Κυριακή 26 Ιουλίου 2020


Differences in developmental potential predict the contrasting patterns of dental diversification in characiform and cypriniform fishes [NEW RESULTS]
Morphological diversification during adaptive radiation may depend on factors external or internal to the lineage. We provide evidence for the latter in characiform fishes (tetras and piranhas), which exhibit extensive dental diversity. Phylogenetic character mapping supported regain of lost teeth as contributing to this diversity. To test for latent potential for dentition that would facilitate its evolutionary expansion, we overexpressed a tooth initiation signal, the tumor necrosis factor pathway...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Sex-specific responses to cold in a very cold-tolerant, northern Drosophila species [NEW RESULTS]
Organisms can plastically alter resource allocation in response to changing environmental factors. For example, in harsh conditions organisms are expected to shift investment from reproduction towards survival, however, the factors and mechanisms that govern the magnitude of such shifts are relatively poorly studied. Here we compared the impact of cold on males and females of the highly cold-tolerant species Drosophila montana at the phenotypic and transcriptomic levels. Although both sexes showed...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Ribosomal proteins could explain the phylogeny of Bacillus species [NEW RESULTS]
Protein translation is a highly conserved process in biology. As participants of translation, ribosomal proteins in the large and small subunits of the ribosomes are likely to be highly conserved; thus, could they be endowed with sufficient sequence diversity to chronicle the evolutionary history of different species in the same or different genus? Using different Bacillus species as a model system, this study sought to examine if ribosomal proteins could reproduce the maximum likelihood phylogeny...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
A mitochondrial mutational signature of temperature and longevity in ectothermic and endothermic vertebrates. [NEW RESULTS]
Mitochondrial mutational signature is very conserved and low deviations between species have been associated with longevity. By reconstructing species-specific mtDNA mutational spectrum for ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii), we observed that temperature is a strong additional factor shaping the mtDNA mutational spectrum in ectotherms. The analysis of mammalian endotherms, with a special focus on species with temporarily or permanently low metabolic rates (hibernators, daily torpors, naked mole rat,...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Optimal inaccuracy: estimating male fitness in the movement-assisted dichogamous species Clerodendrum infortunatum [NEW RESULTS]
Dichogamy, where sporophylls (reproductive parts) are separated in time, could have evolved in hermaphroditic species to reduce the cost of sexual interference. However, the separation of sporophylls can lead to pollination inaccuracy, especially in movement-assisted dichogamy, where sporophylls alter their position over time. Is pollination inaccuracy minimised by the second sporophyll taking the exact position of the first? Are the sporophylls optimally positioned and stable in their respective...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Multi-site co-mutations and 5UTR CpG immunity escape drive the evolution of SARS-CoV-2 [NEW RESULTS]
The SARS-CoV-2 infected cases and the caused mortalities have been surging since the COVID-19 pandemic. Viral mutations emerge during the virus circulating in the population, which is shaping the viral infectivity and pathogenicity. Here we extensively analyzed 6698 SARS-CoV-2 whole genome sequences with specific sample collection dates in NCBI database. We found that four mutations, i.e., 5UTR_c-241-t, NSP3_c-3037-t, NSP12_c-14408-t, and S_a-23403-g, became the dominant variants and each of them...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Top-down engineering of complex communities by directed evolution [NEW RESULTS]
Directed evolution has been used for decades to engineer biological systems from the top-down. Generally, it has been applied at or below the organismal level, by iteratively sampling the mutational landscape in a guided search for genetic variants of higher function. Above the organismal level, a small number of studies have attempted to artificially select microbial communities and ecosystems, with uneven and generally modest success. Our theoretical understanding of artificial ecosystem selection...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
How important is CRISPR-Cas for protecting natural populations of bacteria against infections by mobile genetic elements?? [NEW RESULTS]
