Victor A. Albert
@plantgenomes.bsky.social
670 followers 250 following 59 posts
Professor, University at Buffalo | plant genomes, polyploidy, organismal radiations, phylo/population genomics, carnivorous plants, holocentric chromosomes, evolution of biosynthetic gene clusters; https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=dLniyH0AAAAJ&
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plantgenomes.bsky.social
Sea sandwort (Honckenya peploides) genome update - first Nanopore flow cell looking pretty good. Dormant shoots were collected from under beach sand in Denmark. A salt tolerant species that was the first plant to appear on the volcanic island Surtsey (Iceland), which erupted out of the sea in 1963.
plantgenomes.bsky.social
See Derek Taylor’s and my eLetter in #Science critiquing the #proteomic evidence ostensibly supporting the Penghu 1 mandible as a #Denisovan - at the end of www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
plantgenomes.bsky.social
Our paper on a chromosome-level genome of the carnivorous #butterwort plant #Pinguicula gigantea and other species is now published on bioRxiv ! Exciting to get this project close to done 😀 See the preprint here: www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
stairwaytokevin.bsky.social
Cool new work! Some lineages experiencing ancient whole-genome duplications seem to hold on to their duplicate genes for a really long time & keep accumulating homoeologous exchange events! Runs counter to early models where gene loss is expected to be rapid post-WGD academic.oup.com/gbe/advance-...
A class of allopolyploidy showing high duplicate retention and continued homoeologous exchanges
Abstract. We describe four ancient polyploidy events where the descendant taxa retain many more duplicated gene copies than has been seen in other paleopol
academic.oup.com
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
johnhawks.net
Looking at new criticism and response of an argument for selection in ancient DNA data, I reflected on the huge extent that immunity now matters in our understanding of human evolution.

johnhawks.net/weblog/anoth...
Another look at selection and the Black Death
An exchange of comments probes the story of the EPAS2 gene, balancing selection, and resistance to Yersinia pestis.
johnhawks.net
plantgenomes.bsky.social
Sea sandwort (Honckenya peploides) genome update - first Nanopore flow cell looking pretty good. Dormant shoots were collected from under beach sand in Denmark. A salt tolerant species that was the first plant to appear on the volcanic island Surtsey (Iceland), which erupted out of the sea in 1963.
plantgenomes.bsky.social
FYI, we run PSMCs against self-Masurca assemblies of Illumina reads, as well as against our reference genome. Clermontia spp. are rather poorly divergent which makes the reference genome approach OK, so long as coverage OK. Mapping Cyanea, Delissea and Brighamia to Clermontia not advisable ;)
plantgenomes.bsky.social
Will be happy to talk shop w you about other findings we have .. trees, PCAs, F3 analyses, NeighborNet (all of these just complementary w each other and ADMIXTURE) .. but also PSMCs
plantgenomes.bsky.social
Here’s the other - needs some manual adjustments tho. This work done by expert PhD student Michaela Richter 😀
plantgenomes.bsky.social
Here’s one haplotype .. 14 chrs
plantgenomes.bsky.social
Still working on it! We just generated two new assemblies - phased haplotypes - using HifiAsm with the ONT flag plus our HiC reads. Such a big step means we need to re-call our SNPs .. on both haplotypes, independently
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
nature.com
Nature @nature.com · Feb 12
Giant ground sloths? Armadillos?

Who - or what - cut these ancient sandstone tunnels in Brazil?

Read the full story: www.nature.com/articles/d41...
A man wearing a hard hat shines a torch at the inner wall of a sandstone tunnel. The tunnel is covered in scratches Three people face away from the camera, shining torches on the inside of tunnel walls. One of the people points towards something on the wall Two people crouch inside a sandstone tunnel, one of them points towards the inner wall. They are both wearing hard hats. A photograph taken from the inside of the mouth of a tunnel. Outside the tunnel, we see green foliage.
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
andrewlhipp.bsky.social
Here, a celebration of Apocynaceae (dogbanes, milkweeds, swallow-worts etc.) fruits and flowers tucked into a phylogenetic study. Remarkable diversity.

www.frontiersin.org/journals/eco...
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
johnhawks.net
The discovery that Africa is the birthplace of human evolution: Marking 100 years since Australopithecus africanus transformed our understanding.

www.nature.com/articles/d44...
The discovery that Africa is the birthplace of human evolution
Marking 100 years since Australopithecus Africanus transformed our understanding.
www.nature.com
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
3rdreviewer.bsky.social
New paper led by @glom.bsky.social!

"Unprecedented female female bias in the aye-aye, a highly unusual lemur from Madagascar"

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journals.plos.org/plosbiology/...
Photo of an aye-aye
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
plosbiology.org
Aye-ayes are clearly unusual, but @glom.bsky.social @3rdreviewer.bsky.social &co show that they also have an unusual pattern of #MutationBias; older females transmit more mutations than males. This is a first for mammals, raising questions about other #lemurs 🧪 @plosbiology.org plos.io/40SR4kj
Top: A picture of the aye-aye named Elphaba. Image credit: David Haring, Duke Lemur Center. Bottom: Pedigree structure of the aye-ayes used in this study. The 18 individuals sequenced in this study are shown: males as squares and females as circles. Two individuals (IDs 100937 and 100935) appear multiple places in the pedigree, each time connected by a dashed line. Elphaba is at the bottom right.
Reposted by Victor A. Albert
annbot.bsky.social
🎉🆕📰🎉: Phylogenomic analysis of target enrichment and transcriptome data uncovers rapid radiation and extensive hybridization in the slipper orchid genus Cypripedium
doi.org
plantgenomes.bsky.social
The Droseraceae issue arises if one wants a monophyletic Drosera
plantgenomes.bsky.social
The NeighborNet doesn’t help much to discern admixture vs other sources of homoplasy; it’s a summary of all splits that may imply any source incongruence. It does reflect the admixture graph in this case. Also in the Stachys/Hawaiian mint case I posted