1,085 research outputs found
Mitochondrial genomics and Northwestern Atlantic population genetics of marine annelids
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
September 2005The overarching goal of this thesis was to investigate marine benthic invertebrate
phylogenetics and population genetics, focused on the phylum Annelida. Recent
expansions of molecular methods and the increasing diversity of available markers have
allowed more complex and fine-scale questions to be asked at a variety of taxonomic
levels. At the phylogenetic level, whole mitochondrial genome sequencing of two
polychaetes (the deep-sea tubeworm Riftia pachyptila and the intertidal bamboo worm
Clymenella torquata) supports the placement of leeches and oligochaetes within the
polychaete radiation, in keeping with molecular evidence and morphological
reinvestigations. This re-interpretation, first proposed by others, synonomizes
"Annelida" and "Polychaeta", and lends further support to the inclusion of echiurids,
siboglinids (previously called vestimentiferans) within annelids, and sipunculans as close
allies. The complete mt-genome of C. torquata was then rapidly screened to obtain
markers useful in short timescale population genetics. Two quickly evolving
mitochondrial markers were sequenced from ten populations of C. torquata from the Bay
of Fundy to New Jersey to investigate previous hypotheses that the Cape Cod, MA
peninsula is a barrier to gene flow in the northwest Atlantic. A barrier to gene flow was
found, but displaced south of Cape Cod, between Rhode Island and Long Island, NY.
Imposed upon this pattern was a gradient in genetic diversity presumably due to previous
glaciation, with northern populations exhibiting greatly reduced diversity relative to
southern sites. These trends in C. torquata, combined with other recent short time scale
population genetic research, highlight the lack of population genetics models relevant to
marine benthic invertebrates. To this end, I constructed a model including a typical
benthic invertebrate life cycle, and described the patterns of genetic differentiation at the
juvenile and adult stages. Model analysis indicates that selection operating at the postsettlement
stage may be extremely important in structuring genetic differentiation
between populations and life stages. Further, it demonstrates how combined genetic
analysis of sub-adult and adult samples can provide more information about population
dynamics than either could alone.Financial support was provided by an Academic Programs Office fellowship, a CICOR
fellowship and research grant, and a National Science Foundation research grant
Mitochondrial genomes of Clymenella torquata (Maldanidae) and Riftia pachyptila (Siboglinidae) : evidence for conserved gene order in Annelida
Author Posting. © The Authors, 2004. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Molecular Biology and Evolution 22 (2005): 210-222, doi:10.1093/molbev/msi008.Mitochondrial genomes are useful tools for inferring evolutionary history.
However, many taxa are poorly represented by available data. Thus, to further understand
the phylogenetic potential of complete mitochondrial genome sequence data in Annelida
(segmented worms), we examined the complete mitochondrial sequence for Clymenella
torquata (Maldanidae) and an estimated 80% of the sequence of Riftia pachyptila
(Siboglinidae). These genomes have remarkably similar gene orders to previously
published annelid genomes, suggesting that gene order is conserved across annelids. This
result is interesting given the high variation seen in the closely related Mollusca and
Brachiopoda. Phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequence, amino acid sequence and gene
order all support the recent hypothesis that Sipuncula and Annelida are closely related.
