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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    [s.l.] : Nature Publishing Group
    Nature 351 (1991), S. 315-317 
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] The classical explanation for the success of diploidy relies on the protection it offers against expression of deleterious muta-tions4. Consider the simple case of one deleterious allele in a large population. The deleterious allele appears in each gener-ation by mutation, but is selected against, ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: Rhodophyta ; Gracilaria verrucosa ; evolution of ploidy ; lead toxicity ; ultra-violet mutagen ; survival rates ; growth
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract This study tests the responses of juvenile gametophytes and tetrasporophytes (holdfast stage) of the isomorphic alga Gracilaria verrucosa under different environmental conditions. Estimations of survival and growth of holdfasts of haploid and diploid juvenile individuals were performed in natural sea-water and artificial culture medium, and under stringent conditions using lead as a toxin and ultra violet radiation as a mutagen. Results indicate that (i) holdfasts of haploid juveniles grow better than diploids in non-optimal medium conditions; (ii) holdfasts of diploid juveniles have a better tolerance to lead than haploids; and (iii) slight advantage of holdfasts of diploid juveniles grow better than haploids under U.V. radiation.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-08-19
    Description: To understand the thermal plasticity of a coastal foundation species across its latitudinal distribution, we assess physiological responses to high temperature stress in the kelp Laminaria digitata in combination with population genetic characteristics and relate heat resilience to genetic features and phylogeography. We hypothesize that populations from Arctic and cold-temperate locations are less heat resilient than populations from warm distributional edges. Using meristems of natural L. digitata populations from six locations ranging between Kongsfjorden, Spitsbergen (79°N), and Quiberon, France (47°N), we performed a common-garden heat stress experi- ment applying 15°C to 23°C over eight days. We assessed growth, photosynthetic quantum yield, carbon and nitrogen storage, and xanthophyll pigment contents as response traits. Population connectivity and genetic diversity were analyzed with microsatellite markers. Results from the heat stress experiment suggest that the upper temperature limit of L. digitata is nearly identical across its distribution range, but subtle differences in growth and stress responses were revealed for three popu- lations from the species’ ecological range margins. Two populations at the species’ warm distribution limit showed higher temperature tolerance compared to other populations in growth at 19°C and recovery from 21°C (Quiberon, France), and pho- tosynthetic quantum yield and xanthophyll pigment responses at 23°C (Helgoland, Germany). In L. digitata from the northernmost population (Spitsbergen, Norway), quantum yield indicated the highest heat sensitivity. Microsatellite genotyping revealed all sampled populations to be genetically distinct, with a strong hierarchical structure between southern and northern clades. Genetic diversity was lowest in the isolated population of the North Sea island of Helgoland and highest in Roscoff in the English Channel. All together, these results support the hypothesis of moderate local differentiation across L. digitata's European distribution, whereas effects are likely too weak to ameliorate the species’ capacity to withstand ocean warming and marine heatwaves at the southern range edge.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev , info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-05-31
    Description: In recent years, kelp populations worldwide have faced decline and extirpation at their equatorward limits, while models predict a poleward shift of kelp ecosystems during climate change. To gain an understanding of local thermal adaptation and response plasticity in a forest-forming kelp species, we assessed populations of Laminaria digitata along its entire European distribution range for their capacity to withstand high temperature stress, and analysed population structure and diversity with microsatellite markers (n=12). We sampled wild meristematic L. digitata material (n=30) at six locations ranging from Kongsfjorden, Spitsbergen, to the southernmost distribution limit in Quiberon, France. In a heatwave experiment, we subjected samples from all locations to the same, sublethal temperature treatments (15–23°C for eight days including acclimation) and assessed growth, storage compounds, photosynthetic efficiency and pigment contents as response traits. Recovery was assessed following seven days at 15°C. Microsatellite genotyping revealed all sampled populations to be genetically distinct entities, underlying strong regional structuring between southern and northern clades. Genetic diversity was highest at the southern distribution limit in Quiberon and lowest in the geographically isolated population on the island of Helgoland in the North Sea. The physiological response of L. digitata to temperature was similar over the entire distribution range and did not reflect the mean temperature gradient along the latitudinal gradient. However, material from Spitsbergen and Helgoland presented subtle differentiations in their temperature responses, which reflect long-term local temperature histories at these sites. Finally, a heatwave reaching 23°C for five days led to a cessation of growth, from which none of the sampled populations recovered. Our results suggest that the heat stress response of L. digitata is generally stable across its distribution range, despite strong genetic structuring of the populations. Slight local differentiation occurred in populations from the most distinct thermal environments, but 23°C posed a growth limit for all populations. This implies that local adaptation in trailing edge populations of L. digitata might not alleviate detrimental effects of global warming.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2018-05-30
