Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 12 de 12
Filtrar
Más filtros










Base de datos
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol ; 176: 111819, 2024 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38101098

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate existing literature to understand the utility and safety of uvulopalatopharyngoplasty (UPPP) for treatment of pediatric obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). METHODS: A literature review was conducted by two authors to search for studies from the inception of two databases until March 1, 2023. Studies in which participants were under 18 years of age and underwent UPPP for OSA or upper airway obstruction were selected. Data on variables such as pre- and postoperative severity, efficacy, complications, and follow-up were collected from all studies. RESULTS: After applying inclusion criteria to the initial 91 abstracts that were screened, 26 studies remained that included 224 patients who underwent UPPP. Most children who underwent UPPP had neurologic impairment, developmental delay, craniofacial abnormalities, or were obese, and underwent several procedures for OSA treatment. Of the studies that reported outcomes, 85.6 % of patients had subjective improvement, and 25.6 % of patients had a reported complication. CONCLUSIONS: Most children who underwent UPPP had serious medical comorbidities with moderate or severe OSA and a multi-procedural treatment plan. Although most patients had subjective improvement and there were low complication rates, the heterogeneity of existing literature makes it difficult to draw conclusions. Future multi-center, prospective studies should be conducted to analyze the true safety and efficacy of UPPP in pediatric patients.


Asunto(s)
Apnea Obstructiva del Sueño , Úvula , Humanos , Niño , Adolescente , Estudios Prospectivos , Polisomnografía/métodos , Úvula/cirugía , Apnea Obstructiva del Sueño/cirugía , Faringe/cirugía , Resultado del Tratamiento
2.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 14391, 2023 09 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37658100

RESUMEN

Breeding perennial tree crops often requires prediction of mature performance from juvenile data. To assess the utility of juvenile screens to predict salinity tolerance of mature pistachio trees, we compared performance of 3-month ungrafted seedlings and 4-year-old grafted rootstocks under salinity stress. The QTL allele associated with higher salt exclusion from seedling leaves conferred lower growth in saline field conditions, suggesting that mapping QTL in seedlings may be easier than discerning the optimal allele for field performance.


Asunto(s)
Pistacia , Tolerancia a la Sal , Árboles , Alelos , Fitomejoramiento , Plantones
3.
Science ; 363(6433): 1319-1326, 2019 03 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30765607

RESUMEN

In the 1950s the myxoma virus was released into European rabbit populations in Australia and Europe, decimating populations and resulting in the rapid evolution of resistance. We investigated the genetic basis of resistance by comparing the exomes of rabbits collected before and after the pandemic. We found a strong pattern of parallel evolution, with selection on standing genetic variation favoring the same alleles in Australia, France, and the United Kingdom. Many of these changes occurred in immunity-related genes, supporting a polygenic basis of resistance. We experimentally validated the role of several genes in viral replication and showed that selection acting on an interferon protein has increased the protein's antiviral effect.


Asunto(s)
Adaptación Biológica/genética , Inmunidad Innata/genética , Myxoma virus/inmunología , Mixomatosis Infecciosa/inmunología , Conejos/genética , Conejos/virología , Alelos , Animales , Australia , Evolución Molecular , Francia , Frecuencia de los Genes , Variación Genética , Interferón alfa-2/genética , Interferón alfa-2/inmunología , Mixomatosis Infecciosa/genética , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple , Población , Conejos/inmunología , Reino Unido
4.
BMC Biol ; 15(1): 16, 2017 02 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28241828

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The mosquito Aedes aegypti is the main vector of dengue, Zika, chikungunya and yellow fever viruses. This major disease vector is thought to have arisen when the African subspecies Ae. aegypti formosus evolved from being zoophilic and living in forest habitats into a form that specialises on humans and resides near human population centres. The resulting domestic subspecies, Ae. aegypti aegypti, is found throughout the tropics and largely blood-feeds on humans. RESULTS: To understand this transition, we have sequenced the exomes of mosquitoes collected from five populations from around the world. We found that Ae. aegypti specimens from an urban population in Senegal in West Africa were more closely related to populations in Mexico and Sri Lanka than they were to a nearby forest population. We estimate that the populations in Senegal and Mexico split just a few hundred years ago, and we found no evidence of Ae. aegypti aegypti mosquitoes migrating back to Africa from elsewhere in the tropics. The out-of-Africa migration was accompanied by a dramatic reduction in effective population size, resulting in a loss of genetic diversity and rare genetic variants. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that a domestic population of Ae. aegypti in Senegal and domestic populations on other continents are more closely related to each other than to other African populations. This suggests that an ancestral population of Ae. aegypti evolved to become a human specialist in Africa, giving rise to the subspecies Ae. aegypti aegypti. The descendants of this population are still found in West Africa today, and the rest of the world was colonised when mosquitoes from this population migrated out of Africa. This is the first report of an African population of Ae. aegypti aegypti mosquitoes that is closely related to Asian and American populations. As the two subspecies differ in their ability to vector disease, their existence side by side in West Africa may have important implications for disease transmission.


