journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081928/origin-of-new-emergent-coronavirus-and-candida-fungal-diseases-terrestrial-or-cosmic
#21
REVIEW
Edward J Steele, Reginald M Gorczynski, Robyn A Lindley, Gensuke Tokoro, Robert Temple, N Chandra Wickramasinghe
The origins and global spread of two recent, yet quite different, pandemic diseases is discussed and reviewed in depth: Candida auris, a eukaryotic fungal disease, and COVID-19 (SARS-CoV-2), a positive strand RNA viral respiratory disease. Both these diseases display highly distinctive patterns of sudden emergence and global spread, which are not easy to understand by conventional epidemiological analysis based on simple infection-driven human- to-human spread of an infectious disease (assumed to jump suddenly and thus genetically, from an animal reservoir)...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081927/the-mutagenic-source-and-power-of-our-own-evolution
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Robyn A Lindley
This chapter addresses the molecular mechanism and source of the numerous mutagenic changes that genomes, particularly mammalian genomes, can undergo during normal development and in diseased states. The central role of pathogen and other disease-inducing innate immunity via the action of the cytosine (AID/APOBEC) and adenosine (ADAR) deaminases is reviewed in some depth. The general and universal nature of deaminase-mediated mutagenesis is an important key to understanding cosmic genetic evolutionary processes...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081926/cometary-panspermia-and-origin-of-life
#23
REVIEW
N Chandra Wickramasinghe, Dayal T Wickramasinghe, Edward J Steele
A range of astronomical observations are shown to be in accord with the theory of cometary panspermia. This theory posits that comets harbor a viable biological component in the form of bacteria and viruses that led to origin and evolution of life on Earth. The data includes (1) infrared, visual and ultraviolet spectra of interstellar dust, (2) infrared spectra of the dust released from comet Halley in 1986, (3) infrared spectra of comet Hale-Bopp in 1997, (4) near and mid-infrared spectra of comet Tempel I in 2005, (5) the discovery of an amino acid and degradation products attributable to biology in the material recovered from the Stardust Mission in 2009, (6) jets from comet Lovejoy showing both a sugar and Ethyl alcohol and finally, (7) a diverse set of data that has emerged from the Rosetta mission...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081925/the-sociology-of-science-and-generality-of-the-dna-rna-protein-paradigm-throughout-the-cosmos
#24
REVIEW
N Chandra Wickramasinghe, Edward J Steele, Brig Klyce, Gensuke Tokoro, Dayal T Wickramasinghe
The theory of cometary panspermia argues that life cannot have originated on Earth in the time available. It must have an ultimate, but still undiscovered cosmological source. The origin of life remains an open question. Life on Earth was introduced by impacting comets, and its further evolution was driven by the subsequent acquisition of cosmically derived genes. Explicit predictions of this theory stating how the acquisition of new genes drives evolution, are compared with recent developments in relation to horizontal gene transfer, and the role of retroviruses in evolution...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081924/the-efficient-lamarckian-spread-of-life-in-the-cosmos
#25
REVIEW
Edward J Steele, Reginald M Gorczynski, Robyn A Lindley, Yongsheng Liu, Robert Temple, Gensuke Tokoro, Dayal T Wickramasinghe, N Chandra Wickramasinghe
In this Chapter we discuss the various mechanisms that are available for the possible transfer of cosmic microbial living systems from one cosmic habitat to another. With the 100 or so habitable planets that are now known to exist in our galaxy alone transfers of cometary dust carrying life including fragments of icy planetoids/asteroids would be expected to occur on a routine basis. It is thus easy to view the galaxy as a single connected "biosphere" of which our planet Earth is a minor component. The Hoyle-Wickramasinghe Panspermia paradigm provides a cogent biological rationale for the actual widespread existence of Lamarckian modes of inheritance in terrestrial systems (which we review here)...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081923/experiments-to-prove-continuing-microbial-ingress-from-space-to-earth
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
N Chandra Wickramasinghe, Edward J Steele, Robert Temple, Gensuke Tokoro, Willam A Smith, Brig Klyce, Dayal T Wickramasinghe, Dhammika Magana Arachchi
