Nipam Patel (MBL) 2: The Role of Ubx in the Development of Crustacean Body Plan

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Science Communication Lab

Science Communication Lab

Күн бұрын

www.ibiology.org/development-...
Nipam Patel explains the effects of Hox gene deletions and how these phenotypes help us understand the manner in which Hox genes act to control the insect body plan.
Homeotic (Hox) genes are transcription factors that dictate the development and compartmentalization (regionalization) of body parts in animals along the anterior-posterior (head to tail) axis. Using various insects and crustaceans, Dr. Nipam Patel studies how alterations in the expression of Hox genes could explain the evolution of specialized body parts in arthropods. Patel describes the spatially restricted patterns of Hox gene expression, explains the effects of Hox gene deletions, and how these phenotypes help us understand the manner in which Hox genes act to control the insect body plan. Taking a closer look at the pattern of the Hox gene Ultrabithorax (Ubx) in different insects, Patel summarizes the discovery that what drives changes in the number of wings during insect evolution is the not changes in the expression pattern of Ubx, but the regulation of its downstream gene targets
In the second lecture, Patel describes the work of his lab to expand the studies of Hox gene function to other arthropods. Patel describes the development of specialized body parts in crustaceans, and describes the transition between feeding to locomotor appendages. Using the beach hopper, Parhyale, his laboratory, in collaboration with the laboratory of Michalis Averof, showed that Ubx controls the boundary and transition between feeding and locomotor appendages during development.
In his third talk, Patel explores the function of additional Hox genes in the development of crustacean body plans. Using CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing, his laboratory has characterized the expression and function of six of the nine Hox genes in Parhyale, and describes the combinatorial role of Ubx, abdA, and AbdB in the development of specialized appendages in this species, and how changes in the regulation of abdA is responsible for several morphological transitions during crustacean evolution.
Speaker Biography:
Nipam Patel is the Director of the Marine Biological Lab (Woods Hole) and a Professor at the University of Chicago. He obtained his bachelor’s degree in Biology from Princeton University in 1984, and completed his doctoral degree in Biological Sciences at Stanford University in 1990. His interest towards developmental biology started when he was studying the development of chicks in high school. Today, his laboratory studies the genes involved in the evolution and development of segmentation and regionalization of the body plan. Specifically, he is interested in the role of homeotic (Hox) genes in generating body plan diversification in crustaceans, and the development of nanostructures that create structural colors in butterflies.
Patel was a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator from 2003 to 2010, and is an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2008). Learn more about Patel’s research at his lab website:
www.patellab.net/

Пікірлер: 11
@ScorpioXVirgo
@ScorpioXVirgo 4 жыл бұрын
Very useful! Easy to follow along and teaches a lot
@GiacomoMilazzo
@GiacomoMilazzo 3 жыл бұрын
A must read: "Endless Forms Most Beautiful: The New Science of Evo Devo" by Sean B. Carrol (Prof. Nipam Patel is cited too)
@nonexistence5135
@nonexistence5135 5 жыл бұрын
23:28 The absolute state of California: “there was an earthquake and an embryo rolled over. This is a disaster!”
@patldennis
@patldennis 3 жыл бұрын
Earthquakes are the reason bacterial conjugation wasn't discovered in CA.
@Dr_Sri_Harsha_Guthikonda
@Dr_Sri_Harsha_Guthikonda Жыл бұрын
haha!
@josecanyousee4125
@josecanyousee4125 5 жыл бұрын
Can anyone explain the viable blood vessels found in the "30 million" year old dinosaur bones?
@nonexistence5135
@nonexistence5135 5 жыл бұрын
I do not get the purpose of this comment.
@76rjackson
@76rjackson 5 жыл бұрын
Santa. In the beginning there was void and emptiness. And Santa said, let it snow, let it snow, let it snow! Ho ho ho!
@richardwu9013
@richardwu9013 4 жыл бұрын
Dinosaurs did not exist 30 million years ago. They all died out 65 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous time period. You are probably referring to preserved soft tissue. It is very rare for 65 million year old fossils to have intact soft tissue fossils, because in the process of making fossils, soft tissue is the first tissue to degrade and disappear. "Viable" to me means still living. Nothing is alive as a fossil. If you would like to point out to me "30 million year old" zombies, do so, and bring your source. Do not bring politics into this. However I may predict a creation argument coming, I don't want to dispute that, just disputing your evidence.
@patldennis
@patldennis 4 жыл бұрын
Schweitzer et al reported extraction of pliable organic material that was vessel like. Not confirned if they were actual blood vessels. Moreover, the tissue was fossilized/embedded in a rock matrix that still needed to be dissolved. Finally she was able to identify protein epitopes in the non avian dino sample with an antibody that was formulated to recognize ostrich peptides
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