Asunto(s)
Aedes/genética , Vectores de Enfermedades , Genómica , Adaptación Fisiológica/genética , África Occidental , Américas , Migración Animal , Animales , Asia , Secuencia de Bases , Exoma/genética , Variación Genética , Genética de Población , Genoma de los Insectos , Humanos , Filogenia , Densidad de Población , Análisis de Componente Principal
5.
Genetics ; 203(1): 525-41, 2016 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27017626

RESUMEN

A combination of selective and neutral evolutionary forces shape patterns of genetic diversity in nature. Among the insects, most previous analyses of the roles of drift and selection in shaping variation across the genome have focused on the genus Drosophila A more complete understanding of these forces will come from analyzing other taxa that differ in population demography and other aspects of biology. We have analyzed diversity and signatures of selection in the neotropical Heliconius butterflies using resequenced genomes from 58 wild-caught individuals of Heliconius melpomene and another 21 resequenced genomes representing 11 related species. By comparing intraspecific diversity and interspecific divergence, we estimate that 31% of amino acid substitutions between Heliconius species are adaptive. Diversity at putatively neutral sites is negatively correlated with the local density of coding sites as well as nonsynonymous substitutions and positively correlated with recombination rate, indicating widespread linked selection. This process also manifests in significantly reduced diversity on longer chromosomes, consistent with lower recombination rates. Although hitchhiking around beneficial nonsynonymous mutations has significantly shaped genetic variation in H. melpomene, evidence for strong selective sweeps is limited overall. We did however identify two regions where distinct haplotypes have swept in different populations, leading to increased population differentiation. On the whole, our study suggests that positive selection is less pervasive in these butterflies as compared to fruit flies, a fact that curiously results in very similar levels of neutral diversity in these very different insects.


Asunto(s)
Mariposas Diurnas/genética , Polimorfismo Genético , Selección Genética , Sustitución de Aminoácidos , Animales , Cromosomas de Insectos/genética , Recombinación Genética
6.
Genome Biol Evol ; 8(6): 1762-75, 2016 06 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26951779

RESUMEN

Metaseiulus occidentalis is an eyeless phytoseiid predatory mite employed for the biological control of agricultural pests including spider mites. Despite appearances, these predator and prey mites are separated by some 400 Myr of evolution and radically different lifestyles. We present a 152-Mb draft assembly of the M. occidentalis genome: Larger than that of its favored prey, Tetranychus urticae, but considerably smaller than those of many other chelicerates, enabling an extremely contiguous and complete assembly to be built-the best arachnid to date. Aided by transcriptome data, genome annotation cataloged 18,338 protein-coding genes and identified large numbers of Helitron transposable elements. Comparisons with other arthropods revealed a particularly dynamic and turbulent genomic evolutionary history. Its genes exhibit elevated molecular evolution, with strikingly high numbers of intron gains and losses, in stark contrast to the deer tick Ixodes scapularis Uniquely among examined arthropods, this predatory mite's Hox genes are completely atomized, dispersed across the genome, and it encodes five copies of the normally single-copy RNA processing Dicer-2 gene. Examining gene families linked to characteristic biological traits of this tiny predator provides initial insights into processes of sex determination, development, immune defense, and how it detects, disables, and digests its prey. As the first reference genome for the Phytoseiidae, and for any species with the rare sex determination system of parahaploidy, the genome of the western orchard predatory mite improves genomic sampling of chelicerates and provides invaluable new resources for functional genomic analyses of this family of agriculturally important mites.


