9 research outputs found

    Colombo South Teaching Hospital, Kalubowila. Corresponding author:

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    A fourteen year old girl presented to us with persistent left hypochondrial and left loin pain for several months, associated with loss of weight and dyspeptic symptoms. Physical examination did no

    Dynamic genomic architecture of mutualistic cooperation in a wild population of Mesorhizobium

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    Research on mutualism seeks to explain how cooperation can be maintained when uncooperative mutants co-occur with cooperative kin. Gains and losses of the gene modules required for cooperation punctuate symbiont phylogenies and drive lifestyle transitions between cooperative symbionts and uncooperative free-living lineages over evolutionary time. Yet whether uncooperative symbionts commonly evolve from within cooperative symbiont populations or from within distantly related lineages with antagonistic or free-living lifestyles (i.e., third-party mutualism exploiters or parasites), remains controversial. We use genomic data to show that genotypes that differ in the presence or absence of large islands of symbiosis genes are common within a single wild recombining population of Mesorhizobium symbionts isolated from host tissues and are an important source of standing heritable variation in cooperation in this population. In a focal population of Mesorhizobium , uncooperative variants that lack a symbiosis island segregate at 16% frequency in nodules, and genome size and symbiosis gene number are positively correlated with cooperation. This finding contrasts with the genomic architecture of variation in cooperation in other symbiont populations isolated from host tissues in which the islands of genes underlying cooperation are ubiquitous and variation in cooperation is primarily driven by allelic substitution and individual gene gain and loss events. Our study demonstrates that uncooperative mutants within mutualist populations can comprise a significant component of genetic variation in nature, providing biological rationale for models and experiments that seek to explain the maintenance of mutualism in the face of non-cooperators

    The family Phyllobacteriaceae

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    Opportunities for improved legume inoculants: enhanced stress tolerance of rhizobia and benefits to agroecosystems

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    A systematic review on global pollution status of particulate matter-associated potential toxic elements and health perspectives in urban environment

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    Root-Nodule Bacteria of Legumes Growing in Semi-Arid African Soils and Other Areas of the World

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