336 research outputs found

    BadiRate Software

    Get PDF
    Podeu consultar l'article relacionat a: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/53350Podeu consultar la pàgina de desenvolupament del programari: http://www.ub.edu/softevol/badirate/BadiRate is a software package to estimate, within a phylogenetic context and by likelihood-based methods (or parsimony): (1) the gain, birth, death and innovation family turnover rates (2) most likely number of family members in internal nodes (3) families with turnover rates higher or lower than that estimated for the whole dat

    Comment on 'The Molecular Evolutionary Patterns of the Insulin/FOXO Signaling Pathway'

    Get PDF
    Letter to the Editor on Wang M, Wang Q, Wang Z, Zhang X, Pan Y. The molecular evolutionary patterns of the insulin/FOXO signaling pathwa

    Análisis de la variabilidad a nivel nucleotídico de la región rp49 en Drosophila subobscura

    Get PDF
    [spa] Se ha analizado la variabilidad existente en una región de 1.6 KB. que incluye al locus RP49 (Ribosome Protein 49) en distintas ordenaciones cromosómicas de Drosophila subobscura. El estudio se ha efectuado mediante comparación de mapas de restricción según la técnica "Four-Cutter Analysis". Se han estudiado las siguientes poblaciones naturales: Barcelona (49 líneas), Ter Apel -Holanda- (58 líneas), Tenerife (54 líneas) y Santiago de Chile (54 líneas). Tras el análisis de los mapas de restricción se han detectado un total de 19 polimorfismos por substitución nucleotídica y 8 por inserción/deleción y un total de 96 haplotipos. La heterozigosidad por nucleótido fue de 0.0045 en las poblaciones europeas, de 0.0028 en la población de Tenerife y de 0.0056 en la población de Santiago de Chile. Las principales conclusiones del trabajo han sido: 1) No existencia de heterogeneidad entre las dos poblaciones europeas para ninguna de las 3 ordenaciones cromosómicas que se consideraron (OST' 03+4 Y 03+4+8). 2) Existencia de un importante intercambio genético entre distintas ordenaciones cromosómicas. 3) Mayor antigüedad de la ordenación cromosómica 03+4 respecto a la de la ordenación OST. 4) Gran diferenciación genética de la población de Tenerife respecto a las poblaciones europeas. 5) Gran reducción del número de haplotipos en la población de Santiago de Chile. 6) Evidencia de que los haplotipos de la región RP49 que se hallan en la actualidad en Santiago de Chile son descendientes por réplica de únicamente 6 a 8 cromosomas

    Comparative genomics reveals thousands of novel chemosensory genes and massive changes in chemoreceptor repertories across chelicerates

    Get PDF
    Chemoreception is a widespread biological function that is essential for the survival, reproduction, and social communication of animals. Though the molecular mechanisms underlying chemoreception are relatively well known in insects, they are poorly studied in the other major arthropod lineages. Current availability of a number of chelicerate genomes constitutes a great opportunity to better characterize gene families involved in this important function in a lineage that emerged and colonized land independently of insects. At the same time, that offers new opportunities and challenges for the study of this interesting animal branch in many translational research areas. Here, we have performed a comprehensive comparative genomics study that explicitly considers the high fragmentation of available draft genomes and that for the first time included complete genome data that cover most of the chelicerate diversity. Our exhaustive searches exposed thousands of previously uncharacterized chemosensory sequences, most of them encoding members of the gustatory and ionotropic receptor families. The phylogenetic and gene turnover analyses of these sequences indicated that the whole-genome duplication events proposed for this subphylum would not explain the differences in the number of chemoreceptors observed across species. A constant and prolonged gene birth and death process, altered by episodic bursts of gene duplication yielding lineage-specific expansions, has contributed significantly to the extant chemosensory diversity in this group of animals. This study also provides valuable insights into the origin and functional diversification of other relevant chemosensory gene families different from receptors, such as odorant-binding proteins and other related molecules

    Bioinformática y evolución molecular

    Get PDF
    Aunque la bioinformática y la evolución molecular pueden parecer disciplinas científicas muy heterogéneas, comparten gran parte de sus intereses y fundamentos, concretamente, el mismo interés por el estudio y análisis de secuencias de DNA y proteínas; no sólo eso: estos estudios son el núcleo central de ambas disciplina

