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1.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 8701, 2024 04 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38622193

RESUMO

Honey bees are social insects, and each colony member has unique morphological and physiological traits associated with their social tasks. Previously, we identified a long non-coding RNA from honey bees, termed Nb-1, whose expression in the brain decreases associated with the age-polyethism of workers and is detected in some neurosecretory cells and octopaminergic neurons, suggesting its role in the regulation of worker labor transition. Herein, we investigated its spatially and temporary-regulated/sex-specific expression. Nb-1 was expressed as an abundant maternal RNA during oogenesis and embryogenesis in both sexes. In addition, Nb-1 was expressed preferentially in the proliferating neuroblasts of the mushroom bodies (a higher-order center of the insect brain) in the pupal brains, suggesting its role in embryogenesis and mushroom body development. On the contrary, Nb-1 was expressed in a drone-specific manner in the pupal and adult retina, suggesting its role in the drone visual development and/or sense. Subcellular localization of Nb-1 in the brain during development differed depending on the cell type. Considering that Nb-1 is conserved only in Apidae, our findings suggest that Nb-1 potentially has pleiotropic functions in the expression of multiple developmental, behavioral, and physiological traits, which are closely associated with the honey bee lifecycle.


Assuntos
RNA Longo não Codificante , Feminino , Masculino , Abelhas/genética , Animais , RNA Longo não Codificante/genética , RNA Longo não Codificante/metabolismo , Nióbio , Encéfalo/fisiologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Cabeça , Pupa
2.
J Comput Chem ; 35(18): 1347-55, 2014 Jul 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24771232

RESUMO

A new three-dimensional reference interaction site model (3D-RISM) program for massively parallel machines combined with the volumetric 3D fast Fourier transform (3D-FFT) was developed, and tested on the RIKEN K supercomputer. The ordinary parallel 3D-RISM program has a limitation on the number of parallelizations because of the limitations of the slab-type 3D-FFT. The volumetric 3D-FFT relieves this limitation drastically. We tested the 3D-RISM calculation on the large and fine calculation cell (2048(3) grid points) on 16,384 nodes, each having eight CPU cores. The new 3D-RISM program achieved excellent scalability to the parallelization, running on the RIKEN K supercomputer. As a benchmark application, we employed the program, combined with molecular dynamics simulation, to analyze the oligomerization process of chymotrypsin Inhibitor 2 mutant. The results demonstrate that the massive parallel 3D-RISM program is effective to analyze the hydration properties of the large biomolecular systems.


Assuntos
Análise de Fourier , Modelos Teóricos , Polímeros/química , Termodinâmica , Simulação de Dinâmica Molecular , Peptídeos/química , Proteínas de Plantas/química
3.
PLoS One ; 8(8): e71732, 2013.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23990981

RESUMO

The mushroom bodies (a higher center) of the honeybee (Apis mellifera L) brain were considered to comprise three types of intrinsic neurons, including large- and small-type Kenyon cells that have distinct gene expression profiles. Although previous neural activity mapping using the immediate early gene kakusei suggested that small-type Kenyon cells are mainly active in forager brains, the precise Kenyon cell types that are active in the forager brain remain to be elucidated. We searched for novel gene(s) that are expressed in an area-preferential manner in the honeybee brain. By identifying and analyzing expression of a gene that we termed mKast (middle-type Kenyon cell-preferential arrestin-related protein), we discovered novel 'middle-type Kenyon cells' that are sandwiched between large- and small-type Kenyon cells and have a gene expression profile almost complementary to those of large- and small-type Kenyon cells. Expression analysis of kakusei revealed that both small-type Kenyon cells and some middle-type Kenyon cells are active in the forager brains, suggesting their possible involvement in information processing during the foraging flight. mKast expression began after the differentiation of small- and large-type Kenyon cells during metamorphosis, suggesting that middle-type Kenyon cells differentiate by modifying some characteristics of large- and/or small-type Kenyon cells. Interestingly, CaMKII and mKast, marker genes for large- and middle-type Kenyon cells, respectively, were preferentially expressed in a distinct set of optic lobe (a visual center) neurons. Our findings suggested that it is not simply the Kenyon cell-preferential gene expression profiles, rather, a 'clustering' of neurons with similar gene expression profiles as particular Kenyon cell types that characterize the honeybee mushroom body structure.


Assuntos
Abelhas/genética , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Corpos Pedunculados/metabolismo , Transcriptoma , Animais , Arrestina/classificação , Arrestina/genética , Encéfalo/citologia , Proteína Quinase Tipo 2 Dependente de Cálcio-Calmodulina/genética , Hibridização in Situ Fluorescente , Proteínas de Insetos/genética , Microscopia de Fluorescência , Corpos Pedunculados/citologia , Neurônios/citologia , Neurônios/metabolismo , Análise de Sequência com Séries de Oligonucleotídeos , Filogenia , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase Via Transcriptase Reversa
4.
J Comput Chem ; 31(13): 2381-8, 2010 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20652982

RESUMO

A parallel Fock matrix construction program for FMO-MO method has been developed with the distributed shared memory model. To construct a large-sized Fock matrix during FMO-MO calculations, a distributed parallel algorithm was designed to make full use of local memory to reduce communication, and was implemented on the Global Array toolkit. A benchmark calculation for a small system indicates that the parallelization efficiency of the matrix construction portion is as high as 93% at 1,024 processors. A large FMO-MO application on the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) protein (17,246 atoms and 96,234 basis functions) was also carried out at the HF/6-31G level of theory, with the frontier orbitals being extracted by a Sakurai-Sugiura eigensolver. It takes 11.3 h for the FMO calculation, 49.1 h for the Fock matrix construction, and 10 min to extract 94 eigen-components on a PC cluster system using 256 processors.


Assuntos
Biologia Computacional , Simulação por Computador , Receptores ErbB/química , Proteínas de Plantas/química , Teoria Quântica , Modelos Moleculares
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