gehören alle Arten der Sektion Brezia nach bisheriger taxonomischer Auffassung, die Untergattung Suaeda vereint alle übrigen Arten und wird in weitere Sektionen untergliedert. 6.) Die Untergattung bzw. Sektion Brezia zeigt im ITS-Baum eine deutliche Dreigliederung in 3 Subclades, die allerdings von den Chloroplasten-Bäumen nicht verifiziert wird und auch durch morphologische Merkmale nicht zu rechtfertigen ist. Die Subclades der Untergattung Suaeda entsprechen in Grundzügen den bisherigen Sektionen und sind durch synapomorphe Merkmale gekennzeichnet. Für die Gattung Suaeda leiten sich nach monophyletischen Gruppen oder singulären Linien folgende Sektionen ab: Brezia, Alexandra, Borszczowia, Schanginia, Schoberia Salsina (inkl. der früheren Sektionen Limbogermen, Immersa und Macrosuaeda), Suaeda, Physophora und Glauca (neu). 7.) Hybridisierung und Polyploidisierung sind wichtige Prozesse der sympatrischen Artbildung innerhalb der Suaedoideae und waren wahrscheinlich immer mit Arealerweiterungen gekoppelt. Mehrere Linien sind durch Vervielfachung des Chromosomensatzes charakterisiert, wobei auch die recht seltene Form der Dekaploidie erreicht wird. Vieles spricht dafür, dass sowohl Auto- als auch Allopolyploidie eine Rolle spielt. Auf Autopolyplodie beruhen höchstwahrscheinlich die unterschiedlichen Chromosomenrassen von S. corniculata. Durch Inkongruenzen zwischen Chloroplasten- und ITS (Kern)-Stammbäumen konnten einige Arten mit hoher Wahrscheinlichkeit als etablierte, allopolyploide Hybridsippen identifiziert werden (Suaeda kulundensis, S. sibirica). Es ist damit erwiesen, dass die Diversifizierung durch retikulate Evolution beeinflusst wird. 8.) Die Ergebnisse der molekularen Phylogenien belegen sehr deutlich, dass sich die C4-Photosynthese innerhalb der Suaedoideae viermal unabhängig mit vier vollkommen unterschiedlichen Blatttypen entwickelt hat. Dazu gehören zwei Blatttypen mit single cell C4-photosynthesis, ein bis vor kurzem bei Landpflanzen unbekanntes Phänomen. Innerhalb der Sektionen Schoberia, Salsina und Borszczowia datiert die Entstehung in das späte Miozän, bei Bienertia entstand die C4-Photosynthese möglicherweise noch früher. 9.) Als systematisch äußerst bedeutsame Merkmale haben sich die schon von Iljin (1936a) benutzten Pistill-Formen sowie spezifische Blattmerkmale herausgestellt. Mit diesen Merkmalen können Sektionen, die auf monophyletischen Gruppen beruhen, gut definiert werden. Synapomorphe Merkmale des Pistills sind die Zahl und Ausbildung der Narben sowie die Form ihrer Insertion im Ovar. Bei den Blatttypen sind es vor allem die vier histologisch hoch differenzierten C4-Blatttypen, die als gemeinsam abgeleitetes Merkmal rezenter, teilweise aufgespaltener Linien gewertet werden. 10.) Die früher z.T. überbewerteten Merkmale des Perianths (Verwachsungen, Flügel, Anhänge und Umbildungen) können nur zur Beschreibung einzelner Sippen oder lokaler Gruppen herangezogen werden. Ebenso ist das Merkmal der Lebensformen (Therophyten, Chamaephyten) kaum zur Charakterisierung von Gruppen geeignet. Wie das Beispiel Brezia sehr deutlich zeigt, kam es allein in dieser Gruppe mehrfach zur Entwicklung ausdauernder, verholzender Sippen. Der umgekehrte Prozess fand bei der Entstehung der annuellen S. aegyptiaca und S. arcuata statt. Mit Hilfe von DNA-basierten Stammbäumen ist es in der vorliegenden Arbeit möglich geworden, die evolutionäre Geschichte der Gattung nachzuzeichnen und eine auf monophyletischen Gruppen basierende Gliederung abzuleiten. Damit wird eine Grundlage für ein verbessertes Artkonzept der Gattung Suaeda geschaffen. Für die praktische Taxonomie ist dies aber nur teilweise bedeutend. Die morphologisch nachvollziehbare Abgrenzung von Arten bleibt, gerade in den diversen Sektionen Brezia und Salsina, umstritten und kaum nachvollziehbar. Ein Großteil der Arten hat offenbar keine interspezifischen Kompatibilitätsschranken, es handelt sich daher um Morpho- oder Semispecies, möglicherweise sogar nur geographische Rassen, die allerdings mit schnell evolvierenden DNA-Regionen wie ITS differenzierbar sind. Ausgehend von den Ergebnissen der vorliegenden Arbeit verbleibt genügend Raum für weiterführende, vertiefende systematische und populationsbiologische Studien.
