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1.
Ann Bot ; 134(3): 437-454, 2024 Aug 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38836501

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The benefits and costs of amphistomy (AS) vs. hypostomy (HS) are not fully understood. Here, we quantify benefits of access of CO2 through stomata on the upper (adaxial) leaf surface, using 13C abundance in the adaxial and abaxial epicuticular wax. Additionally, a relationship between the distribution of stomata and epicuticular wax on the opposite leaf sides is studied. METHODS: We suggest that the 13C content of long-chain aliphatic compounds of cuticular wax records the leaf internal CO2 concentration in chloroplasts adjacent to the adaxial and abaxial epidermes. This unique property stems from: (1) wax synthesis being located exclusively in epidermal cells; and (2) ongoing wax renewal over the whole leaf lifespan. Compound-specific and bulk wax 13C abundance (δ) was related to amphistomy level (ASL; as a fraction of adaxial in all stomata) of four AS and five HS species grown under various levels of irradiance. The isotopic polarity of epicuticular wax, i.e. the difference in abaxial and adaxial δ (δab - δad), was used to calculate the leaf dorsiventral CO2 gradient. Leaf-side-specific epicuticular wax deposition (amphiwaxy level) was estimated and related to ASL. KEY RESULTS: In HS species, the CO2 concentration in the adaxial epidermis was lower than in the abaxial one, independently of light conditions. In AS leaves grown in high-light and low-light conditions, the isotopic polarity and CO2 gradient varied in parallel with ASL. The AS leaves grown in high-light conditions increased ASL compared with low light, and δab - δad approached near-zero values. Changes in ASL occurred concomitantly with changes in amphiwaxy level. CONCLUSIONS: Leaf wax isotopic polarity is a newly identified leaf trait, distinguishing between hypo- and amphistomatous species and indicating that increased ASL in sun-exposed AS leaves reduces the CO2 gradient across the leaf mesophyll. Stomata and epicuticular wax deposition follow similar leaf-side patterning.


Asunto(s)
Dióxido de Carbono , Isótopos de Carbono , Epidermis de la Planta , Hojas de la Planta , Estomas de Plantas , Ceras , Ceras/metabolismo , Ceras/química , Isótopos de Carbono/análisis , Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Estomas de Plantas/fisiología , Epidermis de la Planta/metabolismo , Hojas de la Planta/metabolismo , Fotosíntesis
2.
Am J Bot ; 111(2): e16284, 2024 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38351495

RESUMEN

PREMISE: The adaptive significance of amphistomy (stomata on both upper and lower leaf surfaces) is unresolved. A widespread association between amphistomy and open, sunny habitats suggests the adaptive benefit of amphistomy may be greatest in these contexts, but this hypothesis has not been tested experimentally. Understanding amphistomy informs its potential as a target for crop improvement and paleoenvironment reconstruction. METHODS: We developed a method to quantify "amphistomy advantage" ( AA $\text{AA}$ ) as the log-ratio of photosynthesis in an amphistomatous leaf to that of the same leaf but with gas exchange blocked through the upper surface (pseudohypostomy). Humidity modulated stomatal conductance and thus enabled comparing photosynthesis at the same total stomatal conductance. We estimated AA $\text{AA}$ and leaf traits in six coastal (open, sunny) and six montane (closed, shaded) populations of the indigenous Hawaiian species 'ilima (Sida fallax). RESULTS: Coastal 'ilima leaves benefit 4.04 times more from amphistomy than montane leaves. Evidence was equivocal with respect to two hypotheses: (1) that coastal leaves benefit more because they are thicker and have lower CO2 conductance through the internal airspace and (2) that they benefit more because they have similar conductance on each surface, as opposed to most conductance being through the lower surface. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first direct experimental evidence that amphistomy increases photosynthesis, consistent with the hypothesis that parallel pathways through upper and lower mesophyll increase CO2 supply to chloroplasts. The prevalence of amphistomatous leaves in open, sunny habitats can partially be explained by the increased benefit of amphistomy in "sun" leaves, but the mechanistic basis remains uncertain.


