dataService

您的位置: 首页 > 数据服务 > 数据列表页

筛选

共检索到1条 ,权限内显示50条;

Data from: Life history evolution and cellular mechanisms associated with increased size in high-altitude Drosophila
负责人:
关键词:
Endocycle;Cell size;drosophila melanogaster;Wing Size;Ethiopia
DOI:
doi:10.5061/dryad.mp8rt
摘要:
Understanding the physiological and genetic basis of growth and body size variation has wide-ranging implications, from cancer and metabolic disease to the genetics of complex traits. We examined the evolution of body and wing size in high-altitude Drosophila melanogaster from Ethiopia, flies with larger size than any previously known population. Specifically, we sought to identify life history characteristics and cellular mechanisms that may have facilitated size evolution. We found that the large-bodied Ethiopian flies laid significantly fewer but larger eggs relative to lowland, smaller-bodied Zambian flies. The highland flies were found to achieve larger size in a similar developmental period, potentially aided by a reproductive strategy favoring greater provisioning of fewer offspring. At the cellular level, cell proliferation was a strong contributor to wing size evolution, but both thorax and wing size increases involved important changes in cell size. Nuclear size measurements were consistent with elevated somatic ploidy as an important mechanism of body size evolution. We discuss the significance of these results for the genetic basis of evolutionary changes in body and wing size in Ethiopian D. melanogaster.

首页上一页1下一页尾页

意 见 箱

匿名:登录

个人用户登录

找回密码

第三方账号登录

忘记密码

个人用户注册

必须为有效邮箱
6~16位数字与字母组合
6~16位数字与字母组合
请输入正确的手机号码

信息补充