Main View
This view is used for searching all possible sources.
First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page
 
1
NAI: Year 4 Annual Report - NASA Astrobiology Institute

This finding suggests that the fungal ancestor was a unicellular amoeba-like protist with flat mitochondrial cristae. ...

NASA Website

2
The origin and early evolution of eukaryotes in the light of phylogenomics
2010-05-05

Phylogenomics of eukaryote supergroups suggest a highly complex last common ancestor of eukaryotes and a key role of mitochondrial endosymbiosis in the origin of eukaryotes.

PubMed Central

3
NAI: Year 4 Annual Report: Ecogenomics - NASA Astrobiology Institute

This finding suggests that the fungal ancestor was a unicellular amoeba-like protist with flat mitochondrial cristae. ...

NASA Website

4
Mitochondrial Genome of the Homoscleromorph Oscarella carmela (Porifera, Demospongiae) Reveals Unexpected Complexity in the Common Ancestor of

, but the plesio- morphic condition (in which the suture simply terminates at the posterior end of the fenestra

E-print Network

5
African mitochondrial DNA tree, Stephen OppenheimerSite: DNA Interactive (www.dnai.org)
2008-03-26

Interviewee: Stephen Oppenheimer DNAi Location:Applications>Human origins>migrations>Paths out of Africa Geneticist Stephen Oppenheimer talks about the mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosome lineages of our ancestors.

NSDL National Science Digital Library

6
Mitochondrial Eve, The

Analysis of mitochondrial DNA indicates that all humankind traces back to common female ancestor referred to as the "mitochondrial eve." This simulation shows the process prospectively, starting with 10 female parental mitochondrial genotypes, and with random mating tracing the number of ...

NSDL National Science Digital Library

7
Comment on "A Green Algal Apicoplast Ancestor"

algal or a green algal ancestor (3�5). Funes et al. (6) argued for a green algal ancestry based gene split in the mitochondrial DNA before cox2a and cox2b transferred to the nucleus (6). Funes et al supergroup alveolates), but were not included by Funes et al. (6). If apicomplexan cox2 genes were inherited

E-print Network

8
GENETIC STRUCTURE, DIVERSITY, AND HISTORICAL DEMOGRAPHY OF NEW ZEALAND�S DUSKY DOLPHIN (LAGENORHYNCHUS OBSCURUS)

... York. Nei, M. 1992. Age of the common ancestor of human mitochondrial DNA. Molecular Biology and Evolution 9::1176� ... ...

NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure

9
Genome Digging: Insight into the Mitochondrial Genome of Homo
2010-12-09

BackgroundA fraction of the Neanderthal mitochondrial genome sequence has a similarity with a 5,839-bp nuclear DNA sequence of mitochondrial origin (numt) on the human chromosome 1. This fact has never been interpreted. Although this phenomenon may be attributed to contamination and mosaic assembly of Neanderthal mtDNA from short sequencing reads, we ...

PubMed Central

10
Proc. Nati. Acad. Sci. USA Vol. 91, pp. 8900-8904, September 1994

sapiens (1, 2) and to estimate coalescence times for the human mitochondrial ancestor (3). (ii) We wanted.S.C. �1734 solely to indicate this fact. #12;Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91 (1994) 8901 74% Hsa 3 Humans 29 Hsa 4 ancestor of living humans, roughly 200,000-300,000 years ago (3, 11-13). Placing human variability

E-print Network

11
Evolution of the mitochondrial fusion�fission cycle and its role in aging
2011-06-21

Mitochondria are organelles of eukaryotic cells that contain their own genetic material and evolved from prokaryotic ancestors some 2 billion years ago. They are the main source of the cell's energy supply and are involved in such important processes as apoptosis, mitochondrial diseases, and aging. During recent years it also became apparent that ...

PubMed Central

12
Evolution of the mitochondrial fusion-fission cycle and its role in aging.
2011-06-06

Mitochondria are organelles of eukaryotic cells that contain their own genetic material and evolved from prokaryotic ancestors some 2 billion years ago. They are the main source of the cell's energy supply and are involved in such important processes as apoptosis, mitochondrial diseases, and aging. During recent years it also became apparent that ...

PubMed

13
Hybrid origin of the Pliocene ancestor of wild goats.
2006-06-03

Recent theories on speciation suggest that interspecific hybridization is an important mechanism for explaining adaptive radiation. According to this view, hybridization can promote the rapid transfer of adaptations between different species; the hybrid population thus invades new habitats and diversifies into a variety of new species. Although hybridization is well accepted as a fairly common ...