Asunto(s)
Dióxido de Carbono , Hojas de la Planta , Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Hawaii , Hojas de la Planta/metabolismo , Fotosíntesis , Plantas/metabolismo , Estomas de Plantas
3.
Am Nat ; 201(6): 794-812, 2023 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37229708

RESUMEN

AbstractQuantifying the relative contribution of functional and developmental constraints on phenotypic variation is a long-standing goal of macroevolution, but it is often difficult to distinguish different types of constraints. Alternatively, selection can limit phenotypic (co)variation if some trait combinations are generally maladaptive. The anatomy of leaves with stomata on both surfaces (amphistomatous) present a unique opportunity to test the importance of functional and developmental constraints on phenotypic evolution. The key insight is that stomata on each leaf surface encounter the same functional and developmental constraints but potentially different selective pressures because of leaf asymmetry in light capture, gas exchange, and other features. Independent evolution of stomatal traits on each surface imply that functional and developmental constraints alone likely do not explain trait covariance. Packing limits on how many stomata can fit into a finite epidermis and cell size-mediated developmental integration are hypothesized to constrain variation in stomatal anatomy. The simple geometry of the planar leaf surface and knowledge of stomatal development make it possible to derive equations for phenotypic (co)variance caused by these constraints and compare them with data. We analyzed evolutionary covariance between stomatal density and length in amphistomatous leaves from 236 phylogenetically independent contrasts using a robust Bayesian model. Stomatal anatomy on each surface diverges partially independently, meaning that packing limits and developmental integration are not sufficient to explain phenotypic (co)variation. Hence, (co)variation in ecologically important traits like stomata arises in part because there is a limited range of evolutionary optima. We show how it is possible to evaluate the contribution of different constraints by deriving expected patterns of (co)variance and testing them using similar but separate tissues, organs, or sexes.


Asunto(s)
Magnoliopsida , Estomas de Plantas , Estomas de Plantas/anatomía & histología , Magnoliopsida/anatomía & histología , Teorema de Bayes , Hojas de la Planta/anatomía & histología , Fenotipo
4.
Heart Lung Circ ; 32(9): 1076-1079, 2023 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37355429

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Although modern immunosuppressants improve survival post-transplant, they are associated with long-term metabolic complications, such as post-transplant diabetes mellitus (PTDM). Calcineurin inhibitor-sparing regimens using everolimus attenuate some complications such as left ventricular hypertrophy. However, the metabolic effects of everolimus following transplant are less clear. METHODS: Post-hoc analysis to compare PTDM and other metabolic outcomes in participants of a randomised open-label clinical trial of low-dose everolimus and tacrolimus versus standard-dose tacrolimus in heart transplant recipients (RADTAC1 study). RESULTS: There were 39 participants in the trial; mean follow-up was 6.4±1.5 years. There was a high rate of pre-existing diabetes (26%) and newly diagnosed PTDM (36%) during follow-up. Half the patients who developed PTDM in the everolimus-tacrolimus group (n=4/8) ceased diabetes medications during follow-up, which was not observed in patients on standard tacrolimus (n=0/6). In the first 12 months there was a higher use of non-insulin treatment for diabetes in the everolimus-tacrolimus group compared to the standard tacrolimus group. CONCLUSIONS: This study suggests that treatment with everolimus may be associated with improved glycaemic control of PTDM relative to treatment with standard doses of calcineurin inhibitor. These findings should be further studied in prospective randomised trials.


Asunto(s)
Diabetes Mellitus , Trasplante de Corazón , Humanos , Everolimus , Tacrolimus/uso terapéutico , Inhibidores de la Calcineurina/efectos adversos , Estudios Prospectivos , Progresión de la Enfermedad , Rechazo de Injerto
5.
New Phytol ; 234(4): 1464-1476, 2022 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35218016

RESUMEN

Habitat restoration may depend on the recovery of plant microbial symbionts such as arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi, but this requires a better understanding of the rules that govern their community assembly. We examined the interactions of soil and host-associated AM fungal communities between remnant and restored patches of subtropical montane forests. While AM fungal richness did not differ between habitat types, community membership did and was influenced by geography, habitat and host. These differences were largely driven by rare host-specific AM fungi that displayed near-complete turnover between forest types, while core AM fungal taxa were highly abundant and ubiquitous. The bipartite networks in the remnant forest were more specialized and hosts more specific than in the restored forest. Host-associated AM fungal communities nested within soil communities in both habitats, but only significantly so in the restored forest. Our results provide evidence that restored and remnant forests harbour the same core fungal symbionts, while rare host-specific taxa differ, and that geography, host identity and taxonomic resolution strongly affect the observed distribution patterns of these fungi. We suggest that host-specific interactions with AM fungi, as well as spatial processes, should be explicitly considered to effectively re-establish target host and symbiont communities.