Articles on CRISPR commonly open with some variant of the phrase these short-palindromic repeats and their associated endonucleases (Cas) are an adaptive immune system that exists to protect bacteria and archaea from viruses and infections with other mobile genetic elements. There is an abundance of genomic data consistent with the hypothesis that CRISPR plays this role in natural populations of bacteria and archaea, and experimental demonstrations with a few species of bacteria and their phage and...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
The developmental and genetic architecture of the sexually selected male ornament of swordtails [NEW RESULTS]
Sexual selection results in sex-specific characters like the conspicuously pigmented extension of the ventral tip of the caudal fin - the sword - in males of several species of Xiphophorus fishes. To uncover the genetic architecture underlying sword formation and to identify genes that are associated with its development, we characterized the sword transcriptional profile and combined it with genetic mapping approaches. Results showed that the male ornament of swordtails develops from a sexually...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
Balancing selection maintains ancient genetic diversity in C. elegans [NEW RESULTS]
The mating system of a species profoundly influences its evolutionary trajectory. Across diverse taxa, selfing species have evolved independently from outcrossing species thousands of times. The transition from outcrossing to selfing significantly decreases the effective population size, effective recombination rate, and heterozygosity within a species. These changes lead to a reduction in the genetic diversity, and therefore adaptive potential, by intensifying the effects of random genetic drift...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
Adaptive divergence of meiotic recombination rate in ecological speciation [NEW RESULTS]
Theories predict that directional selection during adaptation to a novel habitat results in elevated meiotic recombination rate. Yet the lack of population-level recombination rate data leaves this hypothesis untested in natural populations. Here we examine the population-level recombination rate variation in two incipient ecological species, the microcrustacean Daphnia pulex (an ephemeral-pond species) and D. pulicaria (a permanent-lake species). The divergence of D. pulicaria from D. pulex involved...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
Spotting genome-wide pigmentation variation in a brown trout admixture context [NEW RESULTS]
Colour and pigmentation variation attracted fish biologists for a while, but high-throughput genomic studies investigating the molecular basis of body pigmentation remain still limited to few species and conservation biology issues ignored. Using 75,684 SNPs, we investigated the genomic basis of pigmentation pattern variation among individuals of the Atlantic and Mediterranean clades of the brown trout (Salmo trutta), a polytypic species in which Atlantic hatchery individuals are commonly used to...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
The adaptive function of sexual reproduction: resampling the genotype pool [NEW RESULTS]
Recombination allows a finite population to resample the genotype pool, i.e., the universe of all possible genotypic combinations. This is important in populations that contain abundant genetic variation because, in such populations, the number of potential genotypes is much larger than the number of individuals in the population. Here, we show how recombination, in combination with natural selection, enables an evolving sexual population to replace existing genotypes with new, higher-fitness genotypic...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
The complex genomic basis of rapid convergent adaptation to pesticides across continents in a fungal plant pathogen [NEW RESULTS]
Convergent evolution leads to identical phenotypic traits in different species or populations. Convergence can be driven by standing variation allowing selection to favor identical alleles in parallel or the same mutations can arise independently. However, the molecular basis of such convergent adaptation remains often poorly resolved. Pesticide resistance in agricultural ecosystems is a hallmark of convergence in phenotypic traits. Here, we analyze the major fungal pathogen Zymoseptoria tritici...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
The developmental and genetic architecture of the sexually selected male ornament of swordtails [NEW RESULTS]
Sexual selection results in sex-specific characters like the conspicuously pigmented extension of the ventral tip of the caudal fin - the sword - in males of several species of Xiphophorus fishes. To uncover the genetic architecture underlying sword formation and to identify genes that are associated with its development, we characterized the sword transcriptional profile and combined it with genetic mapping approaches. Results showed that the male ornament of swordtails develops from a sexually...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
Top-down engineering of complex communities by directed evolution [NEW RESULTS]
