8 research outputs found

    Sprachcafé Erfurt. Ein Ort zum gemeinsamen (Kennen-)Lernen

    Get PDF
    Susanne Burckhardt, Benjamin Schäfer, Erstelle Zirn und Karin Lahn stellen die Entwicklung des Sprachcafés Erfurt vor und wie es ihnen gelungen ist, einen Ort zum gemeinsamen (Kennen-)Lernen zu schaffen. (DIPF/Orig.

    No Excess Gene Movement Is Detected off the Avian or Lepidopteran Z Chromosome

    Get PDF
    Most of our knowledge of sex-chromosome evolution comes from male heterogametic (XX/XY) taxa. With the genome sequencing of multiple female heterogametic (ZZ/ZW) taxa, we can now ask whether there are patterns of evolution common to both sex chromosome systems. In all XX/XY systems examined to date, there is an excess of testis-biased retrogenes moving from the X chromosome to the autosomes, which is hypothesized to result from either sexually antagonistic selection or escape from meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI). We examined RNA-mediated (retrotransposed) and DNA-mediated gene movement in two independently evolved ZZ/ZW systems, birds (chicken and zebra finch) and lepidopterans (silkworm). Even with sexually antagonistic selection likely operating in both taxa and MSCI having been identified in the chicken, we find no evidence for an excess of genes moving from the Z chromosome to the autosomes in either lineage. We detected no excess for either RNA- or DNA-mediated duplicates, across a range of approaches and methods. We offer some potential explanations for this difference between XX/XY and ZZ/ZW sex chromosome systems, but further work is needed to distinguish among these hypotheses. Regardless of the root causes, we have identified an additional, potentially inherent, difference between XX/XY and ZZ/ZW systems

    RNA-based gene duplication: mechanistic and evolutionary insights.

    Get PDF
    Gene copies that stem from the mRNAs of parental source genes have long been viewed as evolutionary dead-ends with little biological relevance. Here we review a range of recent studies that have unveiled a significant number of functional retroposed gene copies in both mammalian and some non-mammalian genomes. These studies have not only revealed previously unknown mechanisms for the emergence of new genes and their functions but have also provided fascinating general insights into molecular and evolutionary processes that have shaped genomes. For example, analyses of chromosomal gene movement patterns via RNA-based gene duplication have shed fresh light on the evolutionary origin and biology of our sex chromosomes

    TGF-β at the Crossroads Between Inflammation, Suppression and Cancer

    No full text
    corecore