    Description: Combined phylogenetic, physiological, and biochemical approaches revealed that differences in defense-related responses among 17 species belonging to the Gracilariaceae were consistent with their evolutionary history. An oxidative burst response resulting from activation of NADPH oxidase was always observed in two of the subgenera of Gracilaria sensu lato (Gracilaria, Hydropuntia), but not in Gracilariopsis and in species related to Gracilaria chilensis (“chilensis” clade). On the other hand, all species examined except Gracilaria tenuistipitata var. liui and Gracilariopsis longissima responded with up-regulation of agar oligosaccharide oxidase to an challenge with agar oligosaccharides. As indicated by pharmacological experiments conducted with Gracilaria chilensis and Gracilaria sp. “dura,” the up-regulation of agar oligosaccharide oxidase involved an NAD(P)H-dependent signaling pathway, but not kinase activity. By contrast, the activation of NADPH oxidase requires protein phosphorylation. Both responses are therefore independent, and the agar oligosaccharide-activated oxidative burst evolved after the capacity to oxidize agar oligosaccharide, probably providing additional defensive capacity to the most recently differentiated clades of Gracilariaceae. As demonstrated with Gracilaria gracilis, Gracilaria dura, and Gracilariopsis longissima, the different responses to agar oligosaccharides allow for a fast and nondestructive distinction among different clades of gracilarioids that are morphologically convergent. Based upon sequences of the chloroplast-encoded rbcL gene, this study suggests that at least some of the samples from NW America recorded as Gs. lemanaeiformis are probably Gs. chorda. Moreover, previous records of Gracilaria conferta from Israel are shown to be based upon misidentification of Gracilaria sp. “dura,” a species that belongs to the Hydropuntia subgenus.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: Communities are shaped by scale dependent processes. To study the diversity and variation of microbial communities across scales, the invasive and widespread seaweed Agarophyton vermiculophyllum presents a unique opportunity. We characterized pro‐ and eukaryotic communities associated with this holobiont across its known distribution range, which stretches over the northern hemisphere. Our data reveal that community composition and diversity in the holobiont vary at local but also larger geographic scales. While processes acting at the local scale (i.e., within population) are the main structuring drivers of associated microbial communities, changes in community composition also depend on processes acting at larger geographic scales. Interestingly, the largest analysed scale (i.e., native and non‐native ranges) explained variation in the prevalence of predicted functional groups, which could suggest a functional shift in microbiota occurred over the course of the invasion process. While high variability in microbiota at the local scale supports A. vermiculophyllum to be a generalist host, we also identified a number of core taxa. These geographically independent holobiont members imply that cointroduction of specific microbiota may have additionally promoted the invasion process.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Macroalgal (seaweed) genomic resources are generally lacking as compared to other eukaryotic taxa, and this is particularly true in the red algae (Rhodophyta). Understanding red algal genomes is critical to understanding eukaryotic evolution given that red algal genes are spread across eukaryotic lineages from secondary endosymbiosis and red algae diverged early in the Archaeplastids. The Gracilariales is a highly diverse and widely distributed order including species that can serve as ecosystem engineers in intertidal habitats and several notorious introduced species. The genus Gracilaria is cultivated worldwide, in part for its production of agar and other bioactive compounds with downstream pharmaceutical and industrial applications. This genus is also emerging as a model for algal evolutionary ecology. Here, we report new whole genome assemblies for two species (G. chilensis and G. gracilis), a draft genome assembly of G. caudata, and genome annotation of the previously published G. vermiculophylla genome. To facilitate accessibility and comparative analysis, we integrated these data in a newly created web-based portal dedicated to red algal genomics (https://rhodoexplorer.sb-roscoff.fr). These genomes will provide a resource for understanding algal biology and, more broadly, eukaryotic evolution.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: archive
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2018-08-08
    Description: Vav proteins maintain epithelial traits in breast cancer cells using miR-200c -dependent and independent mechanisms Vav proteins maintain epithelial traits in breast cancer cells using 〈i〉miR-200c〈/i〉-dependent and independent mechanisms, Published online: 07 August 2018; doi:10.1038/s41388-018-0433-7 Vav proteins maintain epithelial traits in breast cancer cells using miR-200c -dependent and independent mechanisms
    Print ISSN: 0950-9232
    Topics: Medicine
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