9 research outputs found
Accelerated evolution of SARS-CoV-2 in free-ranging white-tailed deer
The zoonotic origin of the COVID-19 pandemic virus highlights the need to fill the vast gaps in our knowledge of SARS-CoV-2 ecology and evolution in non-human hosts. Here, we detected that SARS-CoV-2 was introduced from humans into white-tailed deer more than 30 times in Ohio, USA during November 2021-March 2022. Subsequently, deer-to-deer transmission persisted for 2–8 months, disseminating across hundreds of kilometers. Newly developed Bayesian phylogenetic methods quantified how SARS-CoV-2 evolution is not only three-times faster in white-tailed deer compared to the rate observed in humans but also driven by different mutational biases and selection pressures. The long-term effect of this accelerated evolutionary rate remains to be seen as no critical phenotypic changes were observed in our animal models using white-tailed deer origin viruses. Still, SARS-CoV-2 has transmitted in white-tailed deer populations for a relatively short duration, and the risk of future changes may have serious consequences for humans and livestock
Recommended from our members
An Innovative Setup for High-Throughput Respirometry of Small Aquatic Animals
Metabolic rate is often measured as a phenotype in evolutionary genetics, among other fields including many facets of physiology, behavior, and ecology, because it impacts organismal fitness, is repeatable and heritable, and is responsive to numerous environmental variables. Aquatic respirometry, a method used to measure metabolic rate, has allowed key questions in these fields to be investigated, namely: (1) why do individuals from the same population exhibit up to 3-fold differences in metabolic rate, (2) how does metabolic rate change during an individual’s lifetime, and (3) what metabolic rate is advantageous in a specific environment? Current respirometry studies often suffer from small sample sizes and rely on low throughput approaches to measure metabolic rate, making it difficult to answer these and other relevant ecological and evolutionary questions due to lack of power, failure to capture true biological variation, and confounding variables, like time, that are introduced due to limitations in methodology. Here we describe a scalable high-throughput intermittent flow respirometer (HIFR) design and use it to measure the metabolic rates of 19 aquatic animals in one night while reducing equipment costs and time by more than 50%
Recommended from our members
Measuring complex phenotypes: A flexible high-throughput design for micro-respirometry
Abstract Variation in tissue-specific metabolism between species and among individuals is thought to be adaptively important; however, understanding this evolutionary relationship requires reliably measuring this trait in many individuals. In most higher organisms, tissue specificity is important because different organs (heart, brain, liver, muscle) have unique ecologically adaptive roles. Current technology and methodology for measuring tissue-specific metabolism is costly and limited by throughput capacity and efficiency. Presented here is the design for a flexible and cost-effective high-throughput micro-respirometer (HTMR) optimized to measure small biological samples. To verify precision and accuracy, substrate specific metabolism was measured in heart ventricles isolated from a small teleost, Fundulus heteroclitus , and in yeast ( Saccharomyces cerevisiae ). Within the system, results were reproducible between chambers and over time with both teleost hearts and yeast. Additionally, metabolic rates and allometric scaling relationships in Fundulus agree with previously published data measured with lower-throughput equipment. This design reduces cost, but still provides an accurate measure of metabolism in small biological samples. This will allow for high-throughput measurement of tissue metabolism that can enhance understanding of the adaptive importance of complex metabolic traits
RNA Chemical Proteomics Reveals the N<sup>6</sup>‑Methyladenosine (m<sup>6</sup>A)-Regulated Protein–RNA Interactome
Epitranscriptomic
RNA modifications can regulate mRNA function;
however, there is a major gap in our understanding of the biochemical
mechanisms mediating their effects. Here, we develop a chemical proteomics
approach relying upon photo-cross-linking with synthetic diazirine-containing
RNA probes and quantitative proteomics to profile RNA–protein
interactions regulated by N<sup>6</sup>-methyladenosine (m<sup>6</sup>A), the most abundant internal modification in eukaryotic RNA. In
addition to identifying YTH domain-containing proteins and ALKBH5,
known interactors of this modification, we find that FMR1 and LRPPRC,
two proteins associated with human disease, “read” this
modification. Surprisingly, we also find that m<sup>6</sup>A disrupts
RNA binding by the stress granule proteins G3BP1/2, USP10, CAPRIN1,
and RBM42. Our work provides a general strategy for interrogating
the interactome of RNA modifications and reveals the biochemical mechanisms
underlying m<sup>6</sup>A function in the cell
Interindividual plasticity in metabolic and thermal tolerance traits from populations subjected to recent anthropogenic heating