PubMed

14
Ancient DNA from Nubian and Somali wild ass provides insights into donkey ancestry and domestication.
2010-07-28

Genetic data from extant donkeys (Equus asinus) have revealed two distinct mitochondrial DNA haplogroups, suggestive of two separate domestication events in northeast Africa about 5000 years ago. Without distinct phylogeographic structure in domestic donkey haplogroups and with little information on the genetic makeup of the ancestral African wild ass, however, it has been ...

PubMed

15
The complete mitochondrial DNA genome of an unknown hominin from southern Siberia.
2010-03-24

With the exception of Neanderthals, from which DNA sequences of numerous individuals have now been determined, the number and genetic relationships of other hominin lineages are largely unknown. Here we report a complete mitochondrial (mt) DNA sequence retrieved from a bone excavated in 2008 in Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains in southern Siberia. It represents a hitherto ...

PubMed

16
Molecular evolution of the family Camelidae: a mitochondrial DNA study.
1994-04-22

We report the first molecular evolutionary analysis of the family Camelidae by analysing the full DNA sequence of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene. Estimates for the time of divergence of the Old World (Camelini) and New World (Lamini) tribes obtained from sequence data are in agreement with those derived from the fossil record. The DNA sequence data were also used to test ...

PubMed

17
Mitochondrial DNA variation of an isolated population of the Adriatic brook lamprey Lampetra zanandreai (Agnatha: Petromyzontidae): phylogeographic and phylogenetic inferences.
2009-12-01

Two mitochondrial genes were examined to compare an isolated population of the Adriatic brook lamprey Lampetra zanandreai in central Italy with other populations in the species range (Po plain) and with parasitic and freshwater lampreys. A single haplotype, identical to one in a Venetian sample, was found in 10 individuals from the isolated population. The reduced variability ...

PubMed

18
Mitochondrial substitution rates are extraordinarily elevated and variable in a genus of

or the closely related Plantago major for four chloroplast genes and three nuclear genes show unexceptional), with the only major differences occurring, as expected, within subgenus Plantago. Consequently, we discuss below interpretation of Fig. 2D postulates a major rate decrease in the common ancestor of subgenus Plantago

E-print Network

19
Mitochondrial Eve, Mark StonekingSite: DNA Interactive (www.dnai.org)
2008-10-06

Interviewee: Mark Stoneking DNAi Location:Applications>Human origins>gene genealogy>Tracing ancestries Geneticist Mark Stoneking, one of the authors of a controversial 1987 paper on mtDNA, talks about our common female ancestor.

NSDL National Science Digital Library

20
Microsatellites Are Molecular Clocks That Support Accurate Inferences about History

, or migrations, involves the initial expansion of our hominid ancestors out of Africa, perhaps as long as 1.8 million years ago (Swisher et al. 1994). The in- ference of a second, major expansion out of Africa, which:613�623 Wallace DC, Torroni A (1992) American Indian prehistory as written in the mitochondrial DNA: a review. Hum

E-print Network

First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page
 
First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page
 
21
Geographic Patterns of Cytochrome b and Sry Gene Lineages in the Gray Red-Backed Vole Clethrionomys rufocanus from Far ...

... breeding occurred among multiple matriarchal ancestors during the domestication of dogs: Evidence from inter-and intraspecies polymorphisms in the D-loop region of mitochondrial DNA between dogs and wolves...

NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure

22
GOBASE: The Organelle Genome Database

GOBASE is "a taxonomically broad organelle genome database that organizes and integrates diverse data related to organelles." Provided by the University of Montreal, GOBASE focuses on mitochondria and chloroplasts, although future versions will cover the bacterial ancestors of these organelles as well. The GOBASE Web site contains separate easy-to-use search engines for ...

NSDL National Science Digital Library

23
2. Genetic evidence for our recent African ancestry Mark Stoneking

maternal inherit- ance of mtDNA was called into question recently by purported claims of evidence for mtDNA trace back to a single ancestor at some point in the past. Since mtDNA is maternally inherited. 2002. Paternal inheritance of mitochondrial DNA. N Engl J Med 347: 576-80.J Med 347: 576-80.J Med

E-print Network

24
An Ancient Mitochondrial Polymorphism in Adalis bipunctata Linked to a Sex-Ratio-Distorting Bacterium
2005-11-01

Sex-ratio-distorting microbes are common parasites of arthropods. Although the reasons they have invaded and spread though populations are well understood, their subsequent dynamics within those populations are virtually unknown. We have found that different strains of a male-killing Rickettsia bacterium infecting the beetle Adalia bipunctata are associated with distinct ...

