The bee's knees for identifying genetic triggers of novel adult traits
2014-10-29
(Press-News.org) Scientists have long sought to identify the specific DNA changes that can trigger new traits, allowing species to adapt. But when animals develop a new trait, are the mutations within the part of the DNA that makes proteins, or, in the master switches that control the gene, modulating its activity to turn on or off?
For development of the embryo, it is usually the master control regions of a gene that dominate, but what about in an adult?
Jasper et al. found that adults play by a different set of rules, relying on the contributions of novel genes---called taxonomically restricted genes (TRGs, that are only found in a given species)---found in honeybees. Honeybees possess many new adult traits to complement social functions, such as glands to make pheromones for social communication, food for young bees, sting glands to protect the hive, and a division of labor. For the study, they focused on nurse bees that eat pollen to make secretions to feed the brood, and foragers, who sprout wings to take flight. They looked at patterns of genes found in 10 tissues that change in the adult bee when transitioning from nursing to foraging.
"We essentially found that the evolution of novel adult traits is strongly based on changes to the protein coding parts of genes," said paper co-author Brian Johnson. "Specifically, the key genes are often those that are expressed in just one tissue at a very high level. Such genes are often novel, that is organism-specific as opposed to common to all animals, and they provide much of the specialized work of the various tissues of the adult organism. Ironically, although this result contrasts sharply with the highly successful Evo-devo paradigm, we generated our hypotheses in part using the same logical framework developed by the Evo-devo researchers. This framework stresses the importance of connectedness in a gene network and how that hinders (or allows) various types of DNA sequence change."
In fast-evolving tissues, they found evidence that TRGs are critical and much more abundant, underlying novel phenotypes by rapidly mutating their protein-coding DNA sequence to perform new cellular functions. Likewise, they did not find TRGs expressed in "old" tissues. These genes were also the least connected ingene networks, allowing them the freedom to develop novelty for the bees, without having a negative effect on survival. This supports their theory that the evolution of novel adult physiological traits occurs in the distal branches of gene networks rather than hubs (unlike in the embryo), making them more free to develop gene changes for new functions as needed.
INFORMATION:
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2014-10-29
And you thought the sexual battles between people could get weird and fierce? Try ants. In a new study, biologists at the University of Vermont have discovered some queen ants that make sexual bondage into a life and death fight.
In a discovery new to science, their research shows that sexual conflict between two species can drive an evolutionary bedroom-battle royal, leading to competing adaptations in which female ants of one species manage to manhandle sperm away from the unwitting males of a different species during intercourse. The study was published in the October ...
2014-10-29
A high milk intake in women and men is not accompanied by a lower risk of fracture and instead may be associated with a higher rate of death, suggests observational research published in The BMJ this week.
This may be explained by the high levels of lactose and galactose (types of sugar) in milk, that have been shown to increase oxidative stress and chronic inflammation in animal studies, say the researchers.
However, they point out that their study can only show an association and cannot prove cause and effect. They say the results "should be interpreted ...
2014-10-29
Richard Wakeford, Life Fellow at Hughes Hall in the University of Cambridge, warns that the NHS needs more GPs immediately – and that without a complete reorganisation of student recruitment, medical schools "will continue to overproduce graduates inclined to hospital specialties and research."
Workforce reports show that we need at least half of UK medical graduates to become GPs, yet UK medical schools "are not recruiting students with this career inclination in anything like sufficient numbers," he writes.
He points out that Labour has announced plans for 8,000 ...
2014-10-29
The systematic neglect of culture is the single biggest barrier to advancing the highest attainable standard of health worldwide, say the authors of a major new report on culture and health, led by Professor David Napier, a leading medical anthropologist from University College London (UCL), UK, and published in The Lancet.
Bringing together experts from many different fields, including anthropologists, social scientists, and medics, the Commission is the first ever detailed appraisal of the role of culture in health. The authors argue that cultures of all kinds – ...
2014-10-28
Glioma is a common name for serious brain tumours. Different types of glioma are usually diagnosed as separate diseases and have been considered to arise from different cell types in the brain. Now researchers at Uppsala University, together with American colleagues, have shown that one and the same cell of origin can give rise to different types of glioma. This is important for the basic understanding of how these tumours are formed and can contribute to the development of more efficient and specific glioma therapies. The results have been published in Journal of Neuroscience.
The ...
2014-10-28
AMHERST, Mass. – Binge drinking can have lasting effects on brain pathways that are still developing during adolescence, say neuroscience researcher Heather N. Richardson and her colleagues at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Louisiana State University. Results of their study using a rodent model of adolescent drinking appear in the October 29 issue of The Journal of Neuroscience.
Richardson says, "Adverse effects of this physical damage can persist long after adolescent drinking ends. We found that the effects of alcohol are enduring." She adds, "The ...
2014-10-28
WASHINGTON, DC — Heavy drinking during adolescence may lead to structural changes in the brain and memory deficits that persist into adulthood, according to an animal study published October 29 in The Journal of Neuroscience. The study found that, even as adults, rats given daily access to alcohol during adolescence had reduced levels of myelin — the fatty coating on nerve fibers that accelerates the transmission of electrical signals between neurons. These changes were observed in a brain region important in reasoning and decision-making. Animals that were ...
2014-10-28
NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) spacecraft has spied a new crater on the lunar surface; one made from the impact of NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) mission.
"The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) team recently developed a new computer tool to search Narrow Angle Camera (NAC) before and after image pairs for new craters, the LADEE impact event provided a fun test, said Mark Robinson, LROC principal investigator from Arizona State University in Tempe. "As it turns there were several small surface changes found in the predicted ...
2014-10-28
How does a normal cellular process derail and become unhealthy?
A multi-institutional, international team led by Virginia Tech researchers studied cells found in breast and other types of connective tissue and discovered new information about cell transitions that take place during wound healing and cancer.
The results were published in a September issue of the journal Science Signaling.
During development, cells change forms and regroup from tight packs of epithelial cells to more mobile, loose arrays of mesenchymal cells.
The cell changes, known as an epithelial ...
2014-10-28
Montreal, October 28, 2014 – The Montreal Heart Institute Research Centre is once again pushing the limits of knowledge in personalized medicine. A meta-analysis combining the results of several pharmacogenomic studies and involving over 40,000 research subjects now makes it possible to demonstrate a different response to statins according to the patient's gene profile. This important contribution of two Montreal researchers from the Montreal Heart Institute (MHI), Dr. Jean-Claude Tardif, Director of the Research Centre and Dr. Marie-Pierre Dubé, Director of ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] The bee's knees for identifying genetic triggers of novel adult traits