INFORMATION:
The paper is available online at http://www.pnas.org/content/early/recent.
This research was funded by the National Science Foundation and NASA. For more information call McCutcheon at 406-243-6071 or email john.mccutcheon@umontana.edu.
University of Montana research finds evidence of non-adaptive evolution within cicadas
2015-05-18
(Press-News.org) MISSOULA, MONTANA - University of Montana Assistant Professor John McCutcheon has once again discovered something new about the complex and intriguing inner workings of the cicada insect.
The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences recently published his findings online. In a paper titled "Genome expansion by lineage splitting and genome reduction in the cicada endosymbiont Hodgkinia," McCutcheon and his team found that the nutritional symbionts living inside long-living cicadas have become a lot more complicated. And it's not necessarily a good thing for the insect.
McCutcheon's lab examines the symbioses of cicadas, a sap-feeding insect that depends on two bacteria, Sulcia and Hodgkinia, to make amino acids - essential nutrients it needs to survive. In exchange, the bacteria live comfortably inside the cicada. Since all three divvy up the nutritional roles, each member of the symbiosis is completely dependent on the other two for survival. Bottom line: If the insect loses its bacteria, it dies.
Last year, McCutcheon and his team discovered that in some cicadas, the Hodgkinia bacterium had split into two new species. In these insects Sulcia was still there, but they found two different kinds of Hodgkinia. Thus, what previously was thought to be a tripartite, or a three-way symbiosis, is now proven to actually be a four-way symbiosis.
Intrigued by this finding, the researchers dug deeper.
"We thought that this weird bacterial 'speciation' event might be related to the unusual lifecycle of the cicada, not of Hodgkinia itself," McCutcheon said.
Cicadas are unique among insects for their variable and long lifecycles. The shortest-lived cicada has a two-year lifespan, while the longest-lived have 17-year lifespans.
"We guessed that Hodgkinia might have the opportunity to split into more species if it lived in longer-lived cicadas," McCutcheon said.
That's exactly what they found. The researchers began by looking at the genome and cell structure of Hodgkinia in the longest-lived cicadas - the periodical cicadas called Magicicada. These are the 13- and 17-year cicadas that occasionally come out in enormous numbers in Central and Eastern U.S. - in fact, there is a huge emergence happening right now.
They discovered that, indeed, Hodgkinia has fragmented into numerous new species, probably on the order of 20 to 50 or so.
"It's so complicated that it's tough to get an accurate count right now," McCutcheon said.
Hodgkinia seems to have created a massive and messy beueaucracy of genomes and cells. While the role of Hodgkinia hasn't changed, it now takes a collective to accomplish the task of what was once completed by a single cell. In Magicicada, the original functions of Hodgkinia are being partitioned off into smaller jobs and roles. However, many or most of these new genomes remain in separate cells.
What does this mean for the cicada? While the internal bureaucracy of its bacteria has gotten out of hand, it is still reliant upon the symbiosis for survival. Now, it likely needs the entire genome collective to survive. This means that in cicadas, the symbiosis has gone from a three-way partnership to one that involves dozens and dozens of interacting and codependent species.
"We think that this complexity is largely the result of non-adaptive evolution, at least from the host cicada perspective," McCutcheon said. "It's difficult to imagine a situation where it's better for the cicada to have to manage 50 versions of Hodgkinia instead of one. We think that in long-lived cicadas the cicada can't stop Hodgkinia from splitting, and it either must cope with the changes or the entire symbiosis collapses."
McCutcheon's work has implications for the way we think about our own symbionts - such as the power-providing mitochondria in our cells that are the result of a very old bacterial symbiosis - as well as the forces that dictate the structure of genomes in general.
"This wild diversity in genome structure is common in mitochondria, and now we are seeing it in bacterial symbionts, too," McCutcheon said.
It's another feature that unites symbionts and organelles, and understanding the development of organelles is fundamental to understanding the development of life. Because organelles arose such a long time ago, it's impossible to trace back to the specific events that allowed the organelle to become what it is today. By examining Hodgkinia's evolution, researchers in McCutcheon's lab are hoping to gain insight into the storied pasts of organelles whose history has since been erased.
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
California suicide prevention program demonstrates promise, studies find
2015-05-18
A mass media campaign intended to help prevent suicides in California is reaching a majority of the state's adults and appears to be increasing their confidence about how to intervene with those at risk of suicide, according to new RAND Corporation research.
In addition, an assessment of a companion suicide prevention program finds that for each year the program is operated, the long-term impact could be the prevention of at least 140 deaths and 3,600 suicide attempts over the next three decades.
The analysis also estimates that for every $1 the state invests in the ...
