Browsing by Author "Hering, Lars"
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- Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsA Polychaete's powerful punch: venom gland transcriptomics of Glycera reveals a complex cocktail of toxin homologs(2014-09-05)
;von Reumont, Björn M. ;Campbell, Lahcen I. ;Richter, Sandy ;Hering, Lars ;Sykes, Dan ;Hetmank, Jörg ;Jenner, Ronald A.Glycerids are marine annelids commonly known as bloodworms. Bloodworms have an eversible proboscis adorned with jaws connected to venom glands. Bloodworms prey on invertebrates, and it is known that the venom glands produce compounds that can induce toxic effects in animals. Yet, none of these putative toxins has been characterized on a molecular basis. Here we present the transcriptomic profiles of the venom glands of three species of bloodworm, Glycera dibranchiata, Glycera fallax and Glycera tridactyla, as well as the body tissue of G. tridactyla. The venom glands express a complex mixture of transcripts coding for putative toxin precursors. These transcripts represent 20 known toxin classes that have been convergently recruited into animal venoms, as well as transcripts potentially coding for Glycera-specific toxins. The toxins represent five functional categories: Pore-forming and membrane-disrupting toxins, neurotoxins, protease inhibitors, other enzymes, and CAP domain toxins. Many of the transcripts coding for putative Glycera toxins belong to classes that have been widely recruited into venoms, but some are homologs of toxins previously only known from the venoms of scorpaeniform fish and monotremes (stonustoxin-like toxin), turrid gastropods (turripeptide-like peptides), and sea anemones (gigantoxin I-like neurotoxin). This complex mixture of toxin homologs suggests that bloodworms employ venom while predating on macroscopic prey, casting doubt on the previously widespread opinion that G. dibranchiata is a detritivore. Our results further show that researchers should be aware that different assembly methods, as well as different methods of homology prediction, can influence the transcriptomic profiling of venom glands. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsComparative analyses of glycerotoxin expression unveil a novel structural organization of the bloodworm venom system(2017-03-04)
;Richter, Sandy ;Helm, Conrad ;Meunier, Frederic A. ;Hering, Lars ;Campbell, Lahcen I. ;Drukewitz, Stephan H. ;Undheim, Eivind A. B. ;Jenner, Ronald A. ;Schiavo, GiampietroWe present the first molecular characterization of glycerotoxin (GLTx), a potent neurotoxin found in the venom of the bloodworm Glycera tridactyla (Glyceridae, Annelida). Within the animal kingdom, GLTx shows a unique mode of action as it can specifically up-regulate the activity of Cav2.2 channels (N-type) in a reversible manner. The lack of sequence information has so far hampered a detailed understanding of its mode of action. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsGene content evolution in the arthropods(2020)
;Thomas, Gregg W. C. ;Dohmen, Elias ;Hughes, Daniel S. T. ;Murali, Shwetha C. ;Poelchau, Monica ;Glastad, Karl ;Anstead, Clare A. ;Ayoub, Nadia A. ;Batterham, Phillip ;Bellair, Michelle ;Binford, Greta J. ;Chao, Hsu ;Chen, Yolanda H. ;Childers, Christopher ;Dinh, Huyen ;Doddapaneni, Harsha Vardhan ;Duan, Jian J. ;Dugan, Shannon ;Esposito, Lauren A. ;Friedrich, Markus ;Garb, Jessica ;Gasser, Robin B. ;Goodisman, Michael A. D. ;Gundersen-Rindal, Dawn E. ;Han, Yi ;Handler, Alfred M. ;Hatakeyama, Masatsugu ;Hering, Lars ;Hunter, Wayne B. ;Ioannidis, Panagiotis ;Jayaseelan, Joy C. ;Kalra, Divya ;Khila, Abderrahman ;Korhonen, Pasi K. ;Lee, Carol Eunmi ;Lee, Sandra L. ;Li, Yiyuan ;Lindsey, Amelia R. I. ;Mayer, Georg ;McGregor, Alistair P. ;McKenna, Duane D. ;Misof, Bernhard ;Munidasa, Mala ;Munoz-Torres, Monica ;Muzny, Donna M. ;Niehuis, Oliver ;Osuji-Lacy, Nkechinyere ;Palli, Subba R. ;Panfilio, Kristen A. ;Pechmann, Matthias ;Perry, Trent ;Peters, Ralph S. ;Poynton, Helen C.; ;Qu, Jiaxin ;Rotenberg, Dorith ;Schal, Coby ;Schoville, Sean D. ;Scully, Erin D. ;Skinner, Evette ;Sloan, Daniel B. ;Stouthamer, Richard ;Strand, Michael R. ;Szucsich, Nikolaus U. ;Wijeratne, Asela ;Young, Neil D. ;Zattara, Eduardo E. ;Benoit, Joshua B. ;Zdobnov, Evgeny M. ;Pfrender, Michael E. ;Hackett, Kevin J. ;Werren, John H. ;Worley, Kim C. ;Gibbs, Richard A. ;Chipman, Ariel D. ;Waterhouse, Robert M. ;Bornberg-Bauer, Erich ;Hahn, Matthew W.Richards, Stephen - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsOpsins in onychophora (velvet worms) suggest a single origin and subsequent diversification of visual pigments in arthropods(2012-11)
;Hering, Lars ;Henze, Miriam J. ;Kohler, Martin ;Kelber, Almut; ;Leschke, Maren ;Nickel, Birgit ;Meyer, Matthias ;Kircher, Martin ;Sunnucks, PaulMayer, GeorgMultiple visual pigments, prerequisites for color vision, are found in arthropods, but the evolutionary origin of their diversity remains obscure. In this study, we explore the opsin genes in five distantly related species of Onychophora, using deep transcriptome sequencing and screening approaches. Surprisingly, our data reveal the presence of only one opsin gene (onychopsin) in each onychophoran species, and our behavioral experiments indicate a maximum sensitivity of onychopsin to blue-green light. In our phylogenetic analyses, the onychopsins represent the sister group to the monophyletic clade of visual r-opsins of arthropods. These results concur with phylogenomic support for the sister-group status of the Onychophora and Arthropoda and provide evidence for monochromatic vision in velvet worms and in the last common ancestor of Onychophora and Arthropoda. We conclude that the diversification of visual pigments and color vision evolved in arthropods, along with the evolution of compound eyes-one of the most sophisticated visual systems known. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsPlatyzoan paraphyly based on phylogenomic data supports a noncoelomate ancestry of spiralia(2014-07)
;Struck, Torsten H. ;Wey-Fabrizius, Alexandra R. ;Golombek, Anja ;Hering, Lars ;Weigert, Anne; ;Klebow, Sabrina ;Iakovenko, Nataliia ;Hausdorf, Bernhard ;Petersen, Malte ;Kück, Patrick ;Herlyn, HolgerHankeln, ThomasBased on molecular data three major clades have been recognized within Bilateria: Deuterostomia, Ecdysozoa, and Spiralia. Within Spiralia, small-sized and simply organized animals such as flatworms, gastrotrichs, and gnathostomulids have recently been grouped together as Platyzoa. However, the representation of putative platyzoans was low in the respective molecular phylogenetic studies, in terms of both, taxon number and sequence data. Furthermore, increased substitution rates in platyzoan taxa raised the possibility that monophyletic Platyzoa represents an artifact due to long-branch attraction. In order to overcome such problems, we employed a phylogenomic approach, thereby substantially increasing 1) the number of sampled species within Platyzoa and 2) species-specific sequence coverage in data sets of up to 82,162 amino acid positions. Using established and new measures (long-branch score), we disentangled phylogenetic signal from misleading effects such as long-branch attraction. In doing so, our phylogenomic analyses did not recover a monophyletic origin of platyzoan taxa that, instead, appeared paraphyletic with respect to the other spiralians. Platyhelminthes and Gastrotricha formed a monophylum, which we name Rouphozoa. To the exclusion of Gnathifera, Rouphozoa and all other spiralians represent a monophyletic group, which we name Platytrochozoa. Platyzoan paraphyly suggests that the last common ancestor of Spiralia was a simple-bodied organism lacking coelomic cavities, segmentation, and complex brain structures, and that more complex animals such as annelids evolved from such a simply organized ancestor. This conclusion contradicts alternative evolutionary scenarios proposing an annelid-like ancestor of Bilateria and Spiralia and several independent events of secondary reduction. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settingsThe Utility of Genome Skimming for Phylogenomic Analyses as Demonstrated for Glycerid Relationships (Annelida, Glyceridae)(2015-11-19)
;Richter, Sandy ;Schwarz, Francine ;Hering, Lars ;Böggemann, MarkusGlyceridae (Annelida) are a group of venomous annelids distributed worldwide from intertidal to abyssal depths. To trace the evolutionary history and complexity of glycerid venom cocktails, a solid backbone phylogeny of this group is essential. We therefore aimed to reconstruct the phylogenetic relationships of these annelids using Illumina sequencing technology. We constructed whole-genome shotgun libraries for 19 glycerid specimens and 1 outgroup species (Glycinde armigera). The chosen target genes comprise 13 mitochondrial proteins, 2 ribosomal mitochondrial genes, and 4 nuclear loci (18SrRNA, 28SrRNA, ITS1, and ITS2). Based on partitioned maximum likelihood as well as Bayesian analyses of the resulting supermatrix, we were finally able to resolve a robust glycerid phylogeny and identified three clades comprising the majority of taxa. Furthermore, we detected group II introns inside the cox1 gene of two analyzed glycerid specimens, with two different insertions in one of these species. Moreover, we generated reduced data sets comprising 10 million, 4 million, and 1 million reads from the original data sets to test the influence of the sequencing depth on assembling complete mitochondrial genomes from low coverage genome data. We estimated the coverage of mitochondrial genome sequences in each data set size by mapping the filtered Illumina reads against the respective mitochondrial contigs. By comparing the contig coverage calculated in all data set sizes, we got a hint for the scalability of our genome skimming approach. This allows estimating more precisely the number of reads that are at least necessary to reconstruct complete mitochondrial genomes in Glyceridae and probably non-model organisms in general.