PubMed Central

25
Brief communication: mitochondrial DNA variation suggests extensive gene flow from Polynesian ancestors to indigenous Melanesians in the northwestern Bismarck Archipelago.
2006-08-01

Archaeological, linguistic, and genetic studies show that Austronesian (AN)-speaking Polynesian ancestors came from Asia/Taiwan to the Bismarck Archipelago in Near Oceania more than 3,600 years ago, and then expanded into Remote Oceania. However, it remains unclear whether they extensively mixed with indigenous Melanesians who had populated the Bismarck Archipelago before ...

PubMed

26
Structure of fumarate hydratase from Rickettsia prowazekii, the agent of typhus and suspected relative of the mitochondria.
2011-08-16

Rickettsiae are obligate intracellular parasites of eukaryotic cells that are the causative agents responsible for spotted fever and typhus. Their small genome (about 800 protein-coding genes) is highly conserved across species and has been postulated as the ancestor of the mitochondria. No genes that are required for glycolysis are found in the Rickettsia prowazekii or ...

PubMed

27
Structure of fumarate hydratase from Rickettsia prowazekii, the agent of typhus and suspected relative of the mitochondria
2011-08-16

Rickettsiae are obligate intracellular parasites of eukaryotic cells that are the causative agents responsible for spotted fever and typhus. Their small genome (about 800 protein-coding genes) is highly conserved across species and has been postulated as the ancestor of the mitochondria. No genes that are required for glycolysis are found in the Rickettsia prowazekii or ...

PubMed Central

28
Direct evidence for secondary loss of mitochondria in Entamoeba histolytica.
1995-07-03

Archezoan protists are though to represent lineages that diverged from other eukaryotes before acquisition of the mitochondrion and other organelles. The parasite Entamoeba histolytica was originally included in this group. Ribosomal RNA based phylogenies, however, place E. histolytica on a comparatively recent branch of the eukaryotic tree, implying that its ancestors had ...

PubMed Central

29
The phylogenetic position of Acoela as revealed by the complete mitochondrial genome of Symsagittifera roscoffensis
2010-10-13

BackgroundAcoels are simply organized unsegmented worms, lacking hindgut and anus. Several publications over recent years challenge the long-held view that acoels are early offshoots of the flatworms. Instead a basal position as sister group to all other bilaterian animals was suggested, mainly based on molecular evidence. This led to the view that features of acoels might reflect those of the ...

PubMed Central

30
Mitochondrial biology and disease in Dictyostelium.
2007-01-01

The cellular slime mold Dictyostelium discoideum has become an increasingly useful model for the study of mitochondrial biology and disease. Dictyostelium is an amoebazoan, a sister clade to the animal and fungal lineages. The mitochondrial biology of Dictyostelium exhibits some features which are unique, others which are common to all eukaryotes, and ...

PubMed

31
The mitochondrial genome of Chara vulgaris: insights into the mitochondrial DNA architecture of the last common ancestor of green algae and land plants.
2003-08-01

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has undergone radical changes during the evolution of green plants, yet little is known about the dynamics of mtDNA evolution in this phylum. Land plant mtDNAs differ from the few green algal mtDNAs that have been analyzed to date by their expanded size, long spacers, and diversity of introns. We have determined the mtDNA sequence of Chara vulgaris ...

PubMed

32
[Suggested mitochondrial ancestry of non-mitochondrial ATP/ADP].

One of the major evolutionary events that transformed endosymbiotic bacterium into mitochondrion was an acquisition of ATP/ADP carrier in order to supply the host with respiration-derived ATP. Along with mitochondrial carrier, unrelated carrier is known which is characteristic of intracellular chlamydiae, plastids, parasitic intracellular eukaryote Encephalitozoon cuniculi, ...

PubMed

33
A Bayesian Evaluation of Human Mitochondrial Substitution Rates
2008-04-11

Accurate estimates of mitochondrial substitution rates are central to molecular studies of human evolution, but meaningful comparisons of published studies are problematic because of the wide range of methodologies and data sets employed. These differences are nowhere more pronounced than among rates estimated from phylogenies, genealogies, and pedigrees. By using a data set ...