Asunto(s)
Micobioma , Micorrizas , Bosques , Hongos , Raíces de Plantas/microbiología , Suelo , Microbiología del Suelo
6.
Ann Bot ; 129(6): 709-722, 2022 05 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33245747

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The acquisitive-conservative axis of plant ecological strategies results in a pattern of leaf trait covariation that captures the balance between leaf construction costs and plant growth potential. Studies evaluating trait covariation within species are scarcer, and have mostly dealt with variation in response to environmental gradients. Little work has been published on intraspecific patterns of leaf trait covariation in the absence of strong environmental variation. METHODS: We analysed covariation of four leaf functional traits [specific leaf area (SLA) leaf dry matter content (LDMC), force to tear (Ft) and leaf nitrogen content (Nm)] in six Poaceae and four Fabaceae species common in the dry Chaco forest of Central Argentina, growing in the field and in a common garden. We compared intraspecific covariation patterns (slopes, correlation and effect size) of leaf functional traits with global interspecific covariation patterns. Additionally, we checked for possible climatic and edaphic factors that could affect the intraspecific covariation pattern. KEY RESULTS: We found negative correlations for the LDMC-SLA, Ft-SLA, LDMC-Nm and Ft-Nm trait pairs. This intraspecific covariation pattern found both in the field and in the common garden and not explained by climatic or edaphic variation in the field follows the expected acquisitive-conservative axis. At the same time, we found quantitative differences in slopes among different species, and between these intraspecific patterns and the interspecific ones. Many of these differences seem to be idiosyncratic, but some appear consistent among species (e.g. all the intraspecific LDMC-SLA and LDMC-Nm slopes tend to be shallower than the global pattern). CONCLUSIONS: Our study indicates that the acquisitive-conservative leaf functional trait covariation pattern occurs at the intraspecific level even in the absence of relevant environmental variation in the field. This suggests a high degree of variation-covariation in leaf functional traits not driven by environmental variables.


Asunto(s)
Bosques , Nitrógeno , Ecología , Fenotipo , Hojas de la Planta , Poaceae
7.
Am J Bot ; 109(11): 1811-1821, 2022 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36317645

RESUMEN

PREMISE: Many traits covary with environmental gradients to form phenotypic clines. While local adaptation to the environment can generate phenotypic clines, other nonadaptive processes may also. If local adaptation causes phenotypic clines, then the direction of genotypic selection on traits should shift from one end of the cline to the other. Traditionally, genotypic selection on non-Gaussian traits like germination rate have been hampered because it is challenging to measure their genetic variance. METHODS: Here we used quantitative genetics and reciprocal transplants to test whether a previously discovered cline in germination rate showed additional signatures of adaptation in the scarlet monkeyflower (Mimulus cardinalis). We measured genotypic and population level covariation between germination rate and early survival, a component of fitness. We developed a novel discrete log-normal model to estimate genetic variance in germination rate. RESULTS: Contrary to our adaptive hypothesis, we found no evidence that genetic variation in germination rate contributed to variation in early survival. Across populations, southern populations in both gardens germinated earlier and survived more. CONCLUSIONS: Southern populations have higher early survival but it is not caused by faster germination. This pattern is consistent with nonadaptive forces driving the phenotypic cline in germination rate, but future work will need to assess whether there is selection at other life stages. This statistical framework should help expand quantitative genetic analyses for other waiting-time traits.


