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Dive into the research topics where Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis is active.

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Featured researches published by Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis.


PLOS Biology | 2009

Concatenated analysis sheds light on early metazoan evolution and fuels a modern "urmetazoon" hypothesis.

Bernd Schierwater; Michael Eitel; Wolfgang Jakob; Hans-Jürgen Osigus; Heike Hadrys; Stephen L. Dellaporta; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Rob DeSalle

For more than a century, the origin of metazoan animals has been debated. One aspect of this debate has been centered on what the hypothetical “urmetazoon” bauplan might have been. The morphologically most simply organized metazoan animal, the placozoan Trichoplax adhaerens, resembles an intriguing model for one of several “urmetazoon” hypotheses: the placula hypothesis. Clear support for a basal position of Placozoa would aid in resolving several key issues of metazoan-specific inventions (including, for example, head–foot axis, symmetry, and coelom) and would determine a root for unraveling their evolution. Unfortunately, the phylogenetic relationships at the base of Metazoa have been controversial because of conflicting phylogenetic scenarios generated while addressing the question. Here, we analyze the sum of morphological evidence, the secondary structure of mitochondrial ribosomal genes, and molecular sequence data from mitochondrial and nuclear genes that amass over 9,400 phylogenetically informative characters from 24 to 73 taxa. Together with mitochondrial DNA genome structure and sequence analyses and Hox-like gene expression patterns, these data (1) provide evidence that Placozoa are basal relative to all other diploblast phyla and (2) spark a modernized “urmetazoon” hypothesis.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2008

Mitochondrial Genomes Reveal an Explosive Radiation of Extinct and Extant Bears near the Miocene-Pliocene Boundary

Johannes Krause; Tina Unger; Aline Noçon; Anna-Sapfo Malaspinas; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Mathias Stiller; Leopoldo Héctor Soibelzon; Helen Spriggs; Paul H. Dear; Adrian W. Briggs; Sarah C. Bray; Stephen J. O'Brien; Gernot Rabeder; Paul Matheus; Alan Cooper; Montgomery Slatkin; Svante Pääbo; Michael Hofreiter

BackgroundDespite being one of the most studied families within the Carnivora, the phylogenetic relationships among the members of the bear family (Ursidae) have long remained unclear. Widely divergent topologies have been suggested based on various data sets and methods.ResultsWe present a fully resolved phylogeny for ursids based on ten complete mitochondrial genome sequences from all eight living and two recently extinct bear species, the European cave bear (Ursus spelaeus) and the American giant short-faced bear (Arctodus simus). The mitogenomic data yield a well-resolved topology for ursids, with the sloth bear at the basal position within the genus Ursus. The sun bear is the sister taxon to both the American and Asian black bears, and this clade is the sister clade of cave bear, brown bear and polar bear confirming a recent study on bear mitochondrial genomes.ConclusionSequences from extinct bears represent the third and fourth Pleistocene species for which complete mitochondrial genomes have been sequenced. Moreover, the cave bear specimen demonstrates that mitogenomic studies can be applied to Pleistocene fossils that have not been preserved in permafrost, and therefore have a broad application within ancient DNA research. Molecular dating of the mtDNA divergence times suggests a rapid radiation of bears in both the Old and New Worlds around 5 million years ago, at the Miocene-Pliocene boundary. This coincides with major global changes, such as the Messinian crisis and the first opening of the Bering Strait, and suggests a global influence of such events on species radiations.


Oecologia | 2003

Effects of male sterility on reproductive traits in gynodioecious plants: a meta-analysis

Jacqui A. Shykoff; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Carine L. Collin; Manuela López-Villavicencio

Female fecundity advantage in gynodioecious plants is required for the spread and maintenance of this reproductive system. However, not all reproductive characters show female advantage in all species. We used a meta-analysis to summarise differences between females and hermaphrodites reported from the literature for several reproductive traits. Further we tested three hypotheses, (1) that female plants of species with many ovules produce more seeds per fruit while those with few ovules produce heavier seeds, (2) that females are more pollen limited than hermaphrodites, and (3) that floral sexual size dimorphism is more pronounced in species with few ovules, either because female reproductive success is less limited by pollen availability in such species or because flowers with few ovules require a smaller floral structure to protect the carpels. Overall, females compared to hermaphrodites produced more but smaller flowers, had higher fruit set, higher total seed production, and produced heavier seeds that germinated better. Species with many versus few ovules differed in female advantage for flower size dimorphism, flower number, fruit set and total seed production. However seed size, seed set per fruit and seed germination differences between females and hermaphrodites did not differ significantly between species with few and many ovules. We also found no evidence for differential pollen limitation between females and hermaphrodites. Degree of floral sexual size dimorphism differed significantly between species with few and many ovules. Though pistillate flowers were generally smaller than those of hermaphrodites, species with many ovules showed less difference in flower size between the sexes, suggesting either that the protective role of the perianth constrains the evolution of sexual size dimorphism in species with many ovules or that selection for adequate pollination in species with many ovules impedes the reduction in flower size of females.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Historical Mammal Extinction on Christmas Island (Indian Ocean) Correlates with Introduced Infectious Disease

Kelly B. Wyatt; Paula F. Campos; M. Thomas P. Gilbert; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Wayne H. Hynes; Robert DeSalle; Peter Daszak; Ross D. E. MacPhee; Alex D. Greenwood

It is now widely accepted that novel infectious disease can be a leading cause of serious population decline and even outright extinction in some invertebrate and vertebrate groups (e.g., amphibians). In the case of mammals, however, there are still no well-corroborated instances of such diseases having caused or significantly contributed to the complete collapse of species. A case in point is the extinction of the endemic Christmas Island rat (Rattus macleari): although it has been argued that its disappearance ca. AD 1900 may have been partly or wholly caused by a pathogenic trypanosome carried by fleas hosted on recently-introduced black rats (Rattus rattus), no decisive evidence for this scenario has ever been adduced. Using ancient DNA methods on samples from museum specimens of these rodents collected during the extinction window (AD 1888–1908), we were able to resolve unambiguously sequence evidence of murid trypanosomes in both endemic and invasive rats. Importantly, endemic rats collected prior to the introduction of black rats were devoid of trypanosome signal. Hybridization between endemic and black rats was also previously hypothesized, but we found no evidence of this in examined specimens, and conclude that hybridization cannot account for the disappearance of the endemic species. This is the first molecular evidence for a pathogen emerging in a naïve mammal species immediately prior to its final collapse.


PLOS ONE | 2009

The Real maccoyii: Identifying Tuna Sushi with DNA Barcodes – Contrasting Characteristic Attributes and Genetic Distances

Jacob H. Lowenstein; George Amato; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis

Background The use of DNA barcodes for the identification of described species is one of the least controversial and most promising applications of barcoding. There is no consensus, however, as to what constitutes an appropriate identification standard and most barcoding efforts simply attempt to pair a query sequence with reference sequences and deem identification successful if it falls within the bounds of some pre-established cutoffs using genetic distance. Since the Renaissance, however, most biological classification schemes have relied on the use of diagnostic characters to identify and place species. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we developed a cytochrome c oxidase subunit I character-based key for the identification of all tuna species of the genus Thunnus, and compared its performance with distance-based measures for identification of 68 samples of tuna sushi purchased from 31 restaurants in Manhattan (New York City) and Denver, Colorado. Both the character-based key and GenBank BLAST successfully identified 100% of the tuna samples, while the Barcode of Life Database (BOLD) as well as genetic distance thresholds, and neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree building performed poorly in terms of species identification. A piece of tuna sushi has the potential to be an endangered species, a fraud, or a health hazard. All three of these cases were uncovered in this study. Nineteen restaurant establishments were unable to clarify or misrepresented what species they sold. Five out of nine samples sold as a variant of “white tuna” were not albacore (T. alalunga), but escolar (Lepidocybium flavorunneum), a gempylid species banned for sale in Italy and Japan due to health concerns. Nineteen samples were northern bluefin tuna (T. thynnus) or the critically endangered southern bluefin tuna (T. maccoyii), though nine restaurants that sold these species did not state these species on their menus. Conclusions/Significance The Convention on International Trade Endangered Species (CITES) requires that listed species must be identifiable in trade. This research fulfills this requirement for tuna, and supports the nomination of northern bluefin tuna for CITES listing in 2010.


Cell systems | 2015

Geospatial Resolution of Human and Bacterial Diversity with City-Scale Metagenomics

Ebrahim Afshinnekoo; Cem Meydan; Shanin Chowdhury; Dyala Jaroudi; Collin Boyer; Nick Bernstein; Julia M. Maritz; Darryl Reeves; Jorge Gandara; Sagar Chhangawala; Sofia Ahsanuddin; Amber Simmons; Timothy Nessel; Bharathi Sundaresh; Elizabeth Pereira; Ellen Jorgensen; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Nell Kirchberger; Isaac Garcia; David Gandara; Sean Dhanraj; Tanzina Nawrin; Yogesh Saletore; Noah Alexander; Priyanka Vijay; Elizabeth M. Hénaff; Paul Zumbo; Michael Walsh; Gregory D. O'Mullan; Scott Tighe

SUMMARY The panoply of microorganisms and other species present in our environment influence human health and disease, especially in cities, but have not been profiled with metagenomics at a city-wide scale. We sequenced DNA from surfaces across the entire New York City (NYC) subway system, the Gowanus Canal, and public parks. Nearly half of the DNA (48%) does not match any known organism; identified organisms spanned 1,688 bacterial, viral, archaeal, and eukaryotic taxa, which were enriched for harmless genera associated with skin (e.g., Acinetobacter). Predicted ancestry of human DNA left on subway surfaces can recapitulate U.S. Census demographic data, and bacterial signatures can reveal a station’s history, such as marine-associated bacteria in a hurricane-flooded station. Some evidence of pathogens was found (Bacillus anthracis), but a lack of reported cases in NYC suggests that the pathogens represent a normal, urban microbiome. This baseline metagenomic map of NYC could help long-term disease surveillance, bioterrorism threat mitigation, and health management in the built environment of cities.


Biology Letters | 2007

Elevated substitution rates estimated from ancient DNA sequences.