PubMed Central

34
Small tandemly repeated DNA sequences of higher plants likely originate from a tRNA gene ancestor.
1986-10-24

Several monomers (177 bp) of a tandemly arranged repetitive nuclear DNA sequence of Brassica oleracea have been cloned and sequenced. They share up to 95% homology between one another and up to 80% with other satellite DNA sequences of Cruciferae, suggesting a common ancestor. Both strands of these monomers show more than 50% homology with many tRNA genes; the best homologies ...

PubMed Central

35
Amazon Health / Human Origins Update

This 47-minute radio broadcast discusses a report by biologists that the types of trees in the inner Amazon rainforest are changing. Increasingly, they've found, larger, faster-growing tree species are crowding out smaller slower tree types - even in areas that have not yet been touched by logging or fires. The researchers suggest that increased carbon dioxide levels could be to blame. The second ...

NSDL National Science Digital Library

36
Origin and evolution of the mitochondrial proteome.
2000-12-01

The endosymbiotic theory for the origin of mitochondria requires substantial modification. The three identifiable ancestral sources to the proteome of mitochondria are proteins descended from the ancestral alpha-proteobacteria symbiont, proteins with no homology to bacterial orthologs, and diverse proteins with bacterial affinities not derived from alpha-proteobacteria. Random mutations in the ...

PubMed

37
Identification of cytoplasmic ancestor gene-pools of Musa acuminata Colla and Musa balbisiana Colla and their hybrids by chloroplast and mitochondrial haplotyping.
2008-09-02

Cytoplasmically inherited characters such as resistance to viral and fungal diseases, determination of starch types, crop yield, resistance to low or high temperature often contribute to the advantageous phenotypic traits of plants. In the present study, our goal was to elucidate the genealogy of cytoplasmic genomes chloroplast and mitochondria in banana. Banana breeding is rather complicated ...

PubMed

38
Mitochondrial diversity and the origins of African and European cattle.
1996-05-14

The nature of domestic cattle origins in Africa are unclear as archaeological data are relatively sparse. The earliest domesticates were humpless, or Bos taurus, in morphology and may have shared a common origin with the ancestors of European cattle in the Near East. Alternatively, local strains of the wild ox, the aurochs, may have been adopted by peoples in either continent ...

PubMed Central

39
Mitochondrial diversity and the origins of African and European cattle.
1996-05-14

The nature of domestic cattle origins in Africa are unclear as archaeological data are relatively sparse. The earliest domesticates were humpless, or Bos taurus, in morphology and may have shared a common origin with the ancestors of European cattle in the Near East. Alternatively, local strains of the wild ox, the aurochs, may have been adopted by peoples in either continent ...

PubMed

40
Molecular systematics and phylogeography of the genus Lagothrix (Atelidae, Primates) by means of the mitochondrial COII gene.
2010-08-17

We propose the first molecular systematic hypothesis on the origin and evolution of Lagothrix taxa based on an analysis of 720 base pairs of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit II mitochondrial gene in 97 Lagothrix specimens. All the current Lagothrix forms probably descended from the ancestor L. poeppigii or perhaps (less probably) that of L. lugens. We ...

PubMed

First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page
 
First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page
 
41
Mitochondrial genome nucleotide substitution pattern between domesticated silkmoth, Bombyx mori, and its wild ancestors, Chinese Bombyx mandarina and Japanese Bombyx mandarina
2010-03-01

Bombyx mori and Bombyx mandarina are morphologically and physiologically similar. In this study, we compared the nucleotide variations in the complete mitochondrial (mt) genomes between the domesticated silkmoth, B. mori, and its wild ancestors, Chinese B. mandarina (ChBm) and Japanese B. mandarina (JaBm). The sequence divergence and transition mutation ...

PubMed Central

42
Extensive loss of translational genes in the structurally dynamic mitochondrial genome of the angiosperm Silene latifolia
2010-09-10

BackgroundMitochondrial gene loss and functional transfer to the nucleus is an ongoing process in many lineages of plants, resulting in substantial variation across species in mitochondrial gene content. The Caryophyllaceae represents one lineage that has experienced a particularly high rate of mitochondrial gene loss relative to other ...

PubMed Central

43
[Genetic genealogy: history and methodology].
2011-05-01

The review surveys the development and the current state of genetic genealogy, a branch of science dealing with the history of individuals, families, and kins using molecular genetic methods. The main milestones in the development of genetic genealogy are established: the appearance of essential prerequisites (development of DNA genotyping and forensic techniques of evaluating biological kinship); ...

