5 research outputs found

    Population Analysis of <i>Diospyros lotus</i> in the Northwestern Caucasus Based on Leaf Morphology and Multilocus DNA Markers

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    Diospyros lotus is the one of the most frost-tolerant species in the Diospyros genera, used as a rootstock for colder regions. Natural populations of D. lotus have a fragmented character of distribution in the Northwestern Caucasus, one of the coldest regions of Diospyros cultivation. To predict the behavior of D. lotus populations in an extreme environment, it is necessary to investigate the intraspecific genetic diversity and phenotypic variability of populations in the colder regions. In this study, we analyzed five geographically distant populations of D. lotus according to 33 morphological leaf traits, and the most informative traits were established, namely, leaf length, leaf width, leaf index (leaf to length ratio) and the length of the fourth veins. Additionally, we evaluated the intraspecific genetic diversity of D. lotus using ISSR and SCoT markers and proposed a new parameter for the evaluation of genetic polymorphism among populations, in order to eliminate the effect of sample number. This new parameter is the relative genetic polymorphism, which is the ratio of polymorphism to the number of samples. Based on morphological and genetic data, the northernmost population from Shkhafit was phenotypically and genetically distant from the other populations. The correspondence between several morphological traits (leaf width, leaf length and first to fifth right vein angles) and several marker bands (SCoT5, SCoT7, SCoT30: 800–1500 bp; ISSR13, ISSR14, ISSR880: 500–1000 bp) were observed for the Shkhafit population. Unique SCoT and ISSR fragments can be used as markers for breeding purposes. The results provide a better understanding of adaptive mechanisms in D. lotus in extreme environments and will be important for the further expansion of the cultivation area for persimmon in colder regions

    Population Analysis of Diospyros lotus in the Northwestern Caucasus Based on Leaf Morphology and Multilocus DNA Markers

    No full text
    Diospyros lotus is the one of the most frost-tolerant species in the Diospyros genera, used as a rootstock for colder regions. Natural populations of D. lotus have a fragmented character of distribution in the Northwestern Caucasus, one of the coldest regions of Diospyros cultivation. To predict the behavior of D. lotus populations in an extreme environment, it is necessary to investigate the intraspecific genetic diversity and phenotypic variability of populations in the colder regions. In this study, we analyzed five geographically distant populations of D. lotus according to 33 morphological leaf traits, and the most informative traits were established, namely, leaf length, leaf width, leaf index (leaf to length ratio) and the length of the fourth veins. Additionally, we evaluated the intraspecific genetic diversity of D. lotus using ISSR and SCoT markers and proposed a new parameter for the evaluation of genetic polymorphism among populations, in order to eliminate the effect of sample number. This new parameter is the relative genetic polymorphism, which is the ratio of polymorphism to the number of samples. Based on morphological and genetic data, the northernmost population from Shkhafit was phenotypically and genetically distant from the other populations. The correspondence between several morphological traits (leaf width, leaf length and first to fifth right vein angles) and several marker bands (SCoT5, SCoT7, SCoT30: 800–1500 bp; ISSR13, ISSR14, ISSR880: 500–1000 bp) were observed for the Shkhafit population. Unique SCoT and ISSR fragments can be used as markers for breeding purposes. The results provide a better understanding of adaptive mechanisms in D. lotus in extreme environments and will be important for the further expansion of the cultivation area for persimmon in colder regions

    B-Cell Infiltrate in the Tumor Microenvironment Is Associated With Improved Survival in Resected Lung Adenocarcinoma

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    Introduction: Relapse is common after resection of lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD). Features of the tumor microenvironment (TME) which influence postsurgical survival outcomes are poorly characterized. Here, we analyzed the TME of more than 1500 LUAD specimens to identify the relationship between B-cell infiltration and prognosis. Methods: Whole exome sequencing and bulk RNA sequencing were performed on LUADs and adjacent normal lung tissue. Relapse-free survival and overall survival (OS) were retrospectively correlated with characteristics of the tumor and TME in three data sets. Results: High B-cell content (defined as >10% B cells) was associated with improved OS in both a The Cancer Genome Atlas–resected LUAD data set (p = 0.01) and a separate institutional stage II LUAD data set (p = 0.04, median not reached versus 89.5 mo). A validation cohort consisting of pooled microarray data representing more than 1400 resected stage I to III LUADs confirmed the association between greater B-cell abundance, specifically higher B-cell expression, and longer postsurgical survival (median OS 90 versus 71 mo, p < 0.01). Relapse-free survival was longer for patients with adenocarcinomas with high B-cell content across data sets, but it did not reach statistical significance. Subcategorization of B-cell subsets indicated that high naive B-cell content was most predictive of survival. There was no correlation between programmed death-ligand 1 expression, lymphoid aggregates, or overall immune infiltrate density and survival outcomes across the cohorts. Conclusions: The growing adjuvant immunotherapy repertoire has increased the urgency for identifying prognostic and predictive biomarkers. Comprehensive profiling of more than 1500 LUADs suggests that high tumor-infiltrating B-cell content is a favorable prognostic marker
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