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Inversions breaking the 1041 bp int1h-1 or the 9.5-kb int22h-1 sequence of the F8 gene cause hemophilia A in 1/30,000 males. These inversions are due to homologous recombination between the above sequences and their inverted copies on the same DNA molecule, respectively, int1h-2 and int22h-2 or int22h-3. We find that (1) int1h and int22h duplicated more than 25 million years ago; (2) the identity of the copies (>99%) of these sequences in humans and other primates is due to gene conversion; (3) gene conversion is most frequent in the internal regions of int22h; (4) breakpoints of int22h-related inversions also tend to involve the internal regions of int22h; (5) sequence variations in a sample of human X chromosomes defined eight haplotypes of int22h-1 and 27 of int22h-2 plus int22h-3; (6) the latter two sequences, which lie, respectively, 500 and 600 kb telomeric to int22h-1 are five-fold more identical when in cis than when in trans, thus suggesting that gene conversion may be predominantly intrachromosomal; (7) int1h, int22h, and flanking sequences evolved at a rate of about 0.1% substitutions per million years during the divergence between humans and other primates, except for int1h during the human-chimpanzee divergence, when its rate of evolution was significantly lower. This is reminiscent of the slower evolution of palindrome arms in the male specific regions of the Y chromosome and we propose, as an explanation, that intrachromosomal gene conversion and cosegregation of the duplicated regions favors retention of the ancestral sequence and thus reduces the evolution rate.
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Our understanding of the evolution of microbial pathogens has been advanced by the discovery of "islands" of DNA that differ from core genomes and contain determinants of virulence [1, 2]. The acquisition of genomic islands (GIs) by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is thought to have played a major role in microbial evolution. There are, however, few practical demonstrations of the acquisition of genes that control virulence, and, significantly, all have been achieved outside the animal or plant host. Loss of a GI from the bean pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola (Pph) is driven by exposure to the stress imposed by the plant's resistance response [3]. Here, we show that the complete episomal island, which carries pathogenicity genes including the effector avrPphB, transfers between strains of Pph by transformation in planta and inserts at a specific att site in the genome of the recipient. Our results show that the evolution of bacterial pathogens by HGT may be achieved via transformation, the simplest mechanism of DNA exchange. This process is activated by exposure to plant defenses, when the pathogen is in greatest need of acquiring new genetic traits to alleviate the antimicrobial stress imposed by plant innate immunity [4].
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Although genome sequencing of microbial pathogens has shed light on the evolution of virulence, the drivers of the gain and loss of genes and of pathogenicity islands (gene clusters), which contribute to the emergence of new disease outbreaks, are unclear. Recent experiments with the bean pathogen Pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola illustrate how exposure to resistance mechanisms acts as the driving force for genome reorganization. Here we argue that the antimicrobial conditions generated by host defences can accelerate the generation of genome rearrangements that provide selective advantages to the invading microbe. Similar exposure to environmental stress outside the host could also drive the horizontal gene transfer that has led to the evolution of pathogenicity towards both animals and plants.
