@alexandrsember.bsky.social
📤 30
📥 40
📝 0
reposted by
Ekolist.cz
6 days ago
loading . . .
František Lukl: Otevřený dopis ministru životního prostředí - Ekolist.cz
Vážený pane ministře, Svaz měst a obcí České republiky se musí velice hlasitě ozvat na obranu edukativních vzdělávacích programů pro děti a mládež, které nabízejí neziskové organizace zřizované mnohdy...
https://ekolist.cz/cz/publicistika/nazory-a-komentare/frantisek-lukl-otevreny-dopis-ministru-zivotniho-prostredi
1
16
4
reposted by
Scientific American
8 days ago
An exoplanet called HD 137010 b might be the closest thing astronomers have ever seen to “Earth 2.0.” The trouble is that it’s only been seen once—and may never be glimpsed again
loading . . .
Another Earth or a blip in the data? We may never find out
An exoplanet called HD 137010 b might be the closest thing astronomers have ever seen to “Earth 2.0.” The trouble is that it’s only been seen once—and may never be glimpsed again
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/another-earth-or-a-blip-in-the-data-we-may-never-find-out/
3
53
19
reposted by
Nature Reviews Genetics
11 days ago
New online! Long non-coding RNAs as orchestrators of dosage compensation
loading . . .
Long non-coding RNAs as orchestrators of dosage compensation
Nature Reviews Genetics, Published online: 27 January 2026; doi:10.1038/s41576-026-00934-6In this Journal Club, Hodkinson and Larschan recall a 2002 paper by Meller and Rattner that used the power of Drosophila genetics to demonstrate the integral role of long non-coding RNAs in dosage compensation.
http://dlvr.it/TQcBBP
0
5
3
reposted by
André Marques
12 days ago
A new extreme of meiotic evolution: ✔️ 𝗻𝗼 crossovers ✔️ 𝗻𝗼 gene conversion ✔️ 𝗻𝗼𝗿𝗺𝗮𝗹 meiosis & fertility Sex mimics clonality without becoming asexual, in the holocentric multicellular eukaryote 𝘙𝘩𝘺𝘯𝘤𝘩𝘰𝘴𝘱𝘰𝘳𝘢 𝘵𝘦𝘯𝘶𝘪𝘴. more about it:
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
1
56
35
reposted by
Molecular Cell
12 days ago
Anchoring the acentric: How retention elements give ecDNA immortality
loading . . .
Anchoring the acentric: How retention elements give ecDNA immortality
In a recent Nature article, Venkat Sankar et al. uncover ecDNA harboring specific DNA sequences called retention elements, contact regions of mitotic chromosomes that are bookmarked by transcription factors and chromatin proteins to promote coordinated inheritance. Retention elements are essential for ecDNA amplification, even in the absence of positive selection, and their silencing can lead to rapid ecDNA depletion.
http://dlvr.it/TQZlW0
0
4
1
reposted by
Aurora Ruiz-Herrera
14 days ago
📣 Call for Abstracts! Working on sex chromosomes? Join us at SMBE 2026 in Copenhagen (28 June–2 July). All taxa, systems, and approaches welcome! ⏰ Deadline: 3 Feb 2026 👉
smbe2026.org/abstracts/
0
19
15
reposted by
Nature Reviews Genetics
22 days ago
ICYMI: New online! Whole-genome spatial transcriptomic imaging with RAEFISH
loading . . .
Whole-genome spatial transcriptomic imaging with RAEFISH
Nature Reviews Genetics, Published online: 09 January 2026; doi:10.1038/s41576-025-00926-yIn this Tools of the Trade article, Yubao Cheng discusses the development of RAEFISH (reverse-padlock amplicon-encoding fluorescence in situ hybridization), a method that enables spatial transcriptomics with both single-molecule spatial resolution and genome-wide coverage.
http://dlvr.it/TQPPPr
0
8
2
reposted by
Cory Laran
25 days ago
🤔 Think 🤔 about it.
44
832
109
reposted by
Ancient Aliens
28 days ago
Researchers believe they could be representations of extraterrestrial beings that visited humanity in the past.
alienigenasdopassado.com.br/en/the-myste...