Asunto(s)
Lamiales , Mimulus , Mimulus/genética , Germinación/genética , Adaptación Fisiológica/genética , Fenotipo , Selección Genética
8.
Proc Biol Sci ; 288(1952): 20210605, 2021 06 09.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34074123

RESUMEN

While the fundamental biophysics of C3 photosynthesis is highly conserved across plants, substantial leaf structural and enzymatic variation translates into variability in rates of carbon assimilation. Although this variation is well documented, it remains poorly understood how photosynthetic rates evolve, and whether macroevolutionary changes are related to the evolution of leaf morphology and biochemistry. A substantial challenge in large-scale comparative studies is disentangling evolutionary adaptation from environmental acclimation. We overcome this by using a 'macroevolutionary common garden' approach in which we measured metabolic traits (Jmax and Vcmax) from 111 phylogenetically diverse species in a shared environment. We find substantial phylogenetic signal in these traits at moderate phylogenetic timescales, but this signal dissipates quickly at deeper scales. Morphological traits exhibit phylogenetic signal over much deeper timescales, suggesting that these are less evolutionarily constrained than metabolic traits. Furthermore, while morphological and biochemical traits (LMA, Narea and Carea) are weakly predictive of Jmax and Vcmax, evolutionary changes in these traits are mostly decoupled from changes in metabolic traits. This lack of tight evolutionary coupling implies that it may be incorrect to use changes in these functional traits in response to global change to infer that photosynthetic strategy is also evolving.


Asunto(s)
Fotosíntesis , Hojas de la Planta , Aclimatación , Dióxido de Carbono , Filogenia
9.
New Phytol ; 229(2): 791-804, 2021 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32885451

RESUMEN

Leaf optical properties impact leaf energy balance and thus leaf temperature. The effect of leaf development on mid-infrared (MIR) reflectance, and hence thermal emissivity, has not been investigated in detail. We measured a suite of morphological characteristics, as well as directional-hemispherical reflectance from ultraviolet to thermal infrared wavelengths (250 nm to 20 µm) of leaves from five temperate deciduous tree species over the 8 wk following spring leaf emergence. By contrast to reflectance at shorter wavelengths, the shape and magnitude of MIR reflectance spectra changed markedly with development. MIR spectral differences among species became more pronounced and unique as leaves matured. Comparison of reflectance spectra of intact vs dried and ground leaves points to cuticular development - and not internal structural or biochemical changes - as the main driving factor. Accompanying the observed spectral changes was a drop in thermal emissivity from about 0.99 to 0.95 over the 8 wk following leaf emergence. Emissivity changes were not large enough to substantially influence leaf temperature, but they could potentially lead to a bias in radiometrically measured temperatures of up to 3 K. Our results also pointed to the potential for using MIR spectroscopy to better understand species-level differences in cuticular development and composition.


Asunto(s)
Hojas de la Planta , Árboles , Estaciones del Año , Análisis Espectral , Temperatura
10.
Am J Bot ; 108(5): 844-856, 2021 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34036561

RESUMEN

PREMISE: Across taxa, vegetative and floral traits that vary along a fast-slow life-history axis are often correlated with leaf functional traits arrayed along the leaf economics spectrum, suggesting a constrained set of adaptive trait combinations. Such broad-scale convergence may arise from genetic constraints imposed by pleiotropy (or tight linkage) within species, or from natural selection alone. Understanding the genetic basis of trait syndromes and their components is key to distinguishing these alternatives and predicting evolution in novel environments. METHODS: We used a line-cross approach and quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping to characterize the genetic basis of twenty leaf functional/physiological, life history, and floral traits in hybrids between annualized and perennial populations of scarlet monkeyflower (Mimulus cardinalis). RESULTS: We mapped both single and multi-trait QTLs for life history, leaf function and reproductive traits, but found no evidence of genetic co-ordination across categories. A major QTL for three leaf functional traits (thickness, photosynthetic rate, and stomatal resistance) suggests that a simple shift in leaf anatomy may be key to adaptation to seasonally dry habitats. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that the co-ordination of resource-acquisitive leaf physiological traits with a fast life-history and more selfing mating system results from environmental selection rather than functional or genetic constraint. Independent assortment of distinct trait modules, as well as a simple genetic basis to leaf physiological traits associated with drought escape, may facilitate adaptation to changing climates.