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Avian genomes are small and streamlined compared with those of other amniotes by virtue of having fewer repetitive elements and less non-coding DNA(1,2). This condition has been suggested to represent a key adaptation for flight in birds, by reducing the metabolic costs associated with having large genome and cell sizes(3,4). However, the evolution of genome architecture in birds, or any other lineage, is difficult to study because genomic information is often absent for long-extinct relatives. Here we use a novel bayesian comparative method to show that bone-cell size correlates well with genome size in extant vertebrates, and hence use this relationship to estimate the genome sizes of 31 species of extinct dinosaur, including several species of extinct birds. Our results indicate that the small genomes typically associated with avian flight evolved in the saurischian dinosaur lineage between 230 and 250 million years ago, long before this lineage gave rise to the first birds. By comparison, ornithischian dinosaurs are inferred to have had much larger genomes, which were probably typical for ancestral Dinosauria. Using comparative genomic data, we estimate that genome-wide interspersed mobile elements, a class of repetitive DNA, comprised 5 - 12% of the total genome size in the saurischian dinosaur lineage, but was 7 - 19% of total genome size in ornithischian dinosaurs, suggesting that repetitive elements became less active in the saurischian lineage. These genomic characteristics should be added to the list of attributes previously considered avian but now thought to have arisen in non-avian dinosaurs, such as feathers(5), pulmonary innovations 6, and parental care and nesting
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Micromorphological characters of the fruiting bodies, such as ascus-type and hymenial amyloidity, and secondary chemistry have been widely employed as key characters in Ascomycota classification. However, the evolution of these characters has yet not been studied using molecular phylogenies. We have used a combined Bayesian and maximum likelihood based approach to trace character evolution on a tree inferred from a combined analysis of nuclear and mitochondrial ribosomal DNA sequences. The maximum likelihood aspect overcomes simplifications inherent in maximum parsimony methods, whereas the Markov chain Monte Carlo aspect renders results independent of any particular phylogenetic tree. The results indicate that the evolution of the two chemical characters is quite different, being stable once developed for the medullary lecanoric acid, whereas the cortical chlorinated xanthones appear to have been lost several times. The current ascus-types and the amyloidity of the hymenial gel in Pertusariaceae appear to have been developed within the family. The basal ascus-type of pertusarialean fungi remains unknown. (c) 2006 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2006, 89, 615-626.
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A number of strategies are emerging for the high throughput (HTP) expression of recombinant proteins to enable structural and functional study. Here we describe a workable HTP strategy based on parallel protein expression in E. coli and insect cells. Using this system we provide comparative expression data for five proteins derived from the Autographa californica polyhedrosis virus genome that vary in amino acid composition and in molecular weight. Although the proteins are part of a set of factors known to be required for viral late gene expression, the precise function of three of the five, late expression factors (lefs) 6, 7 and 10, is unknown. Rapid expression and characterisation has allowed the determination of their ability to bind DNA and shown a cellular location consistent with their properties. Our data point to the utility of a parallel expression strategy to rapidly obtain workable protein expression levels from many open reading frames (ORFs).
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The immense social and economic impact of bacterial pathogens, from drug-resistant infections in hospitals to the devastation of agricultural resources, has resulted in major investment to understand the causes and conse- quences of pathogen evolution. Recent genome se- quencing projects have provided insight into the evolution of bacterial genome structures; revealing the impact of mobile DNA on genome restructuring and pathogenicity. Sequencing of multiple genomes of relat- ed strains has enabled the delineation of pathogen evo- lution and facilitated the tracking of bacterial pathogens globally. Other recent theoretical and empirical studies have shown that pathogen evolution is significantly influenced by ecological factors, such as the distribution of hosts within the environment and the effects of co- infection. We suggest that the time is ripe for experi- mentalists to use genomics in conjunction with evolu- tionary ecology experiments to further understanding of how bacterial pathogens evolve.