#aliens
#ancientaliens
#ancientastronauts
#ancienthistory
#UFOs
#ufosightings
#UAPs
#Ufology
#ufolovers
#extraterrestrials
#mysteries
loading . . .
The Mysterious 7,000 Year Old Vinca Figurines - Ancient Aliens
Researchers believe they could be representations of extraterrestrial beings that visited humanity in the past.
https://alienigenasdopassado.com.br/en/the-mysterious-7000-year-old-vinca-figurines/
97
480
107
reposted by
Scientific American
about 1 month ago
NASA spent years and billions of dollars collecting Martian samples to bring home. But Congress's current proposed budget for the agency would leave them stranded. What's at stake? Take a deep dive with this recent feature:
loading . . .
NASA Found Something on Mars. Now We Might Just Leave It There
NASA spent years and billions of dollars collecting Martian samples to bring home. Now they might be stranded
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/nasas-mars-sample-return-mission-in-jeopardy-as-u-s-considers-abandoning/
41
574
223
reposted by
Nature Reviews Genetics
about 1 month ago
New online! A genomic and epigenomic view of human centromeres
loading . . .
A genomic and epigenomic view of human centromeres
Nature Reviews Genetics, Published online: 06 January 2026; doi:10.1038/s41576-025-00923-1The complex and repetitive nature of centromeres has historically posed challenges to their genomic assembly and functional understanding, which are now being overcome with long-read sequencing. This Review discusses recent genomic and epigenomic insights into human centromere biology that have positioned the field for future studies of centromere structure in chromosome biology and human disease.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41576-025-00923-1?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=bluesky
0
6
2
reposted by
bioRxiv Evolutionary Biology
about 1 month ago
Non-canonical sex chromosome evolution revealed by extreme heterogeneity in homomorphic Y chromosome differentiation in the common frog
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2025.12.31.697208v1
0
7
5
reposted by
Aurora Ruiz-Herrera
about 2 months ago
Excited to be part of the amazing team behind our upcoming symposium on Sex Evolution at
#SMBE2026
! 🔹 Daniel Jeffries 🔹 Paul Jay 🔹
@sphaeromeria.bsky.social
🔹
@astridboehne.bsky.social
🔹
@cbenvenuto.bsky.social
Join us in Copenhagen for cutting-edge discussions on
#sex
#evolution
add a skeleton here at some point
0
17
10
reposted by
Zhou Qi
about 2 months ago
microchromosome regions always tend to be mainly located in the nuclear interior, while macrochromosome derived region near the nuclear periphery. That is the chromosome rearrangements are constrained by their ancestral 3D locations in the nucleus
0
2
1
reposted by
Nature
2 months ago
“There were some cells in there that were very messed up” In a technological tour-de-force, researchers have sequenced the whole genomes of more than 100 individual cells from one 74-year-old man
go.nature.com/4rvXH8Y
loading . . .
We are all mosaics: vast genetic diversity found between cells in a single person
Nature - Technical advances allow researchers to trace the genetic changes that occur over time.
https://go.nature.com/4rvXH8Y
2
85
28
reposted by
Nicky Bay
2 months ago
This is the Sunburst Candy Spider from Thailand. Not AI (sucks to have to declare this). Very real and had been on my wish list for a long time. The taxonomic placement is unclear, so we are leaving it at Cyrtarachninae.
21
659
174
reposted by
Petr Nguyen
2 months ago
Our whitepaper on
#ProjectPsyche
is online now in
@cp-trendsecolevo.bsky.social
! Psyche will generate reference genomes for all European butterflies. Just imagine what we’ll be able to learn from them. And if you can’t quite imagine it, have a look at the piece. :)
add a skeleton here at some point
1
7
3
reposted by
Jana Helsen
2 months ago
How do new centromeres evolve while staying compatible with the division machinery? Discover it in our new Nature paper! We show centromeres transition gradually via a mix of drift, selection, and sex, reaching new states that still work with the kinetochore. 👉
doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09779-1
8
184
92
reposted by
Dax Kellie
2 months ago
If you missed my talk but still want some tips for writing good code for scientists, my slides are here:
daxkellie.quarto.pub/a-guide-to-w...
