linkedin post 2021-07-10 05:12:07

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STARTING UPSTREAM. “Cytological studies have revealed that CI results from cytogenetic defects affecting the paternal chromosomes in early embryogenesis. As Wolbachia is not present in mature sperm, this suggests that Wolbachia modifies the sperm of infected males during spermatogenesis (the modification function).” (CI = cytoplasmic incompatibility). https://lnkd.in/dXjWp9f View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2021-07-10 05:13:39

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EMERGENT PHENOMENA. “It has been observed that a large population of fireflies often display synchronized flashing. Each firefly tries to match its flashing with neighboring fireflies. As each firefly tries to synchronize with the others, the whole population of fireflies begins to flash together. This collective motion is only a result of interactions between members...and there is no leader who dictates the individual’s behavior. “ https://lnkd.in/dZaukdg View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2021-07-11 09:05:37

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THE STRATEGY. “This leads to development failing unless the zygote inherits a Wolbachia from the mother that is able to rescue embryonic development (the rescue function). When the male and female parents are infected with different Wolbachia strains, it is also common to find that the cross is incompatible (bidirectional CI). This suggests the modification and rescue factors must match each other for development to proceed normally.” (CI = cytoplasmic incompatibility). https://lnkd.in/dXjWp9f View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2021-07-11 09:09:16

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UNTANGLING THE TRAIT. “The discovery of the genes underlying CI now makes it possible to reconstruct the trait’s evolution at the molecular level and infer the selection pressures acting on CI using the tools of molecular evolution.” (CI = cytoplasmic incompatibility). https://lnkd.in/dXjWp9f View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2021-07-11 09:09:50

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THE INCOMPATIBILITY GENES. “The cif genes are widespread across the Rickettsiales. Our large data set supported the observation of Lindsey et al. (2018) that cif genes are common in Wolbachia supergroups A and B. These supergroups contain most of the Wolbachia strains that have been described, and here the genes are tightly linked to the CI phenotype. The genes were absent from a small sample of Wolbachia strains from other supergroups.” (CI = cytoplasmic incompatibility). https://lnkd.in/dXjWp9f View in LinkedIn
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