Asunto(s)
Mimulus , Mapeo Cromosómico , Flores/genética , Mimulus/genética , Fenotipo , Hojas de la Planta/genética , Sitios de Carácter Cuantitativo/genética
11.
Endocr Pract ; 26(9): 1026-1030, 2020 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33471691

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: Graves' disease is an autoimmune disease characterized by production of autoantibodies directed against the thyroid gland. Thyrotropin-receptor antibodies (TRAbs) are clearly pathogenic, but the role of thyroidperoxidase antibodies (TPOAbs) in Graves disease is unknown. METHODS: We retrospectively studied whether TPOAb positivity reduced risk of relapse following antithyroid drug (ATD) treatment in newly diagnosed Graves disease. RESULTS: During follow-up of 204 patients with TRAb-positive Graves disease, 107 (52%) relapsed following withdrawal of ATD. Mean age was 40.0 years, and 82% were female. The average duration of ATD treatment was 23.5 months and was not different between patients who relapsed and those with sustained remission. Absence of TPOAbs significantly increased risk of Graves relapse (odds ratio, 2.21). Male sex and younger age were other factors significantly associated with increased risk of relapse. CONCLUSION: TPOAb positivity significantly improves the odds of remission following ATD treatment in newly diagnosed Graves' disease.


Asunto(s)
Antitiroideos , Enfermedad de Graves , Adulto , Antitiroideos/uso terapéutico , Autoanticuerpos , Femenino , Enfermedad de Graves/tratamiento farmacológico , Humanos , Yoduro Peroxidasa , Masculino , Receptores de Tirotropina , Recurrencia , Estudios Retrospectivos
12.
PLoS Genet ; 13(6): e1006817, 2017 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28604770

RESUMEN

Species barriers, expressed as hybrid inviability and sterility, are often due to epistatic interactions between divergent loci from two lineages. Theoretical models indicate that the strength, direction, and complexity of these genetic interactions can strongly affect the expression of interspecific reproductive isolation and the rates at which new species evolve. Nonetheless, empirical analyses have not quantified the frequency with which loci are involved in interactions affecting hybrid fitness, and whether these loci predominantly interact synergistically or antagonistically, or preferentially involve loci that have strong individual effects on hybrid fitness. We systematically examined the prevalence of interactions between pairs of short chromosomal regions from one species (Solanum habrochaites) co-introgressed into a heterospecific genetic background (Solanum lycopersicum), using lines containing pairwise combinations of 15 chromosomal segments from S. habrochaites in the background of S. lycopersicum (i.e., 95 double introgression lines). We compared the strength of hybrid incompatibility (either pollen sterility or seed sterility) expressed in each double introgression line to the expected additive effect of its two component single introgressions. We found that epistasis was common among co-introgressed regions. Interactions for hybrid dysfunction were substantially more prevalent in pollen fertility compared to seed fertility phenotypes, and were overwhelmingly antagonistic (i.e., double hybrids were less unfit than expected from additive single introgression effects). This pervasive antagonism is expected to attenuate the rate at which hybrid infertility accumulates among lineages over time (i.e., giving diminishing returns as more reproductive isolation loci accumulate), as well as decouple patterns of accumulation of sterility loci and hybrid incompatibility phenotypes. This decoupling effect might explain observed differences between pollen and seed fertility in their fit to theoretical predictions of the accumulation of isolation loci, including the 'snowball' effect.


Asunto(s)
Cromosomas de las Plantas/genética , Epistasis Genética , Sitios de Carácter Cuantitativo/genética , Aislamiento Reproductivo , Solanum lycopersicum/genética , Mapeo Cromosómico , Fertilidad/genética , Genotipo , Hibridación Genética , Solanum lycopersicum/crecimiento & desarrollo , Modelos Genéticos , Fenotipo , Infertilidad Vegetal/genética , Polen/genética , Semillas/genética , Especificidad de la Especie
13.
Oecologia ; 190(1): 59-67, 2019 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30953167

RESUMEN

Climate can affect plant populations through direct effects on physiology and fitness, and through indirect effects on their relationships with pollinating mutualists. We therefore expect that geographic variation in climate might lead to variation in plant mating systems. Biogeographic processes, such as range expansion, can also contribute to geographic patterns in mating system traits. We manipulated pollinator access to plants in eight sites spanning the geographic range of Clarkia pulchella to investigate geographic and climatic drivers of fruit production and seed set in the absence of pollinators (reproductive assurance). We examined how reproductive assurance and fruit production varied with the position of sites within the range of the species and with temperature and precipitation. We found that reproductive assurance in C. pulchella was greatest in populations in the northern part of the species' range and was not well explained by any of the climate variables that we considered. In the absence of pollinators, some populations of C. pulchella have the capacity to increase fruit production, perhaps through resource reallocation, but this response is climate dependent. Pollinators are important for reproduction in this species, and recruitment is sensitive to seed input. The degree of autonomous self-pollination that is possible in populations of this mixed-mating species may be shaped by historic biogeographic processes or variation in plant and pollinator community composition rather than variation in climate.