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The nuclear Dbf2-related protein kinases 1 and 2 (NDR1/2) are closely-related AGC family kinases that are strongly conserved through evolution. In mammals, they are activated inter alia by phosphorylation of an hydrophobic domain threonine-residue [NDR1(Thr-444)/NDR2(Thr-442)] by an extrinsic protein kinase followed by autophosphorylation of a catalytic domain serine-residue [NDR1(Ser-281)/NDR2(Ser-282)]. We examined NDR1/2 expression and regulation in primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes and in perfused adult rat hearts. In myocytes, transcripts for NDR2, but not NDR1, were induced by the hypertrophic agonist, endothelin-1. NDR1(Thr-444) and NDR2(Thr-442) were rapidly phosphorylated (maximal in 15-30 min) in myocytes exposed to some phosphoprotein Ser-/Thr-phosphatase 1/2 inhibitors (calyculin A, okadaic acid) and, to a lesser extent, by hyperosmotic shock, low concentrations of H(2)O(2), or chelerythrine. In myocytes adenovirally-transduced to express FLAG-NDR2 (which exhibited a mainly-cytoplasmic localisation), the same agents increased FLAG-NDR2 activity as assessed by in vitro protein kinase assays, indicative of FLAG-NDR2(Ser-282/Thr-442) phosphorylation. Calyculin A-induced phosphorylation of NDR1(Thr-444)/NDR2(Thr-442) and activation of FLAG-NDR2 were inhibited by staurosporine, but not by other protein kinase inhibitors tested. In ex vivo rat hearts, NDR1(Thr-444)/NDR2(Thr-442) were phosphorylated in response to ischaemia-reperfusion or calyculin A. From a pathological viewpoint, we conclude that activities of NDR1 and NDR2 are responsive to cytotoxic stresses in heart preparations and this may represent a previously-unidentified response to myocardial ischaemia in vivo.
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Latin had no word for "strategy", but the East Romans, whom we call the Byzantines, did. This book tracks the evolution of the concept of warfare being subjected to higher political aims from Antiquity to the Present, using Greek, Latin, French, Spanish, Italian, English and German sources. It tracks the rise, fall, and resurrection of the belief in the Roman and later the medieval and early modern world that warfare was only legitimate if it pursued the higher goal of a just peace, which in the 19th century gave way to a blinkered concentration on military victory as only war aim. It explains why one school of thought, from Antiquity to the present, emphasised eternal principles of warfare, while others emphasised, in Clausewitz's term, the "changing character of war". It tracks ideas from land warfare to naval warfare to air power and nuclear thinking, but it also stresses great leaps and discontinuities in thinking about strategy. It covers asymmetric wars both from the point of view of the weaker power seeking to overthrow a stronger power, and from the stronger power dealing with insurgents and other numerically inferior forces. It concludes with a commentary of the long-known problems of bureaucratic politics, non-centralised command and inter-service rivalry, which since the 16th century or earlier has created obstacles to coherent strategy making.
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Background Polygalacturonase-inhibiting proteins (PGIPs) are leucine-rich repeat (LRR) plant cell wall glycoproteins involved in plant immunity. They are typically encoded by gene families with a small number of gene copies whose evolutionary origin has been poorly investigated. Here we report the complete characterization of the full complement of the pgip family in soybean (Glycine max [L.] Merr.) and the characterization of the genomic region surrounding the pgip family in four legume species. Results BAC clone and genome sequence analyses showed that the soybean genome contains two pgip loci. Each locus is composed of three clustered genes that are induced following infection with the fungal pathogen Sclerotinia sclerotiorum (Lib.) de Bary, and remnant sequences of pgip genes. The analyzed homeologous soybean genomic regions (about 126 Kb) that include the pgip loci are strongly conserved and this conservation extends also to the genomes of the legume species Phaseolus vulgaris L., Medicago truncatula Gaertn. and Cicer arietinum L., each containing a single pgip locus. Maximum likelihood-based gene trees suggest that the genes within the pgip clusters have independently undergone tandem duplication in each species. Conclusions The paleopolyploid soybean genome contains two pgip loci comprised in large and highly conserved duplicated regions, which are also conserved in bean, M. truncatula and C. arietinum. The genomic features of these legume pgip families suggest that the forces driving the evolution of pgip genes follow the birth-and-death model, similar to that proposed for the evolution of resistance (R) genes of NBS-LRR-type.