All the links and references are there too in case you want to see more! 😀🧪🌏
#ESA2025
#rstats
#quartopub
1
87
34
reposted by
Dr. Wen-Juan Ma | 马文娟
3 months ago
Excited that our new collaborative work on Amazonian frogs with giant meiotic chains of 8–12 😲
#SexChromosomes
now is out in
@commsbio.nature.com
! 🐸🧬 Investigating the evolution of large meiotic rings of multiple X and Y chromosomes in two Leptodactylus species 🔗
www.nature.com/articles/s42...
0
17
6
reposted by
Ian Henderson
3 months ago
CRISPR-Cas–mediated heritable chromosome fusions in Arabidopsis | Science
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Very nice work from Holger Puchta & colleagues
loading . . .
CRISPR-Cas–mediated heritable chromosome fusions in Arabidopsis
The genome of Arabidopsis thaliana consists of 10 chromosomes. By inducing CRISPR-Cas–mediated breaks at subcentromeric and subtelomeric sequences, we fused entire chromosome arms, obtaining two eight...
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adz8505
1
48
20
reposted by
Genome Biology and Evolution
3 months ago
Grandchamp,
@drdomain.bsky.social
et al. publish a new Review on commonly used methods for de novo gene detection, address the limitations of nomenclature and detection methods, and establish a de novo gene annotation format to standardize reporting 🔗
doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evaf197
#genome
#evolution
1
14
7
reposted by
Aurora Ruiz-Herrera
3 months ago
🚨 New Paper Alert! Our latest perspective piece is out, and it’s one you won’t want to miss- 'The Genomic Kaleidoscope'
academic.oup.com/gbe/article/...
Co-lead by
@mbrasovives.bsky.social
@jrotwitguez.bsky.social
&
@diegoharta.bsky.social
📌 Check the full post here👇
add a skeleton here at some point
0
17
3
reposted by
Tony Gamble
3 months ago
New Charlesworth & Charlesworth just dropped!!! 🧪🧬 HJ Muller and the relationship between sex chromosome degeneration and the evolution of dosage compensation url:
academic.oup.com/gbe/article/...
loading . . .
HJ Muller and the relationship between sex chromosome degeneration and the evolution of dosage compensation
Abstract. A lack of recombination in the heterogametic sex between parts or all of newly evolving sex chromosomes results in the gradual accumulation of de
https://academic.oup.com/gbe/article/doi/10.1093/gbe/evaf195/8299869
0
12
8
reposted by
Luca Soldini
3 months ago
(1/9) Join us in Bern, Switzerland (8–11 Feb 2026) for our EMBO Workshop on Molecular Mechanisms of Selfish Elements and Strategies! Organized with Tanja Schwander, Laura Ross (
@laurarossevo.bsky.social
) and Axel Imhof.
meetings.embo.org/event/26-sel...
#EMBOselfishElements
#EMBOevents
loading . . .
Molecular mechanisms of selfish elements and strategies
Certain genes, chromosomes, organelles, or entire sets of chromosomes can bias their transmission to the next generation, propagating themselves at the expense of the rest of the genome. Referred to …
https://meetings.embo.org/event/26-selfish-elements
1
9
17
reposted by
Melissa Toups
4 months ago
New preprint!
add a skeleton here at some point
0
11
4
reposted by
Journal of Evolutionary Biology
4 months ago
Have you recently read about a particular field in depth? Perhaps you have just finished your PhD thesis?
@jevbio.bsky.social
is seeking Review Articles! Find out more about Reviews and Target Reviews at JEB here:
academic.oup.com/jeb/pages/re...
0
12
21
reposted by
Sissel Jentoft
4 months ago
New paper out where we demonstrate how pop gen parameters and scoring of structural variants (inversions) could be affected by the choice of reference genome (both in terms of both quality and relatedness).
@unioslo-cees.bsky.social
@biovitenskap.bsky.social
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
loading . . .