Directed evolution has been used for decades to engineer biological systems from the top-down. Generally, it has been applied at or below the organismal level, by iteratively sampling the mutational landscape in a guided search for genetic variants of higher function. Above the organismal level, a small number of studies have attempted to artificially select microbial communities and ecosystems, with uneven and generally modest success. Our theoretical understanding of artificial ecosystem selection...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
DLX5/6 GABAergic expression affects social vocalization: implications for human evolution [NEW RESULTS]
DLX5 and DLX6 are two closely related transcription factors involved in brain development and in GABAergic differentiation. The DLX5/6 locus is regulated by FoxP2, a gene involved in language evolution and has been associated to neurodevelopmental disorders and mental retardation. Targeted inactivation of Dlx5/6 in mouse GABAergic neurons (Dlx5/6VgatCre mice) results in behavioral and metabolic phenotypes notably increasing lifespan by 33%. Here, we show that Dlx5/6VgatCre mice present an hyper-vocalization...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
Heterogeneous genetic basis of age at maturity in salmonid fishes [NEW RESULTS]
Understanding the genetic basis of repeated evolution of the same phenotype across taxa is a fundamental aim in evolutionary biology and has applications to conservation and management. However, the extent to which interspecific life-history trait polymorphisms share evolutionary pathways remains under-explored. We address this gap by studying the genetic basis of a key life-history trait, age at maturity, in four species of Pacific salmon (genus Oncorhynchus) that exhibit intra- and interspecific...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Fri Jul 24, 2020 03:00
Shape Dimensionality Metrics for Landmark Data [NEW RESULTS]
The study of modularity in geometric morphometric landmark data has focused attention on an underlying question, that of whole-shape modularity, or the pattern and strength of covariation among all landmarks. Measuring whole-shape modularity allows measurement of the dimensionality of the shape, but current methods used to measure this dimensionality are limited in application. This paper proposes a metric for measuring the "effective dimensionality", De, of geometric morphometric landmark data based...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Balancing selection maintains ancient genetic diversity in C. elegans [NEW RESULTS]
Summary paragraphThe mating system of a species profoundly influences its evolutionary trajectory1-3. Across diverse taxa, selfing species have evolved independently from outcrossing species thousands of times4. The transition from outcrossing to selfing significantly decreases the effective population size, effective recombination rate, and heterozygosity within a species5. These changes lead to a reduction in the genetic diversity, and therefore adaptive potential, by intensifying the effects of...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Inferring the genetic basis of sex determination from the genome of a dioecious nightshade [NEW RESULTS]
Dissecting the genetic mechanisms underlying dioecy (i.e. separate female and male individuals) is critical for understanding the evolution of this pervasive reproductive strategy. Nonetheless, the genetic basis of sex determination remains unclear in many cases, especially in systems where dioecy has arisen recently. Within the economically important plant genus Solanum ([~]2000 species), dioecy is thought to have evolved independently at least 4 times across roughly 20 species. Here, we generate...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Transmission efficiency drives host-microbe associations [NEW RESULTS]
Sequencing technologies have fueled a rapid rise in descriptions of microbial communities associated with hosts, but what is often harder to ascertain is their evolutionary significance. Here we review the existing literature on the role of vertical (VT), horizontal (HT), environmental acquisition, and mixed modes (MMT) of transmission for establishing animal host-microbe associations. We then modelled four properties of gut microbiota proposed as key to promoting animal host-microbe relationships:...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Fri Jul 24, 2020 03:00
The essential role of Dnmt1 in gametogenesis in the large milkweed bug Oncopeltus fasciatus [NEW RESULTS]
While DNA methylation is an important chromatin modification in many groups of organisms, the function of DNA methylation within the insects is unclear. The taxonomic distribution of DNA methyltransferase genes in insects is highly variable, as is the presence of methylated genomes. In the large milkweed bug, Oncopeltus fasciatus, we have shown the maintenance methyltransferase Dnmt1 is required for oocyte production but this appears to be unrelated to methylation given that demethylating somatic...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Introgression, hominin dispersal and megafaunal survival in Late Pleistocene Island Southeast Asia [NEW RESULTS]
