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Synteny and Evolution
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John H. Renwick first coined the term “synteny” in 1971, which refers to the genes present on the same chromosomes, even if they are not genetically linked. The species with common ancestry tend to show conserved syntenic regions. Therefore, the concept of synteny is nowadays used to describe the evolutionary relationship between species.
Around 80 million years ago, the human and mice lineages diverged from the common ancestor. During the course of evolution, the ancestral...
Around 80 million years ago, the human and mice lineages diverged from the common ancestor. During the course of evolution, the ancestral...
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Phylogeny
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Phylogeny is concerned with the evolutionary diversification of organisms or groups of organisms. A group of organisms with a name is called a taxon (singular). Taxa (plural) can span different levels of the evolutionary hierarchy. For instance, the group containing all birds is a taxon (comprising the class Aves), and the group of all species of daisies (the genus Bellis) is a taxon. Phylogenies can likewise include just one genus (i.e., depict species relationships) or span an entire kingdom.
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Convergent Evolution
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Evolution shapes the features of organisms over time, ensuring that they are suited for the environments in which they live. Sometimes, selection pressure leads to the rise of similar but unrelated adaptations in organisms with no recent common ancestors, a process known as convergent evolution.
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Evolutionary Relationships through Genome Comparisons
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Genome comparison is one of the excellent ways to interpret the evolutionary relationships between organisms. The basic principle of genome comparison is that if two species share a common feature, it is likely encoded by the DNA sequence conserved between both species. The advent of genome sequencing technologies in the late 20th century enabled scientists to understand the concept of conservation of domains between species and helped them to deduce evolutionary relationships across diverse...
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The Law of Sines
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Solving oblique triangles—those without right angles—relies on specific trigonometric relationships, most notably the Law of Sines. This is because, unlike right triangles, where the Pythagorean theorem can be used to relate side lengths, oblique triangles lack a 90-degree angle and therefore require a different approach. The Pythagorean theorem is only valid for right-angled triangles, making it unsuitable for solving non-right triangles. In such cases, the Law of Sines becomes...
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Phylogenetic Trees
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Phylogenetic trees come in many forms. It matters in which sequence the organisms are arranged from the bottom to the top of the tree, but the branches can rotate at their nodes without altering the information. The lines connecting individual nodes can be straight, angled, or even curved.
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Population-scale Y chromosome assemblies reveal recurrent remodeling within constrained architectures.
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology·2026
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Reverse Dissection and DiceCT Reveal Otherwise Hidden Data in the Evolution of the Primate Face
Published on: January 7, 2019
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LINEs and SINEs of primate evolution
Miriam K Konkel1, Jerilyn A Walker1, Mark A Batzer1
1Department of Biological Sciences, Louisiana State University, 202 Life Sciences Bldg., Baton Rouge, LA 70803, USA.
Evolutionary Anthropology
|August 23, 2014
Summary
No abstract available in PubMed .

