Andrea Ricci
University of Bologna
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Featured researches published by Andrea Ricci.
BMC Genomics | 2011
Marco Passamonti; Andrea Ricci; Liliana Milani; Fabrizio Ghiselli
BackgroundDoubly Uniparental Inheritance (DUI) is a fascinating exception to matrilinear inheritance of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). Species with DUI are characterized by two distinct mtDNAs that are inherited either through females (F-mtDNA) or through males (M-mtDNA). DUI sex-linked mitochondrial genomes share several unusual features, such as additional protein coding genes and unusual gene duplications/structures, which have been related to the functionality of DUI. Recently, new evidence for DUI was found in the mytilid bivalve Musculista senhousia. This paper describes the complete sex-linked mitochondrial genomes of this species.ResultsOur analysis highlights that both M and F mtDNAs share roughly the same gene content and order, but with some remarkable differences. The Musculista sex-linked mtDNAs have differently organized putative control regions (CR), which include repeats and palindromic motifs, thought to provide sites for DNA-binding proteins involved in the transcriptional machinery. Moreover, in male mtDNA, two cox2 genes were found, one (M-cox2b) 123bp longer.ConclusionsThe complete mtDNA genome characterization of DUI bivalves is the first step to unravel the complex genetic signals allowing Doubly Uniparental Inheritance, and the evolutionary implications of such an unusual transmission route in mitochondrial genome evolution in Bivalvia. The observed redundancy of the palindromic motifs in Musculista M-mtDNA may have a role on the process by which sperm mtDNA becomes dominant or exclusive of the male germline of DUI species. Moreover, the duplicated M-COX2b gene may have a different, still unknown, function related to DUI, in accordance to what has been already proposed for other DUI species in which a similar cox2 extension has been hypothesized to be a tag for male mitochondria.
Heredity | 2010
Miroslav Plohl; Vlatka Petrović; Andrea Luchetti; Andrea Ricci; Eva Šatović; Marco Passamonti; Barbara Mantovani
The ubiquity of satellite DNA (satDNA) sequences has raised much controversy over the abundance of divergent monomer variants and the long-time nucleotide sequence stability observed for many satDNA families. In this work, we describe the satDNA BIV160, characterized in nine species of the three main bivalve clades (Protobranchia, Pteriomorphia and Heteroconchia). BIV160 monomers are similar in repeat size and nucleotide sequence to satDNAs described earlier in oysters and in the clam Donax trunculus. The broad distribution of BIV160 satDNA indicates that similar variants existed in the ancestral bivalve species that lived about 540 million years ago; this makes BIV160 the most ancient satDNA described so far. In the species examined, monomer variants are distributed in quite a complex pattern. This pattern includes (i) species characterized by a specific group of variants, (ii) species that share distinct group(s) of variants and (iii) species with both specific and shared types. The evolutionary scenario suggested by these data reconciles sequence uniformity in homogenization-maintained satDNA arrays with the genomic richness of divergent monomer variants formed by diversification of the same ancestral satDNA sequence. Diversified repeats can continue to evolve in a non-concerted manner and behave as independent amplification-contraction units in the framework of a ‘library of satDNA variants’ representing a permanent source of monomers that can be amplified into novel homogeneous satDNA arrays. On the whole, diversification of satDNA monomers and copy number fluctuations provide a highly dynamic genomic environment able to form and displace satDNA sequence variants rapidly in evolution.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2011
Federico Plazzi; Andrea Ricci; Marco Passamonti
The Order Phasmatodea (stick and leaf insects) includes many well-known species of cryptic phytophagous insects. In this work, we sequenced the almost complete mitochondrial genomes of two stick insect species of the genus Bacillus. Phasmatodea pertain to the Polyneoptera, and represent one of the major clades of heterometabolous insects. Orthopteroid insect lineages arose through rapid evolutionary radiation events, which likely blurred the phylogenetic reconstructions obtained so far; we therefore performed a phylogenetic analysis to resolve and date all major splits of orthopteroid phylogeny, including the relationships between Phasmatodea and other polyneopterans. We explored several molecular models, with special reference to data partitioning, to correctly detect any phylogenetic signal lying in rough data. Phylogenetic Informativeness analysis showed that the maximum resolving power on the orthopteroid mtDNA dataset is expected for the Upper Cretaceous, about 80millionyears ago (Mya), but at least 70% of the maximum informativeness is also expected for the 150-200 Mya timespan, which makes mtDNA a suitable marker to study orthopteroid splits. A complete chronological calibration has also been computed following a Penalized Likelihood method. In summary, our analysis confirmed the monophyly of Phasmatodea, Dictyoptera and Orthoptera, and retrieved Mantophasmatodea as sister group of Phasmatodea. The origin of orthopteroid insects was also estimated to be in the Middle Triassic, while the order Phasmatodea seems to appear in the Upper Jurassic. The obtained results evidenced that mtDNA is a suitable marker to unravel the ancient splits leading to the orthopteroid orders, given a proper methodological approach.
Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2015
Marco Maccaferri; Andrea Ricci; Silvio Salvi; Sara Giulia Milner; Enrico Noli; Pier Luigi Martelli; Rita Casadio; Eduard Akhunov; Simone Scalabrin; Vendramin; Karim Ammar; A Blanco; F Desiderio; Assaf Distelfeld; Jorge Dubcovsky; Tzion Fahima; Justin D. Faris; Abraham B. Korol; Andrea Massi; Anna M. Mastrangelo; Michele Morgante; Curtis J. Pozniak; A N'Diaye; Steven S. Xu; Roberto Tuberosa
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2013
Tesfaye Letta; Marco Maccaferri; Ayele Badebo; Karim Ammar; Andrea Ricci; José Crossa; Roberto Tuberosa
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2017
Stefania Venturi; Franco Tassi; Gabriele Bicocchi; Jacopo Cabassi; Francesco Capecchiacci; Giorgio Capasso; Orlando Vaselli; Andrea Ricci; Fausto Grassa
BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2008
Andrea Ricci; Valerio Scali; Marco Passamonti
Natural Hazards | 2018
Stefania Venturi; Franco Tassi; Orlando Vaselli; Georges E. Vougioukalakis; Heba Rashed; Christos Kanellopoulos; Chiara Caponi; Francesco Capecchiacci; Jacopo Cabassi; Andrea Ricci; Luciano Giannini
Journal of Limnology | 2018
Franco Tassi; Jacopo Cabassi; César Andrade; Cristiana Callieri; Catarina Silva; Fátima Viveiros; Gianluca Corno; Orlando Vaselli; Enrico Selmo; Andrea Gallorini; Andrea Ricci; Luciano Giannini; José Virgílio Cruz
68° Congresso Nazionale Unione Zoologica Italiana. | 2007
Andrea Ricci; Valerio Scali; Marco Passamonti