The hominin fossil record of Island Southeast Asia (ISEA) indicates that at least two endemic super-archaic species - Homo luzonensis and H. floresiensis - were present around the time anatomically modern humans (AMH) arrived in the region >50,000 years ago. Contemporary human populations carry signals consistent with interbreeding events with Denisovans in ISEA - a species that is thought to be more closely related to AMH than the super-archaic endemic ISEA hominins. To query this disparity...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
Developing a transcriptomic framework for testing testosterone-mediated handicap hypotheses [NEW RESULTS]
Sexually selected traits are hypothesized to be honest signals of individual quality due to the costs associated with their maintenance, development, and/or production. Testosterone, a sex steroid associated with the development and/or production of sexually selected traits, has been proposed to enforce the honesty of sexually selected traits via its immunosuppressive effects (i.e., the Immunocompetence Handicap Hypothesis) and/or by influencing an individuals exposure/susceptibility to oxidative...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Fri Jul 24, 2020 03:00
Signatures of optimal codon usage predict metabolic ecology in budding yeasts [NEW RESULTS]
Reverse ecology is the inference of ecological information from patterns of genomic variation. One rich, heretofore underutilized, source of ecologically-relevant genomic information is codon optimality or adaptation. Bias toward codons that match the tRNA pool is robustly associated with high gene expression in diverse organisms, suggesting that codon optimization could be used in a reverse ecology framework to identify highly expressed, ecologically relevant genes. To test this hypothesis, we examined...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sun Jul 26, 2020 03:00
The genetic architecture of the sexually selected sword ornament and its evolution in hybrid populations [NEW RESULTS]
Biologists since Darwin have been fascinated by the evolution of sexually selected ornaments, particularly those that reduce viability. Uncovering the genetic architecture of these traits is key to understanding how they evolve and are maintained. Here, we investigate the genetic architecture of a sexually selected ornament, the "sword" fin extension that characterizes many species of swordtail fish (Xiphophorus). Using sworded and swordless sister species of Xiphophorus, we generated a mapping population...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
Pure species discriminate against hybrids in the Drosophila melanogaster species subgroup [NEW RESULTS]
Introgression, the exchange of alleles between species, is a common event in nature. This transfer of alleles between species must happen through fertile hybrids. Characterizing the traits that cause defects in hybrids illuminate how and when gene flow is expected to occur. Inviability and sterility are extreme examples of fitness reductions but are not the only type of defects in hybrids. Some traits specific to hybrids are more subtle but are important to determine their fitness. In this report,...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Thu Jul 23, 2020 03:00
Primate innate immune responses to bacterial and viral pathogens reveals an evolutionary trade-off between strength and specificity [NEW RESULTS]
Despite their close genetic relatedness, apes and African and Asian monkeys (AAMs), strongly differ in their susceptibility to severe bacterial and viral infections that are important causes of human disease. Such differences between humans and other primates are thought to be a result, at least in part, of inter-species differences in immune response to infection. However, due to the lack of comparative functional data across species, it remains unclear in what ways the immune systems of humans...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00
Wing musculature reconstruction in extinct flightless auks (Pinguinus and Mancalla) reveals incomplete convergence with penguins (Spheniscidae) due to differing ancestral states [NEW RESULTS]
Despite longstanding interest in convergent evolution, factors that result in deviations from fully convergent phenotypes remain poorly understood. In birds, the evolution of flightless wing-propelled diving has emerged as a classic example of convergence, having arisen in disparate lineages including penguins (Sphenisciformes) and auks (Pan-Alcidae, Charadriiformes). Nevertheless, little is known about the functional anatomy of the wings of flightless auks because all such taxa are extinct, and...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Sat Jul 25, 2020 03:00

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