PubMed

44
Molecular Ecology (2004) 13, 1265�1275 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2004.02110.x � 2004 Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Mitochondrial DNA phylogeography and population history of the grey wolf Canis lupus C. VIL�,* I. R. AMORIM, J Do�ana, C.S.I.C., Apdo. 1056, 41080 Sevilla, Spain Abstract The grey wolf (Canis lupus) and coyote (C Introduction The immediate ancestors of the grey wolf (Canis lupus) and coyote (C. latrans) were the late

E-print Network

45
Mitochondrial genotype of a unisexual salamander of hybrid origin is unrelated to either of its nuclear haplotypes.
1990-03-01

We examined mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), enzyme, and morphological variation among 17 unisexual Ambystoma of hybrid origin. Electrophoretic comparison of diagnostic enzymes indicates that these unisexuals are triploid with two nuclear genomes from the bisexual species Ambystoma laterale and one from Ambystoma jeffersonianum; however, according to restriction analysis, the mtDNAs ...

PubMed Central

46
Mitochondrial Genomes Reveal Slow Rates of Molecular Evolution and the Timing of Speciation in Beavers (Castor), One of the Largest Rodent Species
2011-01-28

BackgroundBeavers are one of the largest and ecologically most distinct rodent species. Little is known about their evolution and even their closest phylogenetic relatives have not yet been identified with certainty. Similarly, little is known about the timing of divergence events within the genus Castor.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe sequenced complete mitochondrial genomes ...

PubMed Central

47
University of Montreal: Fungal Mitochondrial Genome Project

Supported by the Medical Research Council of Canada, the Fungal Mitochondrial Genome Project (FMGP) is a project of B. Franz Lang and his research group at the University of Montreal. Three "goals of FMGP are to (i) sequence complete mitochondrial genomes from all major fungal lineages, (ii) infer a robust fungal phylogeny, (iii) define the origin of ...

NSDL National Science Digital Library

48
Relaxation of yeast mitochondrial functions after whole-genome duplication
2008-09-01

Mitochondria are essential for cellular energy production in most eukaryotic organisms. However, when glucose is abundant, yeast species that underwent whole-genome duplication (WGD) mostly conduct fermentation even under aerobic conditions, and most can survive without a functional mitochondrial genome. In this study, we show that the rate of evolution for the nuclear-encoded ...

PubMed Central

49
Relaxation of selective constraint on dog mitochondrial DNA following domestication.
2006-06-29

The domestication of dogs caused a dramatic change in their way of life compared with that of their ancestor, the gray wolf. We hypothesize that this new life style changed the selective forces that acted upon the species, which in turn had an effect on the dog's genome. We sequenced the complete mitochondrial DNA genome in 14 dogs, six wolves, and three ...

PubMed

50
Relaxation of selective constraint on dog mitochondrial DNA following domestication
2006-08-01

The domestication of dogs caused a dramatic change in their way of life compared with that of their ancestor, the gray wolf. We hypothesize that this new life style changed the selective forces that acted upon the species, which in turn had an effect on the dog�s genome. We sequenced the complete mitochondrial DNA genome in 14 dogs, six wolves, and three ...

PubMed Central

51
Rapid proliferation of repetitive palindromic elements in mtDNA of the endemic Baikalian sponge Lubomirskia baicalensis.
2009-12-21

Animal mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is a remarkably compact molecule largely because of the scarcity of noncoding "selfish" DNA. Recently, however, we found that mitochondrial genomes of several phylogenetically diverse species of demosponges contain small repetitive palindromic sequences, interspersed within intergenic regions and fused in protein and ...

PubMed

52
Noninvasive probes of mitochondrial molecular motors
2005-03-01

We report on a noninvasive method of probing mitochondrial molecular motors using nonlinear dielectric spectroscopy. It has been found previously that enzymes in the plasma membrane, particularly H+ ATPase, result in a strong low frequency (less than 100 Hz) nonlinear harmonic response. In this study, we find evidence that molecular motors located in the inner membranes of ...

NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

53
Mitochondrial 3? tRNA editing in the jakobid Seculamonas ecuadoriensis: A novel mechanism and implications for tRNA processing
2004-04-01

The jakobid flagellates are bacteriovorus protists with mitochondrial genomes that are the most ancestral identified to date, in that they most resemble the genomes of the ?-proteobacterial ancestors of the mitochondrion. Because of the bacterial character of jakobid mitochondrial genomes, it was expected that mechanisms for gene ...

PubMed Central

54
Group II Introns Break New Boundaries: Presence in a Bilaterian's Genome
2008-01-23

Group II introns are ribozymes, removing themselves from their primary transcripts, as well as mobile genetic elements, transposing via an RNA intermediate, and are thought to be the ancestors of spliceosomal introns. Although common in bacteria and most eukaryotic organelles, they have never been reported in any bilaterian animal genome, organellar or nuclear. Here we report ...

PubMed Central

55
Gene fragmentation: a key to mitochondrial genome evolution in Euglenozoa?
2011-05-05

Phylum Euglenozoa comprises three groups of eukaryotic microbes (kinetoplastids, diplonemids, and euglenids), the mitochondrial (mt) genomes of which exhibit radically different modes of organization and expression. Gene fragmentation is a striking feature of both euglenid and diplonemid mtDNAs. To rationalize the emergence of these highly divergent mtDNA types and the ...

PubMed

56
The bacterial ZapA-like protein ZED is required for mitochondrial division.
2009-08-20

Bacterial cell division systems that include FtsZ are found throughout prokaryotes. Mitochondria arose from an endosymbiotic alpha-proteobacterial ancestor and proliferate by division. However, how the mitochondrial division system was established from bacterial division is not clear. Here, we have isolated intact mitochondrial ...

PubMed

57
Pervasive survival of expressed mitochondrial rps14 pseudogenes in grasses and their relatives for 80 million years following three functional transfers to the nucleus
2006-07-14

BackgroundMany mitochondrial genes, especially ribosomal protein genes, have been frequently transferred as functional entities to the nucleus during plant evolution, often by an RNA-mediated process. A notable case of transfer involves the rps14 gene of three grasses (rice, maize, and wheat), which has been relocated to the intron of the nuclear sdh2 gene and which is ...

PubMed Central

58
Phylogenetic relationships among domesticated and wild species of Cucurbita (Cucurbitaceae) inferred from a mitochondrial gene: Implications for crop plant evolution and areas of origin
2002-01-08

We have investigated the phylogenetic relationships among six wild and six domesticated taxa of Cucurbita using as a marker an intron region from the mitochondrial nad1 gene. Our study represents one of the first successful uses of a mtDNA gene in resolving inter- and intraspecific taxonomic relationships in Angiosperms and yields several important insights into the ...

PubMed Central

59
On ancestors of dog breeds with focus on Weimaraner hunting dogs.
2010-10-28

Paternally inherited Y chromosomal markers and maternally inherited mitochondrial (mt) DNA sequences were investigated in 27 dog breeds (Canis familiaris), of which the Weimaraner hunting dog was studied in greater detail. Altogether, nine potentially polymorphic markers of the Y chromosome were examined as well as parts of the canine mt genome (1947 base pairs) in 111 male ...

PubMed

60
Insights into the demographic history of African Pygmies from complete mitochondrial genomes.
2010-11-01

Pygmy populations are among the few hunter-gatherers currently living in sub-Saharan Africa and are mainly represented by two groups, Eastern and Western, according to their current geographical distribution. They are scattered across the Central African belt and surrounded by Bantu-speaking farmers, with whom they have complex social and economic interactions. To investigate the demographic ...

PubMed

First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page
 
First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page
 
61
Structure and evolution of mitochondrial outer membrane proteins of beta-barrel topology.
2010-05-05

Gram-negative bacteria are the ancestors of mitochondrial organelles. Consequently, both entities contain two surrounding lipid bilayers known as the inner and outer membranes. While protein synthesis in bacteria is accomplished in the cytoplasm, mitochondria import 90-99% of their protein ensemble from the cytosol in the opposite direction. Three protein ...

PubMed

62
Rediscovery of Protohynobius puxiongensis (Caudata: Hynobiidae) and its phylogenetic position based on complete mitochondrial genomes.
2009-12-22

The mysterious Asian hynobiid salamander, Protohynobius puxiongensis, was described based on a single specimen collected in 1965 and never found again since then. Because the specimen had an internasal bone, Pr. puxiongensis was thought to retain a primitive character lost by a common ancestor of all other hynobiid salamanders, and it was thus considered to be not only a new ...

PubMed

63
Proboscidean Mitogenomics: Chronology and Mode of Elephant Evolution Using Mastodon as Outgroup
2007-08-24

We have sequenced the complete mitochondrial genome of the extinct American mastodon (Mammut americanum) from an Alaskan fossil that is between 50,000 and 130,000 y old, extending the age range of genomic analyses by almost a complete glacial cycle. The sequence we obtained is substantially different from previously reported partial mastodon mitochondrial ...

PubMed Central

64
Molecular phylogeny of a cosmopolitan group of woodpeckers (genus Picoides) gased on COI and cyt b mitochondrial gene sequences.
2002-01-01

Picoides is the largest genus of woodpeckers and member species are found on most major land masses. Current systematic arrangement of this group, based on morphological, behavioral, and plumage characters, suggests that New World species evolved from a single invasion by a Eurasian common ancestor and that all New World species form a monophyletic group. No clear link has ...

PubMed

65
Mitochondrial DNA variation in human evolution and disease.
1999-09-30

Analysis of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation has permitted the reconstruction of the ancient migrations of women. This has provided evidence that our species arose in Africa about 150000 years before present (YBP), migrated out of Africa into Asia about 60000 to 70000 YBP and into Europe about 40000 to 50000 YBP, and migrated from Asia and possibly Europe to the Americas ...

PubMed

66
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) human family tree, 2D animationSite: DNA Interactive (www.dnai.org)
2008-10-06

DNAi location:Applications>Human Origins>gene genealogy>Tracing ancestries>Tracing our maternal lineage An interactive illustration of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) human family tree, showing the two major mtDNA lineages (African populations and African/non-African populations). In 1987, a Californian research team used mitochondrial DNA ...

NSDL National Science Digital Library

67
Large size and complex structure of mitochondrial DNA in two nonflowering land plants.
1992-02-01

We report the first estimates of genome size and complexity for mitochondrial DNAs (mtDNAs) from nonflowering land plants. The mtDNA of Onoclea sensibilis (sensitive fern) is approximately 300 kb in size, while that of Equisetum arvense (common horsetail) is at least 200 kb. Sufficient mtDNA of Onoclea was available to permit an estimation of the copy number and a linkage ...

PubMed

68
Founder mitochondrial haplotypes in Amerindian populations.
1994-07-01

It had been proposed that the colonization of the New World took place by three successive migrations from northeastern Asia. The first one gave rise to Amerindians (Paleo-Indians), the second and third ones to Nadene and Aleut-Eskimo, respectively. Variation in mtDNA has been used to infer the demographic structure of the Amerindian ancestors. The study of RFLP all along the ...

PubMed Central

69
Founder mitochondrial haplotypes in Amerindian populations.
1994-07-01

It had been proposed that the colonization of the New World took place by three successive migrations from northeastern Asia. The first one gave rise to Amerindians (Paleo-Indians), the second and third ones to Nadene and Aleut-Eskimo, respectively. Variation in mtDNA has been used to infer the demographic structure of the Amerindian ancestors. The study of RFLP all along the ...

PubMed

70
Evolution of trans-splicing plant mitochondrial introns in pre-Permian times
1997-01-21

Trans-splicing in angiosperm plant mitochondria connects exons from independent RNA molecules by means of group II intron fragments. Homologues of trans-splicing introns in the angiosperm mitochondrial nad2 and nad5 genes are now identified as uninterrupted group II introns in the ferns Asplenium nidus and Marsilea drummondii. These fern introns are correctly spliced from the ...

PubMed Central

71
A complete Neandertal mitochondrial genome sequence determined by high-throughput sequencing
2008-08-08

SummaryA complete mitochondrial (mt) genome sequence was reconstructed from a 38,000-year-old Neandertal individual using 8,341 mtDNA sequences identified among 4.8 Gb of DNA generated from ~0.3 grams of bone. Analysis of the assembled sequence unequivocally establishes that the Neandertal mtDNA falls outside the variation of extant human mtDNAs and allows an estimate of the ...

PubMed Central

72
Transfer of rpl22 to the nucleus greatly preceded its loss from the chloroplast and involved the gain of an intron.
1991-10-01

Most chloroplast and mitochondrial proteins are encoded by nuclear genes that once resided in the organellar genomes. Transfer of most of these genes appears to have occurred soon after the endosymbiotic origin of organelles, and so little is known about the process. Our efforts to understand how chloroplast genes are functionally transferred to the nuclear genome have led us ...

PubMed Central

73
The chimeric eukaryote: Origin of the nucleus from the karyomastigont in amitochondriate protists
2000-06-20

We present a testable model for the origin of the nucleus, the membrane-bounded organelle that defines eukaryotes. A chimeric cell evolved via symbiogenesis by syntrophic merger between an archaebacterium and a eubacterium. The archaebacterium, a thermoacidophil resembling extant Thermoplasma, generated hydrogen sulfide to protect the eubacterium, a heterotrophic swimmer comparable to ...

PubMed Central

74
Phylogenomic evidence for separate acquisition of plastids in cryptophytes, haptophytes, and stramenopiles.
2010-03-01

According to the chromalveolate hypothesis (Cavalier-Smith T. 1999. Principles of protein and lipid targeting in secondary symbiogenesis: euglenoid, dinoflagellate, and sporozoan plastid origins and the eukaryote family tree. J Eukaryot Microbiol 46:347-366), the four eukaryotic groups with chlorophyll c-containing plastids originate from a single photosynthetic ancestor, ...

PubMed

75
Molecular phylogeny of the superorder Archonta.
1991-11-15

The superorder Archonta has been hypothesized to include primates, tree shrews, bats, and flying lemurs as descendants of a common ancestor. More recently, a diphyletic origin for bats has been proposed. To evaluate these hypotheses, the nucleotide sequence of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit II gene was determined from a bushbaby (Galago ...

PubMed Central

77
The Organellar Genome and Metabolic Potential of the Hydrogen-Producing Mitochondrion of Nyctotherus ovalis.
2011-03-04

It is generally accepted that hydrogenosomes (hydrogen-producing organelles) evolved from a mitochondrial ancestor. However, until recently, only indirect evidence for this hypothesis was available. Here, we present the almost complete genome of the hydrogen-producing mitochondrion of the anaerobic ciliate Nyctotherus ovalis and show that, except for the ...

PubMed

78
The Organellar Genome and Metabolic Potential of the Hydrogen-Producing Mitochondrion of Nyctotherus ovalis
2011-08-04

It is generally accepted that hydrogenosomes (hydrogen-producing organelles) evolved from a mitochondrial ancestor. However, until recently, only indirect evidence for this hypothesis was available. Here, we present the almost complete genome of the hydrogen-producing mitochondrion of the anaerobic ciliate Nyctotherus ovalis and show that, except for the ...

PubMed Central

79
No evidence of Neandertal admixture in the mitochondrial genomes of early European modern humans and contemporary Europeans.
2011-08-24

Neandertals, the archaic human form documented in Eurasia until 29,000 years ago, share no mitochondrial haplotype with modern Europeans. Whether this means that the two groups were reproductively isolated is controversial, and indeed nuclear data have been interpreted as suggesting that they admixed. We explored the range of demographic parameters that may have generated the ...

PubMed

80
A horizontally transferred tRNA(Cys) gene in the sugar beet mitochondrial genome: evidence that the gene is present in diverse angiosperms and its transcript is aminoacylated.
2011-06-23

Of the two tRNA(Cys) (GCA) genes, trnC1-GCA and trnC2-GCA, previously identified in mitochondrial genome of sugar beet, the former is a native gene and probably a pseudo-copy, whereas the latter, of unknown origin, is transcribed into a tRNA [tRNA(Cys2) (GCA)]. In this study, the trnC2-GCA sequence was mined from various public databases. To evaluate whether or not the ...

PubMed

First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page
 
First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page
 
81
A Phylometagenomic Exploration of Oceanic Alphaproteobacteria Reveals Mitochondrial Relatives Unrelated to the SAR11 Clade
2011-09-14

BackgroundAccording to the endosymbiont hypothesis, the mitochondrial system for aerobic respiration was derived from an ancestral Alphaproteobacterium. Phylogenetic studies indicate that the mitochondrial ancestor is most closely related to the Rickettsiales. Recently, it was suggested that Candidatus Pelagibacter ubique, a member of ...

PubMed Central

82
Location, identity, amount and serial entry of chloroplast DNA sequences in crucifer mitochondrial DNAs.
1988-11-01

Southern blot hybridization techniques were used to examine the chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) sequences present in the mitochondrial DNAs (mtDNAs) of two Brassica species (B. campestris and B. hirta), two closely related species belonging to the same tribe as Brassica (Raphanus sativa, Crambe abyssinica), and two more distantly related species of crucifers (Arabidopsis thaliana, ...

PubMed

First Page Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page Last Page