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Πέμπτη 6 Αυγούστου 2020


Friendly-rivalry solution to the iterated n-person public-goods game [NEW RESULTS]
Repeated interaction promotes cooperation among rational individuals under the shadow of future, but it is hard to maintain cooperation when a large number of error-prone individuals are involved. One way to construct a cooperative Nash equilibrium is to find a `friendly rivalry' strategy, which aims at full cooperation but never allows the co-players to be better off. Recently it has been shown that for the iterated Prisoner's Dilemma in the presence of error, a friendly rival can be designed with...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00
N-terminal Domain Regulates Steroid Activation of Elephant Shark Glucocorticoid and Mineralocorticoid Receptors [NEW RESULTS]
Orthologs of human glucocorticoid receptor (GR) and human mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) first appear in cartilaginous fishes. Subsequently, the MR and GR diverged to respond to different steroids: the MR to aldosterone and the GR to cortisol and corticosterone. We report that cortisol, corticosterone and aldosterone activate full-length elephant shark GR, and progesterone, which activates elephant shark MR, does not activate elephant shark GR. However, progesterone inhibits steroid binding to elephant...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00
Temperature-dependent effects of house fly proto-Y chromosomes on gene expression act independently of the sex determination pathway [NEW RESULTS]
Sex determination, the developmental process by which sexually dimorphic phenotypes are established, evolves fast. Species with polygenic sex determination, in which master regulatory genes are found on multiple different proto-sex chromosomes, are informative models to study the evolution of sex determination. House flies are such a model system, with male determining loci possible on all six chromosomes and a female-determiner on one of the chromosomes as well. The distributions of the two most...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00
Epistasis and physico-chemical constraints contribute to spatial clustering of amino acid substitutions in protein evolution. [NEW RESULTS]
The causes of rate variation among sites within proteins are as yet poorly understood. Here, we compare the spatial autocorrelation of non-synonymous substitutions among species within diverse phylogenetic groups: Saccharomyces, Drosophila, Arabidopsis, and primates. Across these taxa, we find that amino acid substitutions exhibit excess clustering that extends over a 20-30 codon length (10-20 Angstrom distance) scale. We show that these substitutions cluster more strongly and exhibit compensatory...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00
Identification of SARS-CoV-2 recombinant genomes [NEW RESULTS]
Viral recombination has the potential to bring about viral genotypes with modified phenotypic characteristics, including transmissibility and virulence. Although the capacity for recombination among Betacoronaviruses is well documented, SARS-CoV-2 has only been circulating in humans for approximately 8 months and thus has had a relatively short window of opportunity for the occurrence of recombination. The ability to detect recombination has further been limited by the relatively low levels of genetic...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00
Multi-pronged human protein mimicry by SARS-CoV-2 reveals bifurcating potential for MHC detection and immune evasion [NEW RESULTS]
The hand of molecular mimicry in shaping SARS-CoV-2 evolution and immune evasion remains to be deciphered. We identify 33 distinct 8-mer/9-mer peptides that are identical between SARS-CoV-2 and human proteomes, along similar extents of viral mimicry observed in other viruses. Interestingly, 20 novel peptides have not been observed in any previous human coronavirus (HCoV) strains. Four of the total mimicked 8-mers/9-mers map onto HLA-B*40:01, HLA-B*40:02, and HLA-B*35:01 binding peptides from human...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00
Evolutionary dynamics of SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein (N protein) and its consequences [NEW RESULTS]
The emerging novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 has created a global confusing pandemic health crisis that warrants an accurate and detailed characterization of the rapidly evolving viral genome for understanding its epidemiology, pathogenesis and containment. We explored 61,485 sequences of the Nucleocapsid (N) protein, a potent diagnostic and prophylactic target, for identifying the mutations to review their roles in RT-PCR based diagnosis and observe consequent impacts. Compared to the Wuhan reference...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00
Concerted evolution reveals co-adapted amino acid substitutions in frogs that prey on toxic toads [NEW RESULTS]
Gene duplication is an important source of evolutionary innovation, but the adaptive division-of-labor between duplicates can be opposed by ongoing gene conversion between them. Here we document a tandem duplication of Na+,K+-ATPase subunit 1 (ATP1A1) shared by frogs in the genus Leptodactylus, a group of species that feeds on toxic toads. One ATP1A1 paralog evolved resistance to toad toxins while the other copy retained ancestral susceptibility. We show that the two Leptodactylus paralogs are distinguished...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00
Evidence for an extreme founding effect in a highly successful invasive species [NEW RESULTS]
The adaptive potential of invasive species is thought to decrease during founding events due to reduced genetic diversity, limiting the new population's ability to colonize novel habitats. Barbary ground squirrels (Atlantoxerus getulus) were purportedly introduced as a single breeding pair to the island of Fuerteventura but have expanded to over a million individuals spread across the island in just over 50 years. We estimated the number of founders and measured the level of genetic diversity in...
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00
Morphological and genomic shifts in mole-rat 'queens increase fecundity but reduce skeletal integrity [NEW RESULTS]
In some mammals and many social insects, highly cooperative societies are characterized by reproductive division of labor, in which breeders and nonbreeders become behaviorally and morphologically distinct. While differences in behavior and growth between breeders and nonbreeders have been extensively described, little is known of their molecular underpinnings. Here, we investigate the consequences of breeding for skeletal morphology and gene regulation in highly cooperative Damaraland mole-rats....
bioRxiv Subject Collection: Evolutionary Biology
Wed Aug 05, 2020 03:00

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