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Horizontal gene transfer is an important driver of bacterial evolution, but genetic exchange in the core genome of clonal species, including the major pathogen Staphylococcus aureus, is incompletely understood. Here we reveal widespread homologous recombination in S. aureus at the species level, in contrast to its near-complete absence between closely related strains. We discover a patchwork of hotspots and coldspots at fine scales falling against a backdrop of broad-scale trends in rate variation. Over megabases, homoplasy rates fluctuate 1.9-fold, peaking towards the origin-of-replication. Over kilobases, we find core recombination hotspots of up to 2.5-fold enrichment situated near fault lines in the genome associated with mobile elements. The strongest hotspots include regions flanking conjugative transposon ICE6013, the staphylococcal cassette chromosome (SCC) and genomic island νSaα. Mobile element-driven core genome transfer represents an opportunity for adaptation and challenges our understanding of the recombination landscape in predominantly clonal pathogens, with important implications for genotype–phenotype mapping.
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Multiple subclonal populations of tumor cells can coexist within the same tumor. This intra-tumor heterogeneity will have clinical implications and it is therefore important to identify factors that drive or suppress such heterogeneous tumor progression. Evolutionary biology can provide important insights into this process. In particular, experimental evolution studies of microbial populations, which exist as clonal populations that can diversify into multiple subclones, have revealed important evolutionary processes driving heterogeneity within a population. There are transferrable lessons that can be learnt from these studies that will help us to understand the process of intra-tumor heterogeneity in the clinical setting. In this review, we summarize drivers of microbial diversity that have been identified, such as mutation rate and environmental influences, and discuss how knowledge gained from microbial experimental evolution studies may guide us to identify and understand important selective factors that promote intra-tumor heterogeneity. Furthermore, we discuss how these factors could be used to direct and optimize research efforts to improve patient care, focusing on therapeutic resistance. Finally, we emphasize the need for longitudinal studies to address the impact of these potential tumor heterogeneity-promoting factors on drug resistance, metastatic potential and clinical outcome.
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Background: Concerted evolution is normally used to describe parallel changes at different sites in a genome, but it is also observed in languages where a specific phoneme changes to the same other phoneme in many words in the lexicon—a phenomenon known as regular sound change. We develop a general statistical model that can detect concerted changes in aligned sequence data and apply it to study regular sound changes in the Turkic language family. Results: Linguistic evolution, unlike the genetic substitutional process, is dominated by events of concerted evolutionary change. Our model identified more than 70 historical events of regular sound change that occurred throughout the evolution of the Turkic language family, while simultaneously inferring a dated phylogenetic tree. Including regular sound changes yielded an approximately 4-fold improvement in the characterization of linguistic change over a simpler model of sporadic change, improved phylogenetic inference, and returned more reliable and plausible dates for events on the phylogenies. The historical timings of the concerted changes closely follow a Poisson process model, and the sound transition networks derived from our model mirror linguistic expectations. Conclusions: We demonstrate that a model with no prior knowledge of complex concerted or regular changes can nevertheless infer the historical timings and genealogical placements of events of concerted change from the signals left in contemporary data. Our model can be applied wherever discrete elements—such as genes, words, cultural trends, technologies, or morphological traits—can change in parallel within an organism or other evolving group.