The study conducted on the drosophila model organism is to be verified in humans in a forthcoming step. |
|
While the smaller bacterial genomes can be tackled by direct sequencing, larger ones like that of drosophila or humans require the use of genetic markers. |
|
Spotted wing drosophila, a vinegar fly, can destroy an entire crop in a season, despite its tiny size. |
|
I think there is also room to expand the program to other pests, such as a new one called the spotted wing drosophila. |
|
Syrphus flies apparently pollinate Asterogyne martiana in Costa Rica, and drosophila flies are thought to pollinate the nipa palm in New Guinea. |
|
While other fruit flies infest overripe or rotting fruit, the spotted wing drosophila infests fruit just before harvest, which could have a devastating economic effect. |
|
We validated our algorithm in live drosophila motor neurons. |
|
But a nasty fly called drosophila disturbed the harvest year. |
|
Spotted wing drosophila, Drosophila suzukii, trapped with combinations of wines and vinegars. |
|
Other subjects are the W chromosome and sex-linked gene expression in the Japanese frog, the Y chromosome of drosophila melanogaster, and XY male pseudohermaphroditism. |
|
Drosophila melanogaster has been a valuable model system for the analysis of flight kinematics, aerodynamics and mechanics. |
|
The Drosophila compound eye contains around 800 individual ommatidia, arranged in a regular hexagonal pattern. |
|
Drosophila genes undergo complex splicing patterns, reside close to their neighbors, and often overlap. |
|
In Drosophila larvae the paired lymph gland lobes that flank the dorsal vessel are sites of hematopoiesis. |
|
Neuroblasts in many malacostracan crustaceans arise and behave differently from their counterparts in Drosophila. |
|
Catecholamines are required for proper melanization and sclerotization of the Drosophila cuticle. |
|
Compare the embryonic cleavage stage of Drosophila with that of later embryonic development. |
|
In animals, well-studied examples of the coenocytic state are found in oogenesis and in the early embryogeny of Drosophila. |
|
In Drosophila species, the male accessory gland secretes seminal fluids transferred to the female during copulation. |
|
In Drosophila, one of the most evident dimorphic traits is represented by the body size, with males being smaller than females. |
|
|
Testes were dissected in Schneider's Drosophila media from larvae, pupae, or adults. |
|
Tufted is a classical Drosophila mutant characterized by a large number of ectopic mechanosensory bristles on the dorsal mesothorax. |
|
Black spots represent the other DNA and RNA transposable elements described for different Drosophila species. |
|
Assays performed in Drosophila S2 cells and Drosophila embryos demonstrated the transpositional activity of Herves. |
|
The GeneChip Drosophila genome array was hybridized with the test or control probes in parallel experiments. |
|
The first mutations of a single gene affecting the daily locomotion rhythm were found in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. |
|
We used the braconid Asobara tabida, a parasitoid of Drosophila larvae, as our model species. |
|
Studies in Drosophila have been used to improve our understanding of human neurodegenerative diseases. |
|
To elucidate the cellular functions of NSF, we have chosen to use a genetic approach in the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster. |
|
It was mapped in Drosophila by polytene chromosome in situ to 3L heterochromatin. |
|
The cuticular hairs formed by epidermal cells are not the only examples of cellular projections found in Drosophila. |
|
Haploid development results in production of male progeny in the haplodiploid Nasonia but is lethal in mosquitoes and Drosophila. |
|
Anopheline mosquitoes, like Drosophila, are renowned for the presence of polytene chromosomes and chromosomal inversions. |
|
In natural populations of Drosophila melanogaster, an amylase isozyme with the lowest amylase activity is predominant. |
|
Drosophila embryonic spindles are amphiastral and thus centrosomes at the spindle poles play a critical role in their organization. |
|
The compound eye of Drosophila is composed of hundreds of nearly identical ommatidia or unit eyes. |
|
Oogenesis in Drosophila is regulated by the steroid hormone ecdysone and the sesquiterpenoid juvenile hormone. |
|
In Drosophila, relocation of a euchromatic gene near centromeric or telomeric heterochromatin often leads to its mosaic silencing. |
|
This exception may be the result of this region corresponding to a small intron in the Drosophila gene. |
|
Drosophila adults have 2000 chemosensory neurons that reside within segregated compartments called sensilla. |
|
|
Only the Cyclorrapha, which includes Drosophila and the common housefly, Musca domestica, have a bicoid gene. |
|
No single mutation can produce a pentadactyl limb of vertebrate type on a Drosophila. |
|
Drosophila yakuba has a widespread distribution in the Afrotropical region. |
|
Drosophila compound eyes are composed of 800 identical facets or ommatidia. |
|
Because the dorsal body wall develops from the wing imaginal disc, data on thoracic body wall patterning are available in Drosophila. |
|
The role of the bicoid gene was first elucidated by a combination of genetic and physical experiments on the Drosophila embryo. |