Asunto(s)
Ácaros y Garrapatas/genética , Genes Homeobox/genética , Genómica , Animales , Genoma , Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento , Intrones/genética , Control Biológico de Vectores , Tetranychidae/genética , Transcriptoma/genética
7.
Proc Biol Sci ; 283(1823)2016 01 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26817769

RESUMEN

Some group-living species exhibit social immunity, where the immune response of one individual can protect others in the group from infection. In burying beetles, this is part of parental care. Larvae feed on vertebrate carcasses which their parents smear with exudates that inhibit microbial growth. We have sequenced the transcriptome of the burying beetle Nicrophorus vespilloides and identified six genes that encode lysozymes-a type of antimicrobial enzyme that has previously been implicated in social immunity in burying beetles. When females start breeding and producing antimicrobial anal exudates, we found that the expression of one of these genes was increased by approximately 1000 times to become one of the most abundant transcripts in the transcriptome. Females varied considerably in the antimicrobial properties of their anal exudates, and this was strongly correlated with the expression of this lysozyme. We conclude that we have likely identified a gene encoding a key effector molecule in social immunity and that it was recruited during evolution from a function in personal immunity.


Asunto(s)
Escarabajos/genética , Escarabajos/inmunología , Exudados y Transudados/inmunología , Regulación de la Expresión Génica/inmunología , Animales , Escarabajos/metabolismo , Exudados y Transudados/metabolismo , Femenino , Masculino , Filogenia , Conducta Social , Transcriptoma
8.
Mol Biol Evol ; 32(8): 2111-29, 2015 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25908671

RESUMEN

Insects are an important model for the study of innate immune systems, but remarkably little is known about the immune system of other arthropod groups despite their importance as disease vectors, pests, and components of biological diversity. Using comparative genomics, we have characterized the immune system of all the major groups of arthropods beyond insects for the first time--studying five chelicerates, a myriapod, and a crustacean. We found clear traces of an ancient origin of innate immunity, with some arthropods having Toll-like receptors and C3-complement factors that are more closely related in sequence or structure to vertebrates than other arthropods. Across the arthropods some components of the immune system, such as the Toll signaling pathway, are highly conserved. However, there is also remarkable diversity. The chelicerates apparently lack the Imd signaling pathway and beta-1,3 glucan binding proteins--a key class of pathogen recognition receptors. Many genes have large copy number variation across species, and this may sometimes be accompanied by changes in function. For example, we find that peptidoglycan recognition proteins have frequently lost their catalytic activity and switch between secreted and intracellular forms. We also find that there has been widespread and extensive duplication of the cellular immune receptor Dscam (Down syndrome cell adhesion molecule), which may be an alternative way to generate the high diversity produced by alternative splicing in insects. In the antiviral short interfering RNAi pathway Argonaute 2 evolves rapidly and is frequently duplicated, with a highly variable copy number. Our results provide a detailed analysis of the immune systems of several important groups of animals for the first time and lay the foundations for functional work on these groups.


Asunto(s)
Proteínas de Artrópodos , Artrópodos , Evolución Molecular , Inmunidad Innata/genética , Transducción de Señal , Animales , Proteínas de Artrópodos/genética , Proteínas de Artrópodos/inmunología , Artrópodos/genética , Artrópodos/inmunología , Transducción de Señal/genética , Transducción de Señal/inmunología
9.
PLoS Pathog ; 11(3): e1004765, 2015 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25815506

RESUMEN

Many mosquito species are naturally polymorphic for their abilities to transmit parasites, a feature which is of great interest for controlling vector-borne disease. Aedes aegypti, the primary vector of dengue and yellow fever and a laboratory model for studying lymphatic filariasis, is genetically variable for its capacity to harbor the filarial nematode Brugia malayi. The genome of Ae. aegypti is large and repetitive, making genome resequencing difficult and expensive. We designed exome captures to target protein-coding regions of the genome, and used association mapping in a wild Kenyan population to identify a single, dominant, sex-linked locus underlying resistance. This falls in a region of the genome where a resistance locus was previously mapped in a line established in 1936, suggesting that this polymorphism has been maintained in the wild for the at least 80 years. We then crossed resistant and susceptible mosquitoes to place both alleles of the gene into a common genetic background, and used RNA-seq to measure the effect of this locus on gene expression. We found evidence for Toll, IMD, and JAK-STAT pathway activity in response to early stages of B. malayi infection when the parasites are beginning to die in the resistant genotype. We also found that resistant mosquitoes express anti-microbial peptides at the time of parasite-killing, and that this expression is suppressed in susceptible mosquitoes. Together, we have found that a single resistance locus leads to a higher immune response in resistant mosquitoes, and we identify genes in this region that may be responsible for this trait.