    VariScan Software

    Get PDF
    Linux / Mac OS X : The package includes executables for linux (variscan) and Mac OS X (variscan). For other Unix-based platforms you will have to compile it from the source files included in the VariScan package. Windows: The package includes (src directory), the source code, the project (variscan.dev) and makefile (variscan.win) files to be used, for instance, for the Dev-C++ (a free Integrated Development Environment for the C/C++ programming language)Podeu consultar l'article relacionat a: http://hdl.handle.net/2445/7384Podeu consultar la pàgina de desenvolupament del programari: http://www.ub.edu/softevol/VariScan is a software package for the analysis of DNA sequence polymorphisms at the whole genome scale. Among other features, the software: (1) can conduct many population genetic analyses; (2) incorporates a multiresolution wavelet transform-based method that allows capturing relevant information from DNA polymorphism data; and (3) it facilitates the visualization of the results in the most commonly used genome browsers

    Molecular genetics of naringenin biosynthesis, a typical plant secondary metabolite produced by Streptomyces clavuligerus

    Full text link
    Background: Some types of flavonoid intermediates seemed to be restricted to plants. Naringenin is a typical plant metabolite, that has never been reported to be produced in prokariotes. Naringenin is formed by the action of a chalcone synthase using as starter 4-coumaroyl-CoA, which in dicotyledonous plants derives from phenylalanine by the action of a phenylalanine ammonia lyase. Results: A compound produced by Streptomyces clavuligerus has been identified by LC-MS and NMR as naringenin and coelutes in HPLC with a naringenin standard. Genome mining of S. clavuligerus revealed the presence of a gene for a chalcone synthase (ncs), side by side to a gene encoding a P450 cytochrome (ncyP) and separated from a gene encoding a Pal/Tal ammonia lyase (tal). Deletion of any of these genes results in naringenin non producer mutants. Complementation with the deleted gene restores naringenin production in the transformants. Furthermore, naringenin production increases in cultures supplemented with phenylalanine or tyrosine. Conclusion: This is the first time that naringenin is reported to be produced naturally in a prokariote. Interestingly three non-clustered genes are involved in naringenin production, which is unusual for secondary metabolites. A tentative pathway for naringenin biosynthesis has been proposedThis work was supported by Grant BIO2012-34723 from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitivity. R. Álvarez-Álvarez received a FPU fellowship from the Spanish Ministry of Education, Culture and Sport

    Mycobacterial Phylogenomics: An Enhanced Method for Gene Turnover Analysis Reveals Uneven Levels of Gene Gain and Loss among Species and Gene Families

    Get PDF
    Species of the genus Mycobacterium differ in several features, from geographic ranges, and degree of pathogenicity, to ecological and host preferences. The recent availability of several fully sequenced genomes for a number of these species enabled the comparative study of the genetic determinants of this wide lifestyle diversity. Here, we applied two complementary phylogenetic-based approaches using information from 19 Mycobacterium genomes to obtain a more comprehensive view of the evolution of this genus. First, we inferred the phylogenetic relationships using two new approaches, one based on a Mycobacterium-specific amino acid substitution matrix and the other on a gene content dissimilarity matrix. Then, we utilized our recently developed gain-and-death stochastic models to study gene turnover dynamics in this genus in a maximum-likelihood framework. We uncovered a scenario that differs markedly from traditional 16S rRNA data and improves upon recent phylogenomic approaches. We also found that the rates of gene gain and death are high and unevenly distributed both across species and across gene families, further supporting the utility of the new models of rate heterogeneity applied in a phylogenetic context. Finally, the functional annotation of the most expanded or contracted gene families revealed that the transposable elements and the fatty acid metabolism-related gene families are the most important drivers of gene content evolution in Mycobacterium

    TRUFA: A user-friendly web server for de novo RNA-seq analysis using cluster computing.

    Get PDF
    Application of next-generation sequencing (NGS) methods for transcriptome analysis (RNA-seq) has become increasingly accessible in recent years and are of great interest to many biological disciplines including, eg, evolutionary biology, ecology, biomedicine, and computational biology. Although virtually any research group can now obtain RNA-seq data, only a few have the bioinformatics knowledge and computation facilities required for transcriptome analysis. Here, we present TRUFA (TRanscriptome User-Friendly Analysis), an open informatics platform offering a web-based interface that generates the outputs commonly used in de novo RNA-seq analysis and comparative transcriptomics. TRUFA provides a comprehensive service that allows performing dynamically raw read cleaning, transcript assembly, annotation, and expression quantification. Due to the computationally intensive nature of such analyses, TRUFA is highly parallelized and benefits from accessing high-performance computing resources. The complete TRUFA pipeline was validated using four previously published transcriptomic data sets. TRUFA's results for the example datasets showed globally similar results when comparing with the original studies, and performed particularly better when analyzing the green tea dataset. The platform permits analyzing RNA-seq data in a fast, robust, and user-friendly manner. Accounts on TRUFA are provided freely upon request at https://trufa.ifca.es
    corecore