To better understand temperature's role in the interaction between local evolutionary adaptation and physiological plasticity, we investigated acclimation effects on metabolic performance and thermal tolerance among natural Fundulus heteroclitus (small estuarine fish) populations from different thermal environments. Fundulus heteroclitus populations experience large daily and seasonal temperature variations, as well as local mean temperature differences across their large geographical cline. In this study, we use three populations: one locally heated (32°C) by thermal effluence (TE) from the Oyster Creek Nuclear Generating Station, NJ, and two nearby reference populations that do not experience local heating (28°C). After acclimation to 12 or 28°C, we quantified whole-animal metabolic (WAM) rate, critical thermal maximum (CT max ) and substrate-specific cardiac metabolic rate (CaM, substrates: glucose, fatty acids, lactate plus ketones plus ethanol, and endogenous (i.e. no added substrates)) in approximately 160 individuals from these three populations. Populations showed few significant differences due to large interindividual variation within populations. In general, for WAM and CT max , the interindividual variation in acclimation response (log 2 ratio 28/12°C) was a function of performance at 12°C and order of acclimation (12–28°C versus 28–12°C). CT max and WAM were greater at 28°C than 12°C, although WAM had a small change (2.32-fold) compared with the expectation for a 16°C increase in temperature (expect 3- to 4.4-fold). By contrast, for CaM, the rates when acclimatized and assayed at 12 or 28°C were nearly identical. The small differences in CaM between 12 and 28°C temperature were partially explained by cardiac remodeling where individuals acclimatized to 12°C had larger hearts than individuals acclimatized to 28°C. Correlation among physiological traits was dependent on acclimation temperature. For example, WAM was negatively correlated with CT max at 12°C but positively correlated at 28°C. Additionally, glucose substrate supported higher CaM than fatty acid, and fatty acid supported higher CaM than lactate, ketones and alcohol (LKA) or endogenous. However, these responses were highly variable with some individuals using much more FA than glucose. These findings suggest interindividual variation in physiological responses to temperature acclimation and indicate that additional research investigating interindividual may be relevant for global climate change responses in many species
Recommended from our members
Feeling the heat: variation in thermal sensitivity within and among populations
Chemoproteomic Profiling of 8‑Oxoguanosine-Sensitive RNA–Protein Interactions
Cellular nucleic acids are subject to assault by endogenous
and
exogenous agents that can perturb the flow of genetic information.
Oxidative stress leads to the accumulation of 8-oxoguanine (8OG) in
DNA and RNA. 8OG lesions on mRNA negatively impact translation, but
their effect on global RNA–protein interactions is largely
unknown. Here, we apply an RNA chemical proteomics approach to investigate
the effect of 8OG on RNA–protein binding. We find proteins
that bind preferentially to 8OG-modified RNA, including IGF2BP1–3
and hnRNPD, and proteins that are repelled by 8OG such as RBM4. We
characterize these interactions using biochemical and biophysical
assays to quantify the effect of 8OG on binding and show that a single
8OG abolishes the binding of RBM4 to its preferred CGG-containing
substrate. Taken together, our work establishes the molecular consequences
of 8OG on cellular RNA–protein binding and provides a framework
for interrogating the role of RNA oxidation in biological systems
Chemoproteomic Profiling of 8‑Oxoguanosine-Sensitive RNA–Protein Interactions
Cellular nucleic acids are subject to assault by endogenous
and
exogenous agents that can perturb the flow of genetic information.
Oxidative stress leads to the accumulation of 8-oxoguanine (8OG) in
DNA and RNA. 8OG lesions on mRNA negatively impact translation, but
their effect on global RNA–protein interactions is largely
unknown. Here, we apply an RNA chemical proteomics approach to investigate
the effect of 8OG on RNA–protein binding. We find proteins
that bind preferentially to 8OG-modified RNA, including IGF2BP1–3
and hnRNPD, and proteins that are repelled by 8OG such as RBM4. We
characterize these interactions using biochemical and biophysical
assays to quantify the effect of 8OG on binding and show that a single
8OG abolishes the binding of RBM4 to its preferred CGG-containing
substrate. Taken together, our work establishes the molecular consequences
of 8OG on cellular RNA–protein binding and provides a framework
for interrogating the role of RNA oxidation in biological systems
Sequencing Bait: Nuclear and Mitogenome Assembly of an Abundant Coastal Tropical and Subtropical Fish, Atherinomorus stipes
Genetic data from nonmodel species can inform ecology and physiology, giving insight into a species’ distribution and abundance as well as their responses to changing environments, all of which are important for species conservation and management. Moreover, reduced sequencing costs and improved long-read sequencing technology allows researchers to readily generate genomic resources for nonmodel species. Here, we apply Oxford Nanopore long-read sequencing and low-coverage (∼1x) whole genome short-read sequencing technology (Illumina) to assemble a genome and examine population genetics of an abundant tropical and subtropical fish, the hardhead silverside (
Atherinomorus stipes
). These fish are found in shallow coastal waters and are frequently included in ecological models because they serve as abundant prey for commercially and ecologically important species. Despite their importance in sub-tropical and tropical ecosystems, little is known about their population connectivity and genetic diversity. Our
A. stipes
genome assembly is about 1.2 Gb with comparable repetitive element content (∼47%), number of protein duplication events, and DNA methylation patterns to other teleost fish species. Among five sampled populations spanning 43 km of South Florida and the Florida Keys, we find little population structure suggesting high population connectivity