This Week in EvolutionThis Week in EvolutionThis Week in EvolutionThis Week in Evolution
  • About
  • TWiEVO Archive
  • Contribute
  • Shop
  • MicrobeTV Home

Tag: evolution

  • This Week in Evolution
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 85: Teaching old dogs new genetic tricks

  • December 21, 2022
  • Tagged as: canid, canid genome, canine, canine behavioral diversification, canine lineages, dog, dog evolution, evolution, natural selection

Nels and Vincent discuss the use of genome sequence data for over 4,000 domestic, semi-feral, and wild canids to understand the genetic drivers of canine behavior.

Leave a reply
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 84: Decoding our defenses to the Black Death

  • November 8, 2022
  • Tagged as: ancient DNA, black death, evolution, mutation, natural selection, positive selection, Yersinia pestis

Nels and Vincent review the use of ancient DNA to identify loci that may have been under selection during the Black Death by studying populations before, during, and after the pandemic.

Leave a reply
  • This Week in Evolution
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 83: Evolution spreads its wings (and then loses them)

  • October 24, 2022
  • Tagged as: bird, evolution, evolution of flight, flightless bird, natural selection, passerine bird, powered flight

Florian Maderspacher from Current Biology joins Nels and Vincent to discuss a special issue of the journal on birds.

2 Replies
  • This Week in Evolution
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 82: A genetic hack for the human brain

  • September 22, 2022
  • Tagged as: evolution, frontal cortex, H. sapiens, neocortex, neurogenesis, TKTL1

Nels and Vincent consider evidence that a single amino acid change in the TKTL1 gene might have led to greater neurogenesis in the frontal cortex of modern humans compared with Neanderthals.

3 Replies
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 81: Evolution’s new and improved slime molds

  • August 24, 2022
  • Tagged as: Dictyostelium, evolution, gene duplication, mutation, natural selection, neofunctionality, slime mold

Nels and Vincent discuss how duplication of a gene encoding a transcription factor led to evolution of a novel cell type in the slime mold Dictyostelium.

2 Replies
  • This Week in Evolution
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 80: Viruses of a feather bottleneck together

  • August 1, 2022
  • Tagged as: evolution, influenza virus H5N1, mumps virus, mutation, natural selection, phylogenomics, SARS-CoV-2, transmission bottleneck, virus

Louise Moncla joins Nels and Vincent to review her use of genomics to understand emergence, evolution, and transmission of respiratory viruses including influenza virus H5N1, mumps virus, and SARS-CoV-2.

2 Replies
  • This Week in Evolution
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 79: When the immune system is away, SARS-CoV-2 will play

  • July 2, 2022
  • Tagged as: antibody evasion, chronic infection, coronavirus, COVID-19, evolution, fitness, immunocompromised, natural selection, pandemic, SARS-CoV-2, variants of concern

Nels and Vincent discuss an analysis of the drivers of evolution of SARS-CoV-2 during chronic infections, indicating that a tradeoff exists between antibody evasion and fitness.

3 Replies
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 78: The virus daily double

  • May 26, 2022
  • Tagged as: coronavirus, COVID-19, evolution, monkeypox, natural selection, negative selection, pandemic, positive selection, SARS-CoV-2, smallpox, spike protein, variants of concern

Nels and Vincent provide an update on cases of monkeypox, and summarize a biochemical view of three changes in the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein that may balance positive and negative selection.

1 Reply
  • This Week in Evolution
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 77: The mutations of our lives

  • April 26, 2022
  • Tagged as: age, cancer, evolution, germline mutation, mammal, mutation, mutation rate, natural selection, somatic mutation

Alex joins Nels and Vincent to discuss his work which demonstrates that somatic mutation rates scale with lifespan in mammals.

Leave a reply
  • Episode
  • This Week in Evolution
  • This Week in Evolution

TWiEVO 76: One-step symbiosis

  • March 22, 2022
  • Tagged as: E. coli, evolution, mutualism, natural selection, reduced genome, stinkbug, symbiont

Nels and Vincent describe how a single amino acid change can allow E. coli to replace the essential gut symbiont of the stinkbug Plautia stali.

1 Reply
« 1 2 3 4 5 6 … 11 »

Search

Donate

Support our work at Patreon, PayPal, and more

The Hosts of TWiEVO

Nels Elde, Ph.D.


Vincent Racaniello, Ph.D.


CLICK FOR MORE INFO

Please note that content in MicrobeTV podcasts should not be construed as medical advice.

MicrobeTV is an independent podcast network for people who are interested in the sciences. Our shows are about science: viruses, microbes, parasites, evolution, urban agriculture, immunology, neuroscience, and infectious diseases.

Content on this site is licensed by MicrobeTV, Inc under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License