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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2018-06-19
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2018-06-22
    Description: Climate models predict increases in frequency of summer heat waves. In Europe, such events have already caused declines in seagrass meadows, highlighting the importance of short-term responses of local communities to climate stress. Understanding the variability among populations along the European thermal gradient in response to heat waves is crucial for seagrass conservation and management. Using a mesocosm we compared effects of a simulated heat wave on the photophysiology of Zostera marina populations coming from low (43° N, Adriatic Sea) and high latitudes (56° N, North and Baltic Seas). Measurements before, during and up to 4 wk after the heat wave included photophysiological parameters derived from light response curves generated by PAM fluorometry and gene expression using qRT-PCR. In all 3 populations, initial exposures to thermal stress were characterized by increases in dark adapted effective quantum yield (Y0), maximum electron transfer rate of PSII (ETRmax) and slope of the light response curve (α), coinciding with upregulations of the gene superoxidase dismutase [Mn]. With continuation of the heat wave these initial effects disappeared, demonstrated by declines in Y0, ETRmax and α relative to controls. Z. marina from the Adriatic suffered from the simulated heat wave as much as its high-latitude counterparts. However, we also demonstrate slight photophysiological differences between the populations during the recovery phase, where performance of high-latitude populations continued declining even after water temperatures returned to control levels, while photochemical activity fully recovered in the Adriatic population. These results might draw the attention of future studies and seagrass conservation efforts.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: A fundamental problem for the evolution of pregnancy, the most specialized form of parental investment among vertebrates, is the rejection of the nonself-embryo. Mammals achieve immunological tolerance by down-regulating both major histocompatibility complex pathways (MHC I and II). Although pregnancy has evolved multiple times independently among vertebrates, knowledge of associated immune system adjustments is restricted to mammals. All of them (except monotremata) display full internal pregnancy, making evolutionary reconstructions within the class mammalia meaningless. Here, we study the seahorse and pipefish family (syngnathids) that have evolved male pregnancy across a gradient from external oviparity to internal gestation. We assess how immunological tolerance is achieved by reconstruction of the immune gene repertoire in a comprehensive sample of 12 seahorse and pipefish genomes along the “male pregnancy” gradient together with expression patterns of key immune and pregnancy genes in reproductive tissues. We found that the evolution of pregnancy coincided with a modification of the adaptive immune system. Divergent genomic rearrangements of the MHC II pathway among fully pregnant species were identified in both genera of the syngnathids: The pipefishes (Syngnathus) displayed loss of several genes of the MHC II pathway while seahorses (Hippocampus) featured a highly divergent invariant chain (CD74). Our findings suggest that a trade-off between immunological tolerance and embryo rejection accompanied the evolution of unique male pregnancy. That pipefishes survive in an ocean of microbes without one arm of the adaptive immune defense suggests a high degree of immunological flexibility among vertebrates, which may advance our understanding of immune-deficiency diseases.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Significance: A central goal in invasion genomics is to identify and determine the mechanisms that underlie the successful colonization, establishment, and subsequent range expansion of invasive populations of nonindigenous species. Using a whole-genome approach, we evaluate the importance of genetic diversity for the successful establishment of nonindigenous species. Our study shows that genetic diversity per se is not the major factor driving invasions, since we observed all possible scenarios with invasive populations showing reduced, similar but also increased, genetic diversity relative to the native population. Using coalescent methods, we reconstruct the demographic history of the invasion and infer the source population of each invasion event, which shows that propagule pressure and multiple introductions play an important role in determining invasion success. Abstract: Invasion rates have increased in the past 100 y irrespective of international conventions. What characterizes a successful invasion event? And how does genetic diversity translate into invasion success? Employing a whole-genome perspective using one of the most successful marine invasive species world-wide as a model, we resolve temporal invasion dynamics during independent invasion events in Eurasia. We reveal complex regionally independent invasion histories including cases of recurrent translocations, time-limited translocations, and stepping-stone range expansions with severe bottlenecks within the same species. Irrespective of these different invasion dynamics, which lead to contrasting patterns of genetic diversity, all nonindigenous populations are similarly successful. This illustrates that genetic diversity, per se, is not necessarily the driving force behind invasion success. Other factors such as propagule pressure and repeated introductions are an important contribution to facilitate successful invasions. This calls into question the dominant paradigm of the genetic paradox of invasions, i.e., the successful establishment of nonindigenous populations with low levels of genetic diversity.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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