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1.
Mov Ecol ; 12(1): 27, 2024 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38566221

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Ecological segregation allows populations to reduce competition and coexist in sympatry. Using as model organisms two closely related gadfly petrels endemic to the Madeira archipelago and breeding with a two month allochrony, we investigated how movement and foraging preferences shape ecological segregation in sympatric species. We tested the hypothesis that the breeding allochrony is underpinned by foraging niche segregation. Additionally, we investigated whether our data supported the hypothesis that allochrony is driven by species-specific adaptations to different windscapes. METHODS: We present contemporaneous tracking and stable isotopes datasets for Zino's (Pterodroma madeira) and Desertas (Pterodroma deserta) petrels. We quantified the year-round distribution of the petrels, characterised their isotopic niches and quantified their habitat preferences using machine learning (boosted regression trees). Hidden-Markov-models were used to investigate the effect of wind on the central-place movement speed, and a simulation framework was developed to investigate whether each species breeds at times when the windscape is most favourable to sustain their trips. RESULTS: Despite substantial spatial overlap throughout the year, the petrels exhibited diverging isotopic niches and habitat preferences during breeding. Both species used a vast pelagic region in the North Atlantic, but targeted two different mesopelagic ecoregions and showed a preference for habitats mostly differing in sea surface temperature values. Based on our simulation framework, we found that both species would perform trips of similar speed during the other species' breeding season. CONCLUSIONS: The different breeding schedules between the species are underpinned by differences in foraging habitat preferences and adaptation to the local environment, rather than to the windscape. Nevertheless, the larger Desertas petrels exploited significantly windier conditions, potentially unsustainable for the smaller Zino's petrels. Furthermore, due to larger mass and likely higher fasting endurance, Desertas petrels engaged in central-place-foraging movements that covered more ground and lasted longer than those of Zino's petrels. Ultimately, patterns of ecological segregation in sympatric seabirds are shaped by a complex interplay between foraging and movement ecology, where morphology, foraging trip regulation and fasting endurance have an important- yet poorly understood- role.

2.
Sci Total Environ ; 930: 172814, 2024 Jun 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38679096

ABSTRACT

Ocean contamination, particularly from persistent organic pollutants (POPs), remains a significant threat to marine predators that occupy high trophic positions. Long-lived procellariform seabirds are apex predators in marine ecosystems and tend to accumulate contaminants. Prolonged exposure to pollutants negatively affects their fitness including reproductive success. Low breeding success may represent a hurdle for the restoration of small and endangered seabird populations, including several highly threatened gadfly petrels. Here we investigated the annual variation (2019 and 2022) in organochlorine pesticide (OCP), polychlorinated biphenyl ether (PCB), polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE), and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) exposure in the endangered Bermuda petrel (Pterodroma cahow), and the relationship between female contaminant burden and breeding parameters. We found that petrels were exposed to a wide range of pollutants (33 out of 55 showed measurable levels) with PCBs dominating the blood contaminant profiles in both years. Only 9 compounds were detected in >50 % of the birds. Specifically, among OCPs, p, p'-DDE and hexaclorobenzene were the most frequently detected while fluorene and acenaphthene were the most common PAH. The concentrations of ∑5PCBs and ∑7POPs were higher in older birds. Furthermore, females with greater contaminant burdens laid eggs with a lower probability of hatching. However, female investment in egg production (size and volume) was unrelated to their blood contaminant load. Overall, this study highlights the presence of a wide range of contaminants in the petrel's food web, and it sheds light on the potential impact of chronic exposure to sub-lethal levels of PCBs on the breeding success of seabirds. We claim that toxicological testing should be a practice integrated in the management of seabirds, particularly of endangered species to monitor how past and present anthropogenic activities impact their conservation status.


Subject(s)
Birds , Endangered Species , Environmental Monitoring , Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers , Persistent Organic Pollutants , Reproduction , Animals , Reproduction/drug effects , Birds/physiology , Halogenated Diphenyl Ethers/blood , Female , Polychlorinated Biphenyls/blood , Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons/analysis , Hydrocarbons, Chlorinated/blood , Water Pollutants, Chemical , Pesticides/blood
3.
J Hered ; 114(5): 459-469, 2023 08 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37162284

ABSTRACT

The Bermuda petrel Pterodroma cahow is an island endemic seabird that belongs to the Procellariiformes, one of the most endangered orders of birds. Historical records suggest a significant population size decline following human settlement in Bermuda, bringing the species to near extinction. Since the 1950s, the population has been recovering aided by the implementation of an ongoing conservation plan. However, it still faces several threats, and negative genetic effects resulting from that drastic decline are to be expected, including inbreeding and genetic drift. We studied genetic diversity and levels of inbreeding, and their effects on individual fitness and mating choice. We also tested for a genetic signature of the recent demographic bottleneck. For this, we analyzed variation in thousands of nuclear single-nucleotide polymorphisms derived from double digest restriction site-associated DNA sequencing and 1 mitochondrial gene (cytochrome oxidase I). The results revealed that the Bermuda petrel suffered a recent genetic bottleneck and shows low mitochondrial diversity compared with other petrel species. Conversely, nuclear diversity was similar to that of other endangered petrels. Inbreeding levels were not high overall, although some individuals were highly inbred. However, we found no evidence that individual inbreeding or relatedness between mates affected hatching success, or that mate choice is influenced by kinship in this very small population.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Inbreeding Depression , Humans , Animals , Bermuda , Birds/genetics , Inbreeding , Endangered Species
4.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 1939, 2023 02 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36732530

ABSTRACT

The patterns of population divergence of mid-latitude marine birds are impacted by only a few biogeographic barriers to dispersal and the effect of intrinsic factors, such as fidelity to natal colonies or wintering grounds, may become more conspicuous. Here we describe, for the first time, the phylogeographic patterns and historical demography of Bulwer's petrel Bulweria bulwerii and provide new insights regarding the drivers of species diversification in the marine environment. We sampled Bulwer's petrels from the main breeding colonies and used a statistical phylogeography approach based on surveying nuclear and mitochondrial loci (~ 9100 bp) to study its mechanisms of global diversification. We uncovered three highly differentiated groups including the Western Pacific, the Central Pacific and the Atlantic. The older divergence occurred within the Pacific Ocean, ca. 850,000 ya, and since then the W Pacific group has been evolving in isolation. Conversely, divergence between the Central Pacific and Atlantic populations occurred within the last 200,000 years. While the Isthmus of Panama is important in restricting gene flow between oceans in Bulwer's petrels, the deepest phylogeographic break is within the Pacific Ocean, where oceanographic barriers are key in driving and maintaining the remarkable structure found in this highly mobile seabird. This is in contrast with the Atlantic, where no structure was detected. Further data will provide insights regarding the extent of lineage divergence of Bulwer's petrels in the Western Pacific.


Subject(s)
Birds , Mitochondria , Animals , Phylogeography , Oceans and Seas , Birds/genetics , Pacific Ocean , Mitochondria/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Phylogeny , Genetic Variation
5.
Vet Sci ; 9(8)2022 Aug 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36006331

ABSTRACT

Dairy cattle are particularly sensitive to heat stress due to the higher metabolic rate needed for milk production. In recent decades, global warming and the increase in dairy production in warmer countries have stimulated the development of a wide range of environmental control systems for dairy farms. Despite their proven effectiveness, the associated energy and water consumption can compromise the viability of dairy farms in many regions, due to the cost and scarcity of these resources. To make these systems more efficient, they should be activated in time to prevent thermal stress and switched off when that risk no longer exists, which must consider environmental variables as well as the variables of the animals themselves. Nowadays, there is a wide range of sensors and equipment that support farm routine procedures, and it is possible to measure several variables that, with the aid of algorithms based on predictive models, would allow anticipating animals' thermal states. This review summarizes three types of approaches as predictive models: bioclimatic indexes, machine learning, and mechanistic models. It also focuses on the application of the current knowledge as algorithms to be used in the management of diverse types of environmental control systems.

6.
Parasitol Res ; 117(1): 323-329, 2018 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29124410

ABSTRACT

The apparent scarcity or absence of blood parasites in some avian groups, such as seabirds, has been related to intrinsic and extrinsic factors including host immunological capacity, host-parasite assemblage, and ecological parameters, but also to reduced sensitivity of some methods to detect low parasite prevalence/intensities of infection. Here, we examined the haemosporidian parasite prevalence in a breeding population of Cory's shearwater Calonectris diomedea borealis, a long-distance migrant seabird, nesting in the Macaronesian region, in the Eastern Atlantic. Previous studies on Calonectris diomedea complex were based on small sample sizes providing weak evidence for a lack of infections by haemoparasites. Here, we investigated the presence of both parasite infections in C. d. borealis and larvae of potential mosquito vectors on the area. By employing a PCR-based assay, we extensively examined the prevalence of blood parasites belonging to the genera Plasmodium, Haemoproteus, and Leucocytozoon in 286 individuals from different life stages (i.e., chicks, immatures, sabbatical, and breeding adults), facing their specific energetic trade-offs (immunological functions vs. life history activities). We sampled immatures and adult shearwaters, of different sexes, ages, and migratory origins, from two sub-colonies. None of the sampled individuals were infected by these parasites, supporting the hypothesis that there was no in situ or ex situ transmission of vector-borne parasites in marine habitats irrespective of host's life stage and in spite of the presence of the potential Plasmodium vector Culiseta longiareolata breeding in the area. These results suggest that the lack of transmission of haemosporidian parasites on Selvagem Grande may be related to the lack of suitable dipteran vectors at the study sites, which may result from the geographic isolation of this area.


Subject(s)
Bird Diseases/parasitology , Haemosporida/isolation & purification , Protozoan Infections/parasitology , Animals , Bird Diseases/epidemiology , Birds , Breeding , Ecosystem , Female , Haemosporida/classification , Haemosporida/genetics , Male , Protozoan Infections/epidemiology
7.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 98: 314-23, 2016 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26921843

ABSTRACT

The evolutionary mechanisms underlying the geographic distribution of gene lineages in the marine environment are not as well understood as those affecting terrestrial groups. The continuous nature of the pelagic marine environment may limit opportunities for divergence to occur and lineages to spatially segregate, particularly in highly mobile species. Here, we studied the phylogeography and historical demography of two tropically distributed, pelagic seabirds, the Madeiran Storm-petrel Oceanodroma castro, sampled in the Azores, Madeira, Galapagos and Japan, and its sister species Monteiro's Storm-petrel O. monteiroi (endemic to the Azores), using a multi-locus dataset consisting of 12 anonymous nuclear loci and the mitochondrial locus control region. Both marker types support the existence of four significantly differentiated genetic clusters, including the sampled O. monteiroi population and three populations within O. castro, although only the mitochondrial locus suggests complete lineage sorting. Multi-locus coalescent analyses suggest that most divergence events occurred within the last 200,000years. The proximity in divergence times precluded robust inferences of the species tree, in particular of the evolutionary relationships of the Pacific populations. Despite the great potential for dispersal, divergence among populations apparently proceeded in the absence of gene flow, emphasizing the effect of non-physical barriers, such as those driven by the paleo-oceanographical environments, philopatry and local adaptation, as important mechanisms of population divergence and speciation in highly mobile marine species. In view of the predicted climate change impacts, future changes in the demography and evolutionary dynamics of marine populations might be expected.


Subject(s)
Biodiversity , Birds/genetics , Genetic Variation/genetics , Phylogeny , Animals , Aquatic Organisms/classification , Aquatic Organisms/genetics , Azores , Birds/classification , Cell Nucleus/genetics , Climate Change , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Ecuador , Flight, Animal , Gene Flow/genetics , Genes, Mitochondrial/genetics , Japan , Phylogeography , Portugal
8.
J Med Virol ; 88(5): 782-9, 2016 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26466923

ABSTRACT

The present study aimed to provide a molecular characterization of circulating rotavirus (RVA) strains in Rio Branco, Acre, in the post-rotavirus vaccination period, particularly with regard to the emerging, increasingly prevalent G12P[8] genotype. A total of 488 fecal specimens from diarrheic and non-diarrheic children were obtained between January and December 2012. RVA detection was initially performed using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) method, followed by reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) using specific primers. RVA was detected in 18.3% (44/241) of the children with acute diarrhea and in 1.2% (3/247) of the non-diarrheic children (P < 0.001), with overall RVA-positivity of 9.6% (47/488). The most common genotype was G2P[4] with 43.2% (19/44) of the diarrheic cases, followed by G12P[8] (27.3%, 12/44), G3P[6] (18.2%, 8/44), G3P[8] (4.5%, 2/44), and G12P[6] (2.3%, 1/44). G12 samples belonged to lineage III and were from children aged 4-52 months. All of these children had acute diarrhea associated with fever (83.3%, 10/12) and vomiting (66.7%, 8/12). Most of the cases occurred in August (58.3%, 7/12), 75% (9/12) of which having received the full vaccination scheme with Rotarix™. For the first time G12 was reported at relative high prevalence in Brazil. Our findings warrant further monitoring studies on the molecular characterization of circulating RVA strains after rotavirus vaccine introduction in Brazil and elsewhere, since the occurrence of either unusual our emerging genotypes may pose a challenge to vaccination strategies.


Subject(s)
Genotype , Rotavirus Infections/epidemiology , Rotavirus Infections/prevention & control , Rotavirus Vaccines/administration & dosage , Rotavirus/classification , Rotavirus/genetics , Brazil/epidemiology , Child, Preschool , Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay , Feces/virology , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Molecular Epidemiology , Prevalence , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Rotavirus/isolation & purification , Rotavirus Infections/pathology , Rotavirus Infections/virology , Seasons
9.
Mol Ecol ; 24(12): 3122-37, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25903359

ABSTRACT

Analytical methods that apply coalescent theory to multilocus data have improved inferences of demographic parameters that are critical to understanding population divergence and speciation. In particular, at the early stages of speciation, it is important to implement models that accommodate conflicting gene trees, and benefit from the presence of shared polymorphisms. Here, we employ eleven nuclear loci and the mitochondrial control region to investigate the phylogeography and historical demography of the pelagic seabird White-faced Storm-petrel (Pelagodroma marina) by sampling subspecies across its antitropical distribution. Groups are all highly differentiated: global mitochondrial ΦST = 0.89 (P < 0.01) and global nuclear ΦST varies between 0.22 and 0.83 (all P < 0.01). The complete lineage sorting of the mitochondrial locus between hemispheres is corroborated by approximately half of the nuclear genealogies, suggesting a long-term antitropical divergence in isolation. Coalescent-based estimates of demographic parameters suggest that hemispheric divergence of P. marina occurred approximately 840 000 ya (95% HPD 582 000-1 170 000), in the absence of gene flow, and divergence within the Southern Hemisphere occurred 190 000 ya (95% HPD 96 000-600 000), both probably associated with the profound palaeo-oceanographic changes of the Pleistocene. A fledgling sampled in St Helena (tropical South Atlantic) suggests recent colonization from the Northern Hemisphere. Despite the great potential for long-distance dispersal, P. marina antitropical groups have been evolving as independent, allopatric lineages, and divergence is probably maintained by philopatry coupled with asynchronous reproductive phenology and local adaptation.


Subject(s)
Birds/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Genetic Variation , Genetics, Population , Animals , Bayes Theorem , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Phylogeography , Sequence Analysis, DNA
10.
Rev. Soc. Cardiol. Estado de Säo Paulo ; 24(2 Suppl. A): 23-26, Abr. 2014.
Article in Portuguese | Sec. Est. Saúde SP, SESSP-IDPCPROD, Sec. Est. Saúde SP | ID: biblio-1026844

ABSTRACT

A cardiopatia congênita é a manifestação da alteração na estrutura cardiovascular normal ou da incapacidade da estrutura atingir desenvolvimento completo durante o período fetal, produ-zindo graus variáveis de disfunção circulatória, podendo afetar o crescimento e estado nutricional de crianças, sendo a desnutrição o fator de risco mais importante de morbimortalidade nesses pacientes. Objetivo: Descrever o perfil nutricional de crianças e adolescentes com cardiopatia em período pré-operatório sob regime de internação. Método: Estudo transversal com coleta de dados de crianças e adolescentes de ambos os gêneros internados na enfermaria pediátrica em um hospital de cardiologia de janeiro a março de 2012. Foram mensuradas as medidas de peso e estatura e calculados os escores-z de peso/idade, peso/estatura, estatura/idade, Índice de Massa Corporal (IMC)/idade segundo as curvas de crescimento da Organização Mundial da Saúde. A classificação do estado nutricional foi realizada de acordo com a recomendação do Sistema de Vigilância Alimentar e Nutricional - SISVAN. Resultados: Foram avaliados 60 pacientes. Segundo o índice peso/estatura, 54,3% crianças foram classificadas como eutróficas, 33,3% desnutridas e 11,9% apresentaram excesso de peso. De acordo com o IMC/idade, 51,7% dos pacientes eram eutróficos, 30% eram desnutridos e 21% com excesso de peso. Conclusão: Este grupo estudado apresentou elevada proporção de desnutrição segundo o índice peso/estatura e IMC/estatura, o que pode acarretar no aumento da morbidade e mortalidade desses pacientes. (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Nutrition Assessment , Preoperative Period , Heart Defects, Congenital
11.
Psicol. argum ; 31(73): 205-213, abr.-jun. 2013. ilus
Article in Portuguese | Index Psychology - journals | ID: psi-61875

ABSTRACT

O objetivo dessa investigação foi identificar e analisar as representações sociais de paternidade veiculadas pela revista Pais & Filhos entre 1969 e 2008. Foram selecionados, para a análise, 40 exemplares dessa revista (um exemplar por ano; seleção aleatória do mês). Desse conjunto, foram transcritos todos os 190 itens (reportagens, entrevistas, colunas de especialistas, anúncios publicitários) que apresentavam os vocábulos “pais”, “pai”, “paternidade”, “paternal” e variantes. O corpus formado foi submetido à análise lexical realizada pelo software ALCESTE. Foram identificadas as seguintes classes de formas reduzidas: “nós, as crianças e nossas histórias”, “relacionando-se com crianças e adolescentes”, “terapia”, “as doenças dos bebês” e “pai jurídico”. Em seu conjunto, os resultados indicam que, no corpus analisado, a representaçãosocial de paternidade é composta por elementos que concedem ao pai o lugar de coadjuvante ou, mais recorrentemente, o identificam como uma referência problemática (causador de problemas ou como eventual possibilidade de solução).(AU)


This research aimed to identify and analyze the social representations of fatherhood conveyed by the Pais & Filhos magazine from 1969 to 2008. Forty issues of the magazine were selected for analysis (one piece per year, at random selection of the month). From this group, all 190 items (reports, interviews, expert columns and advertisements) that showed the words “parents”, “father”, “paternity”, parental” and variants were transcribed. The corpus formed was subjected to lexical analysis in the software ALCESTE. We identified the following classes of reduced form: "we, the children and our stories," “interacting with children and adolescents", "therapy", "babies’ diseases” and " “legal father". Taken together, these results indicate that in the corpus examined, the social representation of fatherhood is made of elements that give the father the supporting role, or more frequently, identify the father as a problematic reference (troublemaker or as an eventual possibility of solution).(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Paternity , Social Group , Anthropology
12.
Psicol. argum ; 31(73): 205-213, abr.-jun. 2013. ilus
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-746348

ABSTRACT

O objetivo dessa investigação foi identificar e analisar as representações sociais de paternidade veiculadas pela revista Pais & Filhos entre 1969 e 2008. Foram selecionados, para a análise, 40 exemplares dessa revista (um exemplar por ano; seleção aleatória do mês). Desse conjunto, foram transcritos todos os 190 itens (reportagens, entrevistas, colunas de especialistas, anúncios publicitários) que apresentavam os vocábulos “pais”, “pai”, “paternidade”, “paternal” e variantes. O corpus formado foi submetido à análise lexical realizada pelo software ALCESTE. Foram identificadas as seguintes classes de formas reduzidas: “nós, as crianças e nossas histórias”, “relacionando-se com crianças e adolescentes”, “terapia”, “as doenças dos bebês” e “pai jurídico”. Em seu conjunto, os resultados indicam que, no corpus analisado, a representaçãosocial de paternidade é composta por elementos que concedem ao pai o lugar de coadjuvante ou, mais recorrentemente, o identificam como uma referência problemática (causador de problemas ou como eventual possibilidade de solução).


This research aimed to identify and analyze the social representations of fatherhood conveyed by the Pais & Filhos magazine from 1969 to 2008. Forty issues of the magazine were selected for analysis (one piece per year, at random selection of the month). From this group, all 190 items (reports, interviews, expert columns and advertisements) that showed the words “parents”, “father”, “paternity”, parental” and variants were transcribed. The corpus formed was subjected to lexical analysis in the software ALCESTE. We identified the following classes of reduced form: "we, the children and our stories," “interacting with children and adolescents", "therapy", "babies’ diseases” and " “legal father". Taken together, these results indicate that in the corpus examined, the social representation of fatherhood is made of elements that give the father the supporting role, or more frequently, identify the father as a problematic reference (troublemaker or as an eventual possibility of solution).


Subject(s)
Humans , Population Groups , Paternity , Anthropology
13.
Mol Ecol Resour ; 12(4): 779-81, 2012 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22642264

ABSTRACT

This article documents the addition of 171 microsatellite marker loci and 27 pairs of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) sequencing primers to the Molecular Ecology Resources Database. Loci were developed for the following species: Bombus pauloensis, Cephalorhynchus heavisidii, Cercospora sojina, Harpyhaliaetus coronatus, Hordeum vulgare, Lachnolaimus maximus, Oceanodroma monteiroi, Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici, Rhea americana, Salmo salar, Salmo trutta, Schistocephalus solidus, Sousa plumbea and Tursiops aduncus. These loci were cross-tested on the following species: Aquila heliaca, Bulweria bulwerii, Buteo buteo, Buteo swainsoni, Falco rusticolus, Haliaeetus albicilla, Halobaena caerulea, Hieraaetus fasciatus, Oceanodroma castro, Puccinia graminis f. sp. Tritici, Puccinia triticina, Rhea pennata and Schistocephalus pungitii. This article also documents the addition of 27 sequencing primer pairs for Puffinus baroli and Bulweria bulwerii and cross-testing of these loci in Oceanodroma castro, Pelagodroma marina, Pelecanoides georgicus, Pelecanoides urinatrix, Thalassarche chrysostoma and Thalassarche melanophrys.


Subject(s)
Databases, Genetic , Microsatellite Repeats , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Ecology , Genetic Markers
14.
J Hered ; 102(3): 362-5, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21447754

ABSTRACT

Procellariiform seabirds are among the avian species with the fastest rates of extinction due to interactions with fisheries and introduction of alien predators to the breeding colonies. Conservation and management policies targeting populations of these species must include information on colony demographics and levels of isolation and genetic markers go a long way toward providing reliable estimates of these parameters. To this end, we report isolation and characterization of 14 anonymous nuclear loci, with average length of 657 bp, in the pelagic seabird White-faced Storm-petrel Pelagodroma marina, a species for which there is virtually no genetic information available. These loci, initially isolated from a genomic library built from P. marina, were further tested, for a range of conditions, in 7 other species representing all Procellariiform families. We found high levels of cross-species amplification success, varying between 79% and 86% in representatives of Diomedeidae, Procellariidae, Pelecanoididae, and other Hydrobatidae. We also sequenced 11 loci for 22 P. marina individuals and report higher levels of anonymous genetic variation (π = 0.002), with an average of 1 single nucleotide polymorphism every 100 bp surveyed, relative to the levels found on a typically variable intron in avian species. These markers will be a valuable tool in future population genetics and phylogenetic studies, particularly of nonmodel seabird species.


Subject(s)
Birds/genetics , Cell Nucleus/genetics , Genetic Loci , Animals , Genetic Variation , Haplotypes , Molecular Sequence Data
15.
J Mol Evol ; 68(3): 279-91, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19209378

ABSTRACT

The major histocompatibility complex encodes molecules that present foreign peptides to T cells of the immune system. The peptide binding region (PBR) of these molecules is among the most polymorphic regions found in vertebrate taxa. Genomic cloning approaches are improving our understanding of the evolution of this multigene family in nonmodel avian groups. By building a cosmid library, a new MHC class II B gene, Pabe-DAB1, was isolated and characterized at the genomic level in a sub-Antarctic seabird, the thin-billed prion (Pachyptila belcheri). Pabe-DAB1 exhibits the hallmark structural features of functional MHC class II loci. Direct sequencing of the PBR encoding exon in a panel of prions revealed significantly higher levels of genetic diversity compared to two noncoding neutral loci, with most alleles differing by at least one replacement substitution in the peptide binding codons. We estimated evolutionary dynamics for Pabe-DAB1 using a variety of Bayesian and other approaches. Evidence for balancing selection comes from a spatially variable ratio of nonsynonymous-to-synonymous substitutions (mean d (N)/d (S) = 2.87) in the PBR, with sites predicted to be functionally relevant exhibiting the highest omega values. We estimate the population recombination rate to be approximately 0.3 per site per generation, indicating an important role for recombination in generating polymorphism at this locus. Pabe-DAB1 is among the few avian class II loci characterized at the genomic level and with a known intron-exon structure, a feature that greatly facilitated the amplification and sequencing of a single MHC locus in this species.


Subject(s)
Avian Proteins/genetics , Birds/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Genes, MHC Class II , Animals , Base Sequence , Bayes Theorem , Falkland Islands , Genomic Library , Models, Genetic , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Polymorphism, Genetic , Recombination, Genetic , Selection, Genetic , Sequence Analysis, DNA
16.
Rev Soc Bras Med Trop ; 37(3): 215-7, 2004.
Article in Portuguese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15330059

ABSTRACT

The adverse effects of primaquine (0.50 mg/kg/day) were investigated in eleven patients with vivax malaria (three patients with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency). Clinical and laboratorial alterations indicated acute hemolysis in only the enzymopenic patients and treatment was interrupted. Our results suggest that screening for G6PD deficiency should be carried out in patients with vivax malaria infection in order to avoid complications due to primaquine.


Subject(s)
Antimalarials/adverse effects , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency/complications , Hemolysis , Malaria, Vivax/drug therapy , Primaquine/adverse effects , Adolescent , Adult , Animals , Antimalarials/administration & dosage , Chloroquine/administration & dosage , Humans , Malaria, Vivax/complications , Middle Aged , Primaquine/administration & dosage
17.
Rev. Soc. Bras. Med. Trop ; 37(3): 215-217, maio-jun. 2004. tab
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: lil-360406

ABSTRACT

O efeito adverso da primaquina na dose de 0,50mg/kg/dia foi investigado em onze pacientes com malária vivax (três com deficiência de glicose-6-fosfato desidrogenase). Alterações clínicas e laboratoriais indicaram hemólise aguda apenas nos enzimopênicos, o que fez com que o tratamento fosse interrompido. Nossos resultados sugerem a necessidade do emprego de um teste de triagem para a deficiência de G6PD em áreas endêmicas de malária vivax a fim de se evitar complicações causadas pelo uso da primaquina.


Subject(s)
Humans , Animals , Adult , Middle Aged , Adolescent , Antimalarials , Chloroquine , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency , Hemolysis , Malaria, Vivax , Primaquine , Antimalarials , Malaria, Vivax , Primaquine
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