Study finds wide variation in carotid artery stenting outcomes
2015-05-18
WASHINGTON (May 18, 2015) -- Hospitals performing carotid artery stenting vary considerably in rates of in-hospital stroke or death--from 0 to 18 percent overall and from 1.2 to 4.7 percent when accounting for variation in health of patients at admission, according to a study published today in JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions.
Using data from the American College of Cardiology's CARE Registry, the largest national registry of carotid artery stent patients, researchers assessed 19,381 procedures from 188 hospitals that each performed more than five carotid artery stenting ...
Study: Blood thinner safe for cancer patients with brain metastases
2015-05-18
(WASHINGTON, May, 18, 2015) - Cancer patients with brain metastases who develop blood clots may safely receive blood thinners without increased risk of dangerous bleeding, according to a study, published online today in Blood, the Journal of the American Society of Hematology
Cancer increases a patient's risk of developing blood clots. When a patient with cancer develops a clot, treatment with a blood thinning medication called an anticoagulant is often added to their treatment regimen in order to prevent the potentially fatal complication of blood clots traveling to ...
Adolescents, drugs and dancing
2015-05-18
In recent years, the popularity of "electronic dance music" (EDM) and dance festivals has increased substantially throughout the US and worldwide.
Even though data from national samples suggests drug use among adolescents in the general US population has been declining, targeted samples have shown nightclub attendees tend to report high rates of drug use, above that of the general population. In spite of increasing deaths among dance festival attendees in recent years, no nationally representative studies have examined potential associations between nightlife attendance ...
Atrial fibrillation after surgery increases risk of heart attacks and strokes
2015-05-18
MAYWOOD, IL - As many as 12 percent of patients undergoing major, non-cardiac surgery experience an irregular heartbeat called atrial fibrillation.
Post-operative atrial fibrillation (POAF) often is dismissed as a transient phenomenon. But a Loyola University Medical Center study has found that POAF can significantly increase the risk of heart attack or stroke during the first 12 months after surgery.
Among bladder cancer patients who underwent a cystectomy (bladder removal) and developed POAF, 24.8 percent experienced a heart attack or stroke during the first 12 months ...
Sleep apnea linked to depression in men
2015-05-18
ATS 2015, DENVER ? Severe obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and excessive daytime sleepiness are associated with an increased risk of depression in men, according to a new community-based study of Australian men, which was presented at the 2015 American Thoracic Society International Conference.
"An association between sleep apnea and depression has been noted in some earlier studies," said lead author Carol Lang, PhD, from the University of Adelaide, Australia. "Our study, in a large community-based sample of men, confirms a strong relationship even after adjustment for ...
Noted urologist calls attention to implications of flawed prostate specific antigen data in SEER
2015-05-18
New York, NY, May 18, 2015 -- The National Cancer Institute (NCI) recently announced that it had removed all prostate specific antigen (PSA) data from the SEER (Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results) and SEER-Medicare programs. The PSA data were removed after quality control checks revealed that a substantial number of PSA values included in the programs were incorrect. An editorial published in The Journal of Urology® explores the ramifications of the removal of these data for researchers, clinicians, and administrators within the health care community, as well ...
Stereotactic body radiation therapy appears to help some patients with pancreatic cancer
2015-05-18
Two studies from Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center researchers add to preliminary evidence that high-dose radiation treatment, called stereotactic body radiotherapy, appears to be safe and as effective as standard radiation treatment for certain patients with pancreatic cancer whose tumors are advanced but have not spread.
The studies also suggest, the researchers say, that stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT) may have some advantages over traditional radiation for some patients, because doses can be delivered over the course of one week, unlike six or seven weeks with ...
Bigger capsules may be long-sought key for transplanting islet cells
2015-05-18
Changing the size of cell-carrying spheres may surmount the difficulties that have bedeviled diabetes researchers trying to ferry insulin-producing islet cells into hosts as a way to treat type 1 diabetes.
New findings published in the journal Nature Materials suggest that for the spherical capsules, bigger may be better.
Tiny gel capsules carrying islet cells allow insulin to seep out, and nutrients to get in, through microscopic holes. The holes are small enough, however, to isolate and protect the encapsulated cells from the cells of host's immune system, which would ...
Pactamycin analogs offer new, gentler approach to cancer treatment
2015-05-18
CORVALLIS, Ore. -- Researchers at Oregon State University are pursuing a new concept in treatment of epithelial cancer, especially head and neck cancer, by using two promising "analogs" of an old compound that was once studied as a potent anti-tumor agent, but long ago abandoned because it was too toxic.
The analogs are more highly selective than the parent compound, pactamycin, which originally was found to kill all cells, from bacteria to mammals, by inhibiting their protein synthesis.
The pactamycin analogs, which were developed with biosynthetic engineering, also ...