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Full-Text Articles in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

An Evolving Epigenome That Determines Tissue And Cell Specificity, Renee Louise Sears Dec 2019

An Evolving Epigenome That Determines Tissue And Cell Specificity, Renee Louise Sears

Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Understanding the mechanisms driving phenotypic variation is a major goal of biology that unifies classical genetics with the emerging fields of genomics and epigenomics. Human and mouse share over 90% of genes and global tissue-specific patterns of expression are maintained between the species. Thus, it is hypothesized that gene expression is influenced through distinctive regulation among species in order to account for the unmistakable phenotypic divergence. DNA methylation, histone modifications, open chromatin patterns, transcription factor binding, and other epigenetic factors are all associated with shaping, maintaining, and repressing regulatory regions which in turn coordinate gene expression. It is vital to …


Symbiotic Bacteria Can Colonize Closely-Related, But Not Distantly-Related Species Of Its Host Dictyostelium Discoideum, Rory Vu Mather Jan 2019

Symbiotic Bacteria Can Colonize Closely-Related, But Not Distantly-Related Species Of Its Host Dictyostelium Discoideum, Rory Vu Mather

Undergraduate Research Symposium Posters

Some of the closest interactions between organisms can be found within symbioses, where different individuals live in close physiological contact and either benefit or harm the other. A powerful kind of benefit comes when bacterial symbionts produce amino acids or provide digestive capabilities outside the host’s ability, in essence taking advantage of the other’s genetic catalog. One such symbiosis is that of the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum and its bacterial symbionts Burkholderia agricolaris, Burkholderia hayleyella, and Burkholderia bonneia. In this symbiosis, Burkholderia provide the capability of carrying food bacteria to their host, an advantageous trait when bacterial food is rare. …