A wide range of evidence for pointing to our cosmic origins is close to the point of being overwhelming. Yet the long-entrenched paradigm of Earth-centered biology appears to prevail in scientific culture. A matter of crucial importance is to carry out a decisive experiment that is long overdue-establishing empirically beyond any doubt that extraterrestrial microbiota reaches the surface of the Earth at the present day. Such an experiment may of course happen naturally by the appearance of pandemics of new disease as discussed in an earlier chapter...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081922/microbial-transfers-from-venus-to-earth
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
N Chandra Wickramasinghe, Predrag Slijepcevic
The possibility that the clouds of Venus are habitats for microorganisms has been discussed for several decades. Over the past two decades evidence to support this point of view has grown with new data from space probes and space exploration. In this article we argue that microorganisms are likely to be widely present in the clouds of Venus, and may under certain conditions have a ready route to Earth. Such transfers could occur by the action of the solar wind that leads to expulsion of parts of the atmosphere laden with microorganisms...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081921/is-the-2019-novel-coronavirus-related-to-a-spike-of-cosmic-rays
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
N Chandra Wickramasinghe
WHO's pronouncement of the 2019 novel coronavirus outbreak as a pandemic disease came months after we published a warning that the present deepest minimum of the sunspot cycle would be likely to facilitate the onset of a viral pandemic. During a deep sunspot minimum (deepest in 100 years) such as we are now witnessing, two space related phenomena could have an effect on the disposition of viral disease and potential pandemics. With the weakening of the magnetic field in the Earth's vicinity, there would be a high flux of mutagenic cosmic rays...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081920/an-internet-of-microbes-straddling-the-cosmos
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Predrag Slijepcevic, N Chandra Wickramasinghe
Exchanges of information analogous to a global internet have been known to take place between biological systems on the Earth ranging from bacteria and viruses to plants and animals. We argue that this process can be extended to include a cosmic biosphere within which evolution would seem to be intimately interlinked across astronomical, perhaps cosmological distance scales. Comets and interstellar dust, argued to have a bacterial/viral component, could be involved in establishing these links.
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081919/a-cosmic-virosphere
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Predrag Slijepcevic, N Chandra Wickramasinghe
The concept of a cosmic virosphere that serves as the repository of information for all life on Earth and throughout the Universe is discussed. Recent studies in geology, astronomy and biology point to an intimate connection between the evolution of life and a cosmic virosphere/biosphere.
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33081918/introduction-panspermia-2020
#31
Edward J Steele
This current volume is, in many ways, a 2020 update to the important 1999-2000 compendium by Sir Fred Hoyle and Professor N. Chandra Wickramasinghe's "Astronomical Origins of life: Steps towards Panspermia." The emerging new paradigm of biology that connects life on Earth with the wider cosmos is covered in considerable depth showing that terrestrial biological evolution is best understood as a cosmically derived habitat and an interconnected genetic system. The various chapters here discuss all aspects of this interconnectedness, particularly relevant now in this time of the coronavirus pandemic (COVID-19) as the human race reacts to the many microbes and viral pathogens that arrive regularly from space...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32560792/preface
#32
EDITORIAL
Dhavendra Kumar
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32560791/fmrp-ribonucleoprotein-complexes-and-rna-homeostasis
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gabriela Aparecida Marcondes Suardi, Luciana Amaral Haddad
The Fragile Mental Retardation 1 gene (FMR1), at Xq27.3, encodes the fragile mental retardation protein (FMRP), and displays in its 5'-untranslated region a series of polymorphic CGG triplet repeats that may undergo dynamic mutation. Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is the leading cause of inherited intellectual disability among men, and is most frequently due to FMR1 full mutation and consequent transcription repression. FMR1 premutations may associate with at least two other clinical conditions, named fragile X-associated primary ovarian insufficiency (FXPOI) and tremor and ataxia syndrome (FXTAS)...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32560790/role-of-rna-interacting-proteins-in-modulating-plant-microbe-interactions
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Saurabh Pandey, Namisha Sharma, Manoj Prasad
Successful infection of a pathogen in its host plant depends on the complex molecular interplay between host and the invading microbe. Plant-microbe interactions are primarily governed by signal interchange amid both the organisms. Effective passage of the pathogen into the plant system requires the circumvention of signal detection mechanisms and subsequent immune responses. As a mechanism to counteract defense response, pathogens deploy several RNA-interacting proteins (RIPs) or RNA molecules which interrupt the host transcriptional as well as signaling pathways, leading to successful infection and symptom development...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32560789/application-of-yeast-to-studying-amyloid-and-prion-diseases
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yury O Chernoff, Anastasia V Grizel, Aleksandr A Rubel, Andrew A Zelinsky, Pavithra Chandramowlishwaran, Tatiana A Chernova
Amyloids are fibrous cross-β protein aggregates that are capable of proliferation via nucleated polymerization. Amyloid conformation likely represents an ancient protein fold and is linked to various biological or pathological manifestations. Self-perpetuating amyloid-based protein conformers provide a molecular basis for transmissible (infectious or heritable) protein isoforms, termed prions. Amyloids and prions, as well as other types of misfolded aggregated proteins are associated with a variety of devastating mammalian and human diseases, such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and Huntington's diseases, transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and transthyretinopathies...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32560788/antibiotic-drug-discovery-challenges-and-perspectives-in-the-light-of-emerging-antibiotic-resistance
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Keshab Bhattarai, Rina Bastola, Bikash Baral
Amid a rising threat of antimicrobial resistance in a global scenario, our huge investments and high-throughput technologies injected for rejuvenating the key therapeutic scaffolds to suppress these rising superbugs has been diminishing severely. This has grasped world-wide attention, with increased consideration being given to the discovery of new chemical entities. Research has now proven that the relatively tiny and simpler microbes possess enhanced capability of generating novel and diverse chemical constituents with huge therapeutic leads...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32560787/recent-advances-in-oomycete-genomics
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jamie McGowan, David A Fitzpatrick
The oomycetes are a class of ubiquitous, filamentous microorganisms that include some of the biggest threats to global food security and natural ecosystems. Within the oomycete class are highly diverse species that infect a broad range of animals and plants. Some of the most destructive plant pathogens are oomycetes, such as Phytophthora infestans, the agent of potato late blight and the cause of the Irish famine. Recent years have seen a dramatic increase in the number of sequenced oomycete genomes. Here we review the latest developments in oomycete genomics and some of the important insights that have been gained...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32560786/-electrifying-dysmorphology-potassium-channelopathies-causing-dysmorphic-syndromes
#38
REVIEW
Mark James Hamilton, Mohnish Suri
Potassium channels are a heterogeneous group of membrane-bound proteins, whose functions support a diverse range of biological processes. Genetic disorders arising from mutations in potassium channels are classically recognized by symptoms arising from acute channel dysfunction, such as periodic paralysis, ataxia, seizures, or cardiac conduction abnormalities, often in a patient with otherwise normal examination findings. In this chapter, we review a distinct subgroup of rare potassium channelopathies whose presentations are instead suggestive of a developmental disorder, with features including intellectual disability, craniofacial dysmorphism or other physical anomalies...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32560785/pathogen-and-host-genetics-underpinning-cryptococcal-disease
#39
REVIEW
Carolina Coelho, Rhys A Farrer
Cryptococcosis is a severe fungal disease causing 220,000 cases of cryptococcal meningitis yearly. The etiological agents of cryptococcosis are taxonomically grouped into at least two species complexes belonging to the genus Cryptococcus. All of these yeasts are environmentally ubiquitous fungi (often found in soil, leaves and decaying wood, tree hollows, and associated with bird feces especially pigeon guano). Infection in a range of animals including humans begins following inhalation of spores or aerosolized yeasts...
2020: Advances in Genetics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31200810/preface
#40
EDITORIAL
Dhavendra Kumar
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2019: Advances in Genetics
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