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"Rewiring" at Non-Coding Genome Regions Important for Adaptation


 
Sampling cichlid fish tissues for genome and transcriptome sequencing in Tanzania and Zanzibar Archipelago. Tilapia and haplochromine cichlid fish species were sampled for associated studies on characterising genomic signatures of domestication and adaptation. Credit: Dr Graham Etherington and Dr Tarang Mehta, Earlham Institue (EI).
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BMC Genome Biology, an Earlham Institute study, with collaborators at the University of East Anglia (UEA) and Wisconsin Institute for Discovery, shows that ‘genetic rewiring’ at non-coding regions - rather than mutations to protein-coding regions of genes - may play an important role in how cichlid fish are able to rapidly adapt to fill a staggeringly wide range of environmental niches in the East African Rift lakes. ....

United States , Lake Victoria , Tarang Mehta , Wisconsin Institute For Discovery , University Of East Anglia , Earlham Institute , Ei Haerty Group , East Anglia , Wisconsin Institute , East African Rift , Galapagos Islands , Lake Malawi , Great Lakes , East Africa , East African , Great Rift Lakes , Lake Tanganyika , South America , Federica Di Palma , Professorial Fellow , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஏரி விக்டோரியா , தரங் மேத்தா , விஸ்கான்சின் நிறுவனம் க்கு கண்டுபிடிப்பு , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் கிழக்கு ஆங்கிலியா , ஏர்ல்தாம் நிறுவனம் ,

Genetic rewiring behind spectacular evolutionary explosion in East Africa


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IMAGE: Sampling cichlid fish tissues for genome and transcriptome sequencing in Tanzania and Zanzibar Archipelago. Tilapia and haplochromine cichlid fish species were sampled for associated studies on characterising genomic signatures of.
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Credit: Dr Graham Etherington and Dr Tarang Mehta, Earlham Institue (EI)
Genetic rewiring could have driven an evolutionary explosion in the shapes, sizes and adaptations of cichlid fish, in East Africa s answer to Darwin s Galapagos finches.
Published in
BMC Genome Biology, an Earlham Institute (EI) study, with collaborators at the University of East Anglia (UEA) and Wisconsin Institute for Discovery, shows that genetic rewiring at non-coding regions - rather than mutations to protein-coding regions of genes - may play an important role in how cichlid fish are able to rapidly adapt to fill a staggeringly wide range of environmental niches in the East African Rift lakes. ....

United States , Lake Victoria , Tarang Mehta , Wisconsin Institute For Discovery , University Of East Anglia , Earlham Institute , Ei Haerty Group , East Africa , East Anglia , Wisconsin Institute , East African Rift , Galapagos Islands , Lake Malawi , Great Lakes , East African , Great Rift Lakes , Lake Tanganyika , South America , Federica Di Palma , Professorial Fellow , Fisheries Aquaculture , Ecology Environment , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஏரி விக்டோரியா , தரங் மேத்தா , விஸ்கான்சின் நிறுவனம் க்கு கண்டுபிடிப்பு ,