Asunto(s)
Clarkia , Flores , Polinización , Reproducción , Semillas , Simbiosis
14.
New Phytol ; 218(1): 242-252, 2018 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29288622

RESUMEN

In most plants, stomata are located only on the abaxial leaf surface (hypostomy), but many plants have stomata on both surfaces (amphistomy). High light and herbaceous growth form have been hypothesized to favor amphistomy, but these hypotheses have not been rigorously tested together using phylogenetic comparative methods. I leveraged a large dataset including stomatal ratio, Ellenberg light indicator value, growth form and phylogenetic relationships for 372 species of British angiosperms. I used phylogenetic comparative methods to test how light and/or growth form influence stomatal ratio and density. High light and herbaceous growth form are correlated with amphistomy, as predicted, but they also interact; the effect of light is pronounced in therophytes (annuals) and perennial herbs, but muted in phanerophytes (shrubs and trees). Furthermore, amphistomy and stomatal density evolve together in response to light. Comparative analyses of British angiosperms reveal two major insights. First, light and growth form interact to shape stomatal ratio; amphistomy is common under high light, but mostly for herbs. Second, coordinated evolution of adaxial stomatal density and light tolerance indicates that amphistomy helps to optimally balance light acquisition with gas exchange. Stomatal ratio may have potential as a functional trait for paleoecology and crop improvement.


Asunto(s)
Luz , Magnoliopsida/crecimiento & desarrollo , Magnoliopsida/efectos de la radiación , Estomas de Plantas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Estomas de Plantas/efectos de la radiación , Adaptación Fisiológica/efectos de la radiación , Evolución Biológica , Filogenia
16.
New Phytol ; 213(4): 1642-1653, 2017 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28164333

RESUMEN

Theory predicts that natural selection should favor coordination between leaf physiology, biochemistry and anatomical structure along a functional trait spectrum from fast, resource-acquisitive syndromes to slow, resource-conservative syndromes. However, the coordination hypothesis has rarely been tested at a phylogenetic scale most relevant for understanding rapid adaptation in the recent past or for the prediction of evolutionary trajectories in response to climate change. We used a common garden to examine genetically based coordination between leaf traits across 19 wild and cultivated tomato taxa. We found weak integration between leaf structure (e.g. leaf mass per area) and physiological function (photosynthetic rate, biochemical capacity and CO2 diffusion), even though all were arrayed in the predicted direction along a 'fast-slow' spectrum. This suggests considerable scope for unique trait combinations to evolve in response to new environments or in crop breeding. In particular, we found that partially independent variation in stomatal and mesophyll conductance may allow a plant to improve water-use efficiency without necessarily sacrificing maximum photosynthetic rates. Our study does not imply that functional trait spectra, such as the leaf economics spectrum, are unimportant, but that many important axes of variation within a taxonomic group may be unique and not generalizable to other taxa.


Asunto(s)
Hojas de la Planta/anatomía & histología , Hojas de la Planta/fisiología , Solanum lycopersicum/anatomía & histología , Solanum lycopersicum/fisiología , Dióxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Clima , Difusión , Cinética , Células del Mesófilo/metabolismo , Fenotipo , Fotosíntesis , Subunidades de Proteína/metabolismo , Ribulosa-Bifosfato Carboxilasa/metabolismo , Especificidad de la Especie , Temperatura , Agua
17.
J Clin Psychopharmacol ; 36(2): 120-4, 2016 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26872115

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: Weight gain on clozapine is highly variable and poorly predictable. Its mechanisms are not well understood. This study explores the factors that predict weight gain between 3 and 12 months of clozapine therapy in community-dwelling patients. METHODS: We conducted a retrospective audit of patients attending an outpatient clozapine clinic. Weight change from 3 to 12 months of therapy was recorded, expressed as a percentage of the 3-month weight. Univariate analyses compared percent weight change according to sex, smoking status, country of birth, and baseline body mass index. Correlations between weight gain, age, and clozapine dose were explored. A general linear model identified independent predictors of weight gain. RESULTS: The mean weight change from 3 to 12 months in 117 patients was +3.1% (range, -17% to +30%). Females gained more weight than males (+5.5% vs +1.3%, P = 0.01), smokers gained more than nonsmokers (+5.1% vs +1.2%, P = 0.02), and obese patients gained less than normal or overweight individuals (0.15% vs 4.6% and 5.2%, respectively, P = 0.01). Age and clozapine dose had no relation to weight change. On multivariate analysis, baseline BMI and smoking status remained independent predictors of percent weight change in females. These 2 predictors explained 25% of weight change in females in the first 3 to 12 months of therapy. These associations were not observed in males. CONCLUSIONS: We hypothesize that smoking affects weight change by promoting clozapine metabolism to norclozapine via cytochrome P450 enzymes. Verifying this hypothesis and exploring the mechanisms underpinning the sex dichotomy are areas for further research.


Asunto(s)
Antipsicóticos/efectos adversos , Índice de Masa Corporal , Clozapina/efectos adversos , Caracteres Sexuales , Fumar/metabolismo , Aumento de Peso/efectos de los fármacos , Adulto , Estudios de Cohortes , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Valor Predictivo de las Pruebas , Estudios Retrospectivos , Esquizofrenia/tratamiento farmacológico , Esquizofrenia/metabolismo , Fumar/efectos adversos , Resultado del Tratamiento , Aumento de Peso/fisiología , Adulto Joven
19.
Am Nat ; 186(3): 421-33, 2015 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26655358

RESUMEN

The West-Brown-Enquist (WBE) metabolic scaling theory posits that many organismal features scale predictably with body size because of selection to minimize transport costs in resource distribution networks. Many scaling exponents are quarter-powers, as predicted by WBE, but there are also biologically significant deviations that could reflect adaptation to different environments. A central but untested prediction of the WBE model is that wide deviation from optimal scaling is penalized, leading to a pattern of constraint on scaling exponents. Here, we demonstrate, using phylogenetic comparative methods, that variation in allometric scaling between mass and leaf area across 17 wild tomato taxa is constrained around a value indistinguishable from that predicted by WBE but significantly greater than 2/3 (geometric-similarity model). The allometric-scaling exponent was highly correlated with fecundity, water use, and drought response, suggesting that it is functionally significant and therefore could be under selective constraints. However, scaling was not strictly log-log linear but rather declined during ontogeny in all species, as has been observed in many plant species. We caution that although our results supported one prediction of the WBE model, it did not strongly test the model in other important respects. Nevertheless, phylogenetic comparative methods such as those used here are powerful but underutilized tools for metabolic ecology that complement existing methods to adjudicate between models.


Asunto(s)
Sequías , Modelos Teóricos , Solanum/metabolismo , Fertilidad , Fotosíntesis , Filogenia , Hojas de la Planta/anatomía & histología , Hojas de la Planta/metabolismo , Solanum/anatomía & histología , Agua/metabolismo
20.
Am Nat ; 185(1): 70-86, 2015 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25560554

RESUMEN

Hybrid incompatibilities contribute to reproductive isolation between species, allowing them to follow independent evolutionary trajectories. Since hybrid incompatibilities are by definition deleterious, they cannot be selected for directly and must arise as a by-product of evolutionary divergence. Divergent resolution of duplicate genes, a special case of Dobzhansky-Muller incompatibilities, is one mechanism by which hybrid incompatibility can evolve. Following whole-genome duplication, loss of gene copies could possibly increase the opportunity for divergent resolution and, hence, the evolution of hybrid incompatibilities. However, divergent resolution can take place only when populations are isolated in allopatry; genes lost within a species cannot contribute to future speciation. Furthermore, nearly complete allopatry is necessary for passive divergent resolution. Using mathematical models, we demonstrate that these two factors severely impede the ability of divergent resolution alone to increase speciation rates, except under very particular conditions. Instead, we find that the population dynamics of diverging lineages dominate this process, leading to a larger role for ecology relative to genetics in the origin of new species, even by passive mechanisms. Divergent resolution of duplicate genes might increase speciation rates in some clades at some times, but our results indicate that it alone is unlikely to account for the macroevolutionary success of polyploid clades.


Asunto(s)
Especiación Genética , Hibridación Genética/genética , Aislamiento Reproductivo , Evolución Biológica , Modelos Genéticos , Poliploidía
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