Asunto(s)
Aedes/genética , Brugia Malayi , Exoma , Sitios Genéticos , Transcriptoma , Aedes/inmunología , Animales , Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento
10.
Virus Evol ; 1(1): vev014, 2015.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27774286

RESUMEN

Metagenomic studies are leading to the discovery of a hidden diversity of RNA viruses. These new viruses are poorly characterized and new approaches are needed predict the host species these viruses pose a risk to. The rhabdoviruses are a diverse family of RNA viruses that includes important pathogens of humans, animals, and plants. We have discovered thirty-two new rhabdoviruses through a combination of our own RNA sequencing of insects and searching public sequence databases. Combining these with previously known sequences we reconstructed the phylogeny of 195 rhabdovirus sequences, and produced the most in depth analysis of the family to date. In most cases we know nothing about the biology of the viruses beyond the host they were identified from, but our dataset provides a powerful phylogenetic approach to predict which are vector-borne viruses and which are specific to vertebrates or arthropods. By reconstructing ancestral and present host states we found that switches between major groups of hosts have occurred rarely during rhabdovirus evolution. This allowed us to propose seventy-six new likely vector-borne vertebrate viruses among viruses identified from vertebrates or biting insects. Based on currently available data, our analysis suggests it is likely there was a single origin of the known plant viruses and arthropod-borne vertebrate viruses, while vertebrate- and arthropod-specific viruses arose at least twice. There are also few transitions between aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. Viruses also cluster together at a finer scale, with closely related viruses tending to be found in closely related hosts. Our data therefore suggest that throughout their evolution, rhabdoviruses have occasionally jumped between distantly related host species before spreading through related hosts in the same environment. This approach offers a way to predict the most probable biology and key traits of newly discovered viruses.

11.
PLoS Negl Trop Dis ; 8(1): e2652, 2014.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24498447

RESUMEN

The mosquito Aedes aegypti transmits some of the most important human arboviruses, including dengue, yellow fever and chikungunya viruses. It has a large genome containing many repetitive sequences, which has resulted in the genome being poorly assembled - there are 4,758 scaffolds, few of which have been assigned to a chromosome. To allow the mapping of genes affecting disease transmission, we have improved the genome assembly by scoring a large number of SNPs in recombinant progeny from a cross between two strains of Ae. aegypti, and used these to generate a genetic map. This revealed a high rate of misassemblies in the current genome, where, for example, sequences from different chromosomes were found on the same scaffold. Once these were corrected, we were able to assign 60% of the genome sequence to chromosomes and approximately order the scaffolds along the chromosome. We found that there are very large regions of suppressed recombination around the centromeres, which can extend to as much as 47% of the chromosome. To illustrate the utility of this new genome assembly, we mapped a gene that makes Ae. aegypti resistant to the human parasite Brugia malayi, and generated a list of candidate genes that could be affecting the trait.


Asunto(s)
Aedes/genética , Mapeo Cromosómico , Genes de Insecto , Genoma de los Insectos , Insectos Vectores , Animales , Polimorfismo de Nucleótido Simple
12.
Bioinformatics ; 28(5): 603-6, 2012 Mar 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22238262

RESUMEN

MOTIVATION: Fixed nitrogen is an essential requirement for the biosynthesis of cellular nitrogenous compounds. Some cyanobacteria can fix nitrogen, contributing significantly to the nitrogen cycle, agriculture and biogeochemical history of Earth. The rate and position on the species phylogeny of gains and losses of this ability, as well as of the underlying nif genes, are controversial. RESULTS: We use probabilistic models of trait evolution to investigate the presence and absence of cyanobacterial nitrogen-fixing ability. We estimate rates of change on the species phylogeny, pinpoint probable changes and reconstruct the state and nif gene complement of the ancestor. Our results are consistent with a nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterial ancestor, repeated loss of nitrogen fixation and vertical descent, with little horizontal transfer of the genes involved. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Asunto(s)
Cianobacterias/genética , Cianobacterias/metabolismo , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Evolución Biológica , Cianobacterias/clasificación , Transferencia de Gen Horizontal , Fijación del Nitrógeno , Nitrogenasa/genética , Filogenia
SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA
...