|
Recently we and others have used double-stranded RNA interference to generate null phenocopies of specific genes in Drosophila. |
|
Genetic screens have successfully identified a number of different growth promoters and growth inhibitors in Drosophila. |
|
The Amy genes of Drosophila constitute a relatively small multigene family with two to seven members in different species. |
|
In Drosophila, paternal transmission has been detected in both interspecific and intraspecific crosses. |
|
Its genome size is only 200 Mb and most repetitive sequences, as in Drosophila, occur in a pattern of long interspersion. |
|
Similarly, mutations within the Drosophila CBP homolog have wide-ranging pleiotropic phenotypes. |
|
The Drosophila retina is composed of 750 unit eyes, or ommatidia. |
|
For example, crickets infected with bacteria, Drosophila infested with mites, and amphipods harboring trematodes all increase reproductive activity. |
|
A gene that codes for a single myosuppressin FLRFamide has been found in Drosophila, the cockroach Diploptera punctata, and the true army worm Pseudaletia unipuncta. |
|
Drosophila melanogaster seminal fluid proteins stimulate sperm storage and egg laying in the mated female but also cause a reduction in her life span. |
|
Consider the possibility that the destruction of the Drosophila model will prove generally true, if not for all organisms perhaps, then at least for metazoa. |
|
A new era of chromosome research began with the detection of giant chromosomes in tissues of Dipteran insects, the midges Bibio and Chironomus, and the fruit fly Drosophila. |
|
Male meiosis of Drosophila melanogaster is unusual in some respects. |
|
This second gene is only found in holometabolous insects, Drosophila, and silkworms but not in the more primitive hemimetabolous insects, like grasshoppers or springtails. |
|
|
Recent analysis of the Drosophila genome sequence supports previous suggestions of strong parallels between many fly and vertebrate cell cycle regulators. |
|
In the early Drosophila embryo, the male and female pronuclei fuse and then undergo 13 rounds of synchronous mitoses without cell division to produce a syncytium. |
|
In many taxa, such as mammals and Drosophila, the males are heterogametic, and, thus, hybrid male offspring are more prone to be inviable or sterile. |
|
Here we report the isolation of mutations in the Drosophila Tap 42 gene. |
|
However, only one non-Drosophila Adh gene has been sequenced so far, that of the flesh fly Sarcophaga peregrina, a higher dipteran quite divergent from Drosophila. |
|
Such groups include Drosophila, some other insects, some fish, some reptiles, and some plants. |
|
When these genes were transplanted into Drosophila, resistance to pyrethroids and carbamates was generated in otherwise susceptible fly strains. |
|
Heterodimerization of the Drosophila ecdysone receptor with retinoid X receptor and ultraspir acle. |
|
The roles of juvenile hormone, ecdysone and the ovary in the control of Drosophila vitellogenesis. |
|
Mutations of the human homolog of Drosophila patched in the nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome. |
|
They then created a line of Drosophila mutants completely lacking both forms. |
|
Toll-like receptors are membrane-bound receptors identified as homologs of Toll in Drosophila. |
|
Robustness of the BMP morphogen gradient in Drosophila embryonic patterning. |
|
Persistence of oviposition rhythm in individuals of Drosophila melanogaster reared in an aperiodic environment for several hundred generations. |
|
There are some species of Drosophila in which X0 males are both viable and fertile. |
|
The scientists worked with the fruitfly Drosophila pseudoobscura for the study. |
|
In Drosophila melanogaster, the Y chromosome does not trigger male development. |
|
A Kunitz-type protease inhibitor related protein is synthesized in Drosophila prepupal salivary glands and released into the moulting fluid during pupation. |
|
In Drosophila melanogaster a single orthologous hand gene is expressed with absence of the respective protein causing semilethality during early larval instars. |
|
Immunological method for mapping genes on Drosophila polytene chromosomes. |
|
|
Drosophila convert DDT to the non insecticidal but miticidal dicofol. |
|
All of us have a tendency to overgeneralize about the significance of results obtained from just a few species, such as Drosophila, Caenorhabditis elegans or rats. |
|
Geneticists first did the lab fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, and have since published reports on another fruit fly species, the malaria mosquito, and the silkworm. |
|
A gene linked to familial Parkinson disease may protect neurons from oxidative damage, according to two independent studies in the fruit fly Drosophila. |
|
Throughout the first, second and early third instars, Drosophila larvae exhibit photophobicity and remain buried in their food source throughout the critical feeding period. |
|
Drosophila is a powerful model organism to discover gene networks and test gene function in vivo, and has recurrently led to discoveries relevant to human health. |
|
Early genetic studies focused on the identification and chromosomal localization of genes that control readily observable characteristics, such as the eye color of Drosophila. |
|