Our findings suggest that gene order data is of limited utility in annelids but that
sequence data holds promise. Additionally, these genomes show AT bias (~66%) and
codon usage biases, but have a typical gene complement for bilaterian mitochondrial
genomes.Support by CICOR to RJM is gratefully acknowledged. This work was support by the
National Science Foundation grants (DEB-0075618 and EAR-0120646) to KMH
Mitochondrial genomics and northwestern Atlantic population genetics of marine annelids
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Joint Program in Biological Oceanography (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Biology; and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution), 2005.Includes bibliographical references.The overarching goal of this thesis was to investigate marine benthic invertebrate phylogenetics and population genetics, focused on the phylum Annelida. Recent expansions of molecular methods and the increasing diversity of available markers have allowed more complex and fine-scale questions to be asked at a variety of taxonomic levels. At the phylogenetic level, whole mitochondrial genome sequencing of two polychaetes (the deep-sea tubeworm Riftia pachyptila and the intertidal bamboo worm Clymenella torquata) supports the placement of leeches and oligochaetes within the polychaete radiation, in keeping with molecular evidence and morphological reinvestigations. This re-interpretation, first proposed by others, synonomizes "Annelida" and "Polychaeta", and lends further support to the inclusion of echiurids, siboglinids (previously called vestimentiferans) within annelids, and sipunculans as close allies. The complete mt-genome of C. torquata was then rapidly screened to obtain markers useful in short timescale population genetics.(cont.) Two quickly evolving mitochondrial markers were sequenced from ten populations of C. torquata from the Bay of Fundy to New Jersey to investigate previous hypotheses that the Cape Cod, MA peninsula is a barrier to gene flow in the northwest Atlantic. A barrier to gene flow was found, but displaced south of Cape Cod, between Rhode Island and Long Island, NY. Imposed upon this pattern was a gradient in genetic diversity presumably due to previous glaciation, with northern populations exhibiting greatly reduced diversity relative to southern sites. These trends in C. torquata, combined with other recent short time scale population genetic research, highlight the lack of population genetics models relevant to marine benthic invertebrates. To this end, I constructed a model including a typical benthic invertebrate life cycle, and described the patterns of genetic differentiation at the juvenile and adult stages. Model analysis indicates that selection operating at the post- settlement stage may be extremely important in structuring genetic differentiation between populations and life stages. Further, it demonstrates how combined genetic analysis of sub-adult and adult samples can provide more information about population dynamics than either could alone.by Robert M. Jennings.Ph.D
Suitport Feasibility - Human Pressurized Space Suit Donning Tests with the Marmon Clamp and Pneumatic Flipper Suitport Concepts
The suitport concept has been recently implemented as part of the small pressurized lunar rover (Currently the Space Exploration vehicle, or SEV) and the Multi-Mission Space Exploration Vehicle (MMSEV) concept demonstrator vehicle. Suitport replaces or augments the traditional airlock function of a spacecraft by providing a bulkhead opening, capture mechanism, and sealing system to allow ingress and egress of a space suit while the space suit remains outside of the pressurized volume of the spacecraft. This presents significant new opportunities to EVA exploration in both microgravity and surface environments. The suitport concept will enable three main improvements in EVA by providing reductions in: pre-EVA time from hours to less than thirty minutes; airlock consumables; contamination returned to the cabin with the EVA crewmember. Two second generation suitports were designed and tested. The previously reported second generation Marman Clamp suitport and a newer concept, the Pneumatic Flipper Suitport. These second generation suitports demonstrated human donning and doffing of the Z1 spacesuit with an 8.3 psi pressure differential across the spacesuit. Testing was performed using the JSC B32 Chamber B, a human rated vacuum chamber. The test included human rated suitports, the suitport compatible prototype suit, and chamber modifications. This test brought these three elements together in the first ever pressurized donning of a rear entry suit through a suitport. This paper presents the results of the testing, including unexpected difficulties with doffing, and engineering solutions implemented to ease the difficulties. A review of suitport functions, including a discussion of the need to doff a pressurized suit in earth gravity, is included. Recommendations for future design and testing are documented
The effect of outer antenna complexes on the photochemical trapping rate in barley thylakoid Photosystem II
AbstractWe have investigated the previous suggestions in the literature that the outer antenna of Photosystem II of barley does not influence the effective photosystem primary photochemical trapping rate. It is shown by steady state fluorescence measurements at the F0 fluorescence level of wild type and the chlorina f2 mutant, using the chlorophyll b fluorescence as a marker, that the outer antenna is thermally equilibrated with the core pigments, at room temperature, under conditions of photochemical trapping. This is in contrast with the conclusions of the earlier studies in which it was suggested that energy was transferred rapidly and irreversibly from the outer antenna to the Photosystem II core. Furthermore, the effective trapping time, determined by single photon counting, time-resolved measurements, was shown to increase from 0.17±0.017 ns in the chlorina Photosystem II core to a value within the range 0.42±0.036–0.47±0.044 ns for the wild-type Photosystem II with the outer antenna system. This 2.5–2.8-fold increase in the effective trapping time is, however, significantly less than that expected for a thermalised system. The data can be explained in terms of the outer antenna increasing the primary charge separation rate by about 50%
A “Rosetta Stone” for Metazoan Zooplankton: DNA Barcode Analysis of Species Diversity of the Sargasso Sea (Northwest Atlantic Ocean)
Species diversity of the metazoan holozooplankton assemblage of the Sargasso Sea, Northwest Atlantic Ocean, was examined through coordinated morphological taxonomic identification of species and DNA sequencing of a ∼650 base-pair region of mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (mtCOI) as a DNA barcode (i.e., short sequence for species recognition and discrimination). Zooplankton collections were made from the surface to 5,000 meters during April, 2006 on the R/V R.H. Brown. Samples were examined by a ship-board team of morphological taxonomists; DNA barcoding was carried out in both ship-board and land-based DNA sequencing laboratories. DNA barcodes were determined for a total of 297 individuals of 175 holozooplankton species in four phyla, including: Cnidaria (Hydromedusae, 4 species; Siphonophora, 47); Arthropoda (Amphipoda, 10; Copepoda, 34; Decapoda, 9; Euphausiacea, 10; Mysidacea, 1; Ostracoda, 27); and Mollusca (Cephalopoda, 8; Heteropoda, 6; Pteropoda, 15); and Chaetognatha (4). Thirty species of fish (Teleostei) were also barcoded. For all seven zooplankton groups for which sufficient data were available, Kimura-2-Parameter genetic distances were significantly lower between individuals of the same species (mean=0.0114; S.D. 0.0117) than between individuals of different species within the same group (mean=0.3166; S.D. 0.0378). This difference, known as the barcode gap, ensures that mtCOI sequences are reliable characters for species identification for the oceanic holozooplankton assemblage. In addition, DNA barcodes allow recognition of new or undescribed species, reveal cryptic species within known taxa, and inform phylogeographic and population genetic studies of geographic variation. The growing database of “gold standard” DNA barcodes serves as a Rosetta Stone for marine zooplankton, providing the key for decoding species diversity by linking species names, morphology, and DNA sequence variation. In light of the pivotal position of zooplankton in ocean food webs, their usefulness as rapid responders to environmental change, and the increasing scarcity of taxonomists, the use of DNA barcodes is an important and useful approach for rapid analysis of species diversity and distribution in the pelagic community
Regularized Maximum Likelihood Image Synthesis and Validation for ALMA Continuum Observations of Protoplanetary Disks
Regularized Maximum Likelihood (RML) techniques are a class of image
synthesis methods that achieve better angular resolution and image fidelity
than traditional methods like CLEAN for sub-mm interferometric observations. To
identify best practices for RML imaging, we used the GPU-accelerated open
source Python package MPoL, a machine learning-based RML approach, to explore
the influence of common RML regularizers (maximum entropy, sparsity, total
variation, and total squared variation) on images reconstructed from real and
synthetic ALMA continuum observations of protoplanetary disks. We tested two
different cross-validation (CV) procedures to characterize their performance
and determine optimal prior strengths, and found that CV over a coarse grid of
regularization strengths easily identifies a range of models with comparably
strong predictive power. To evaluate the performance of RML techniques against
a ground truth image, we used MPoL on a synthetic protoplanetary disk dataset
and found that RML methods successfully resolve structures at fine spatial
scales present in the original simulation. We used ALMA DSHARP observations of
the protoplanetary disk around HD 143006 to compare the performance of MPoL and
CLEAN, finding that RML imaging improved the spatial resolution of the image by
up to a factor of 3 without sacrificing sensitivity. We provide general
recommendations for building an RML workflow for image synthesis of ALMA
protoplanetary disk observations, including effective use of CV. Using these
techniques to improve the imaging resolution of protoplanetary disk
observations will enable new science, including the detection of protoplanets
embedded in disks.Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in PAS
Integrative systematics and ecology of a new deep-sea family of tanaidacean crustaceans
A new family of paratanaoidean Tanaidacea – Paranarthrurellidae fam. nov. – is erected to accommodate two genera without family classification (Paratanaoidea incertae sedis), namely Armatognathia Kudinova-Pasternak, 1987 and Paranarthrurella Lang, 1971. Seven new species of Paranarthrurella and two of Armatognathia are described from material taken in different deep-sea areas of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The type species of Paranarthrurella — P. caudata (Kudinova-Pasternak, 1965) — is redescribed based on the paratype. The genus Cheliasetosatanais Larsen and Araújo-Silva, 2014 originally classified within Colletteidae is synonymised with Paranarthrurella, and Arthrura shiinoi Kudinova-Pasternak, 1973 is transferred to Armatognathia. Amended diagnoses of Armatognathia and Paranarthrurella genera are given. Choosing characters for distinguishing and defining both genera was supported by Principal Component Analysis. Designation of the new family is supported by molecular phylogenetic analysis of COI and 18S datasets. The distribution of all species currently included in the new family was visualised and their bathymetric distribution analysed
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