Reference genome bias in light of species-specific chromosomal reorganization and translocations - Genome Biology
Background Whole-genome sequencing efforts, have during the past decade, unveiled the central role of genomic rearrangements—such as chromosomal inversions—in evolutionary processes, including local a...
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13059-025-03761-w?utm_source=rct_congratemailt&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=oa_20251015&utm_content=10.1186/s13059-025-03761-w
1
21
9
reposted by
Aurora Ruiz-Herrera
4 months ago
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
loading . . .
Sperm sequencing reveals extensive positive selection in the male germline - Nature
A combination of whole-genome NanoSeq with deep whole-exome and targeted NanoSeq is used to accurately characterize mutation rates and genes under positive selection in sperm cells.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09448-3
0
3
1
reposted by
José Cerca
4 months ago
📌 New publication out: Reference genome bias in light of species-specific chromosomal reorganization and translocations TL;DR - We show that the choice of reference genome biases the detection of structural variants and popgen stats. Navigate carefully - 🛳️ 😬
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
loading . . .
Reference genome bias in light of species-specific chromosomal reorganization and translocations - Genome Biology
Background Whole-genome sequencing efforts, have during the past decade, unveiled the central role of genomic rearrangements—such as chromosomal inversions—in evolutionary processes, including local a...
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13059-025-03761-w
0
30
9
reposted by
Guillaume Bourque
4 months ago
This suggest that telomere maintenance in sperm is more robust than in oocytes and impacts the inherited telomeres. Full paper is below. Curious to know what you think as this is a new area for us!
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
loading . . .
Long-read sequencing reveals telomere inheritance patterns from human trios
Telomeres are essential for maintaining genomic integrity and are associated with cellular aging and disease, yet the factors influencing their inheritance across generations remain poorly understood....
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.10.07.680721v1
0
5
3
reposted by
Rachel Moran
4 months ago
When sex chromosomes turnover, they can reset the rules of genomic conflict. New preprint exploring how turnover reshapes barriers to gene flow through an “escape-hatch” model for mitonuclear conflict. Any feedback would be welcome!
ecoevorxiv.org/repository/v...
loading . . .
Resetting the rules: Sex chromosome turnover as an escape hatch for mitonuclear conflict
https://ecoevorxiv.org/repository/view/10451/
1
9
9
reposted by
Kristen Behrens, PhD
4 months ago
New paper alert! Not yet formatted, but check it out to see what we found regarding sex chromosomes in tilapia and other outgroup cichlid species.
academic.oup.com/gbe/advance-...
loading . . .
Before the East African radiation: sex chromosome systems in basal haplotilapiine cichlids
Abstract. Cichlid fishes have undergone an extraordinary diversification in East Africa. They also have a high rate of sex chromosome turnover. This clade
https://academic.oup.com/gbe/advance-article/doi/10.1093/gbe/evaf191/8277969?utm_source=advanceaccess&utm_campaign=gbe&utm_medium=email
1
4
6
reposted by
Reichard Lab
4 months ago
Symposium on Fish Mating Systems (Czechia, 21-23 Jan 2026): REGISTRATION NOW OPEN at
fish.ivb.cz/registration/
Plenary talks by Suzanne Alonzo, John Fitzpatrick, and Chiara Benvenuto.
0
3
2
reposted by
Nature Reviews Genetics
4 months ago
ICYMI: New online! Advances in haplotype phasing and genotype imputation
loading . . .
Advances in haplotype phasing and genotype imputation
Nature Reviews Genetics, Published online: 24 September 2025; doi:10.1038/s41576-025-00895-2Haplotype phasing and genotype imputation improve genomic analyses by determining which variants occur together on a chromosome and inferring unobserved varants, respectively. In this Review, Sun and Li describe how tools for haplotype phasing and genotype imputation have evolved to accommodate increasingly larger genomic datasets and new sequencing technologies.
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41576-025-00895-2?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=bluesky
0
3
1
reposted by
Jukka-Pekka Verta
4 months ago
Surprise 🤗 So many uncharacterized transcripts in Atlantic salmon, including super interesting long non-coding RNAs! Proud to share the 1st publication of Xindi Huang:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
With
@fishcongen.bsky.social
🖥️🧬🦑
loading . . .
A comprehensive analysis of Atlantic salmon gonad and pituitary transcriptomes identifies novel players in sexual maturation - BMC Genomics
Sexual maturation is a key developmental process important for reproductive success. Understanding the molecular mechanisms behind variation in sexual maturation can provide insights into reproductive biology and how life history variation is encoded in the genome. Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) has become an excellent sexual maturation research model due to its diversity of life history strategies and its ecological and economic importance. A major challenge has been the lack of a comprehensive transcriptional investigation of reproductive tissues that captures the dynamic transcriptional changes across individuals, tissues, and developmental stages. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) also play crucial roles in maturation, yet their functions in salmon maturation remain underexplored. In this study, we sequenced 98 transcriptomes and found substantial transcriptomic complexity in the gonad and pituitary tissues of Atlantic salmon. We identified transcripts corresponding to 2,364 putative newly characterized protein-coding genes and 4,421 putative long intergenic non-coding RNAs (lincRNAs), many with tissue-specific expression. Gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA) revealed tissue-specific gene network modules, linked to GO terms including Wnt signaling in immature testis, lipid metabolism, and cilia assembly in mature testis, ribosome biogenesis and DNA repair in the ovary, and hormone activity in pituitary. We identified new copies of known genes, such as gh1, pou3f2, and ier5 associated with the regulation of gonadal and pituitary functions. Some lncRNAs and their nearest genes showed correlated expression within modules, suggesting potential regulatory roles. Candidate lincRNAs indicated cis-acting regulatory potential on genes like tnfrsf11b and fgl1, which are implicated in immune privilege during gonadal development and sperm quality control. Our study provides a comprehensive transcriptomic analysis of Atlantic salmon gonad and pituitary tissues, significantly improving the functional annotation of the Atlantic salmon genome. These findings reveal key regulatory pathways and novel molecular players involved in sexual maturation, particularly in the testis. Importantly, our study highlights the regulatory potential of lncRNAs in reproductive biology and maturation age variation, advancing our understanding of the molecular mechanisms governing sexual maturation. They further unlock future gene expression analyses and regulatory network reconstruction for dissecting the roles of lncRNAs in Atlantic salmon life history variation.
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12864-025-11954-7?utm_source=rct_congratemailt&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=oa_20250926&utm_content=10.1186%2Fs12864-025-11954-7
0
16
9
reposted by
Braasch Lab @ Michigan State University
4 months ago
Hello
#fish
🐟 🐠 researchers and PIs of tomorrow! We would be excited to sponsor you for an Ecology, Evolution and Behavior (EEB) Presidential
#Postdoc
Fellowship application
@michiganstateu.bsky.social
. Application deadline is Nov 10, so get in touch soom!
#EndlessFishMostBeautiful
add a skeleton here at some point
0
27
21
reposted by
Nature
5 months ago
Nature research paper: Diverging fish biodiversity trends in cold and warm rivers and streams
go.nature.com/42JFObR
loading . . .
Diverging fish biodiversity trends in cold and warm rivers and streams - Nature
In the past three decades, fish abundance, richness and uniqueness have diverged across cold and warm streams, and the effects on native fish communities of stream warming and increases in introduced fishes have magnified each other.
https://go.nature.com/42JFObR
0
21
10
reposted by
School of Biological Sciences, Monash @MonashBiol
6 months ago
No single process explains all features of sex chromosome evolution but Andrea Mrnjavac and co-authors have shown that an extension of Mullers sheltering hypothesis is simple and compatible with several features of sex chromosome evolution
academic.oup.com/mbe/advance-...
loading . . .
An extension of Muller’s sheltering hypothesis for the evolution of sex chromosome gene content
Abstract. The first influential hypothesis for sex chromosome evolution was proposed in 1914 by H. J. Muller, who argued that once recombination was suppre
https://academic.oup.com/mbe/advance-article/doi/10.1093/molbev/msaf177/8213983
0
5
4
reposted by
Molecular Biology and Evolution
5 months ago
Heitzmann et al. compared brain transcriptomes of four sexual genotypes of the African pygmy mouse, showing how sex and neo-sex chromosomes impacted transcriptomes to reflect their transmission mode, evolutionary trajectories, and genomic conflicts. 🔗
doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msaf208
#evobio
#molbio
0
12
7
reposted by
Laura K Hayward
6 months ago
Why do males and females often differ in traits? The expected answer: selection. But our new paper in GENETICS shows that genetic drift alone can generate sexual dimorphism — even when male & female optima are the same
4
111
50
reposted by
David Lowry
5 months ago
Beyond supergenes: the diverse roles of inversions in trait evolution
www.cell.com/trends/ecolo...
loading . . .
Beyond supergenes: the diverse roles of inversions in trait evolution
Chromosomal inversions are ubiquitous across the Tree of Life, with genome-wide studies revealing a bias toward smaller inversions, yet research has disproportionately focused on large, supergene-like...
https://www.cell.com/trends/ecology-evolution/fulltext/S0169-5347(25)00225-3
0
18
6
reposted by
Rachel Moran
5 months ago
First pop gen paper from our lab! We find repeated evolutionary turn over of sex chromosomes in darters contributes to reproductive isolation. Turnover may be an escape hatch to resolve mitonuclear conflict & neo sex chromosomes evolved via a rare recessive mutation.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
2
43
19
reposted by
Terezie Mandakova
8 months ago
The 6th B chromosome conference in Olomouc 🇨🇿 in 2026
#6BCC
0
2
1
reposted by
Nature
5 months ago
A map of DNA methylation changes in human organs could help researchers to discover more targets for anti-ageing therapies.
go.nature.com/4nazaTV
loading . . .
How ageing changes our genes — huge epigenetic atlas gives clearest picture yet
A map of DNA methylation changes in human organs could help researchers to discover more targets for anti-ageing therapies.
https://go.nature.com/4nazaTV
1
52
9
reposted by
Lucia Campos
5 months ago
Interested in repetitive DNA? We are organising a free repetitive DNA workshop this Oct 2nd at the Botanical Institute in Barcelona! Registration is open until September 7th :)
bit.ly/repetitiveDN...
2
7
10
reposted by
KamilSJaron.bsky.social
6 months ago
We had productive 2 days of defining some hard bits of the database as well as figuring out the next steps forward. We will send around notes in the upcoming days. ToS folks are the best, thank you all for taking part and
@aruizherrera.bsky.social
and
@sphaeromeria.bsky.social
for organising!
add a skeleton here at some point
0
16
5
reposted by
Yann Guiguen
6 months ago
Was such a nice meeting 😎
0
1
1
reposted by
Martin Johnsson
6 months ago
Beatriz Vicoso: Artemia brine shrimp have complete dosage compensation of their Z chromosome. She proposes that they're using a system similar to MSL for Drosophila X. Cool contrast to e.g. birds, whose ZW are doing something different entirely.
academic.oup.com/mbe/article/...
#eseb2025
loading . . .
Chromatin Landscape Is Associated With Sex-Biased Expression and Drosophila-Like Dosage Compensation of the Z Chromosome in Artemia franciscana
Abstract. The males and females of the brine shrimp Artemia franciscana are highly dimorphic, and this dimorphism is associated with substantial sex-biased
https://academic.oup.com/mbe/article/42/5/msaf085/8109105
0
8
7
reposted by
Aurora Ruiz-Herrera
6 months ago
🎉 Another exciting contribution from our lab this summer! 🧬 Nearly complete, gapless genome of the sex-changing central bearded dragon (Pogona vitticeps) shed new light on the mystery of reptile sex determination. Proud to be part of this collaborative effort!
academic.oup.com/gigascience/...
loading . . .
A near telomere-to-telomere phased genome assembly and annotation for the Australian central bearded dragon Pogona vitticeps
AbstractBackground. The central bearded dragon (Pogona vitticeps) is widely distributed in central eastern Australia and adapts readily to captivity. Among
https://academic.oup.com/gigascience/article/doi/10.1093/gigascience/giaf085/8237437?login=false
0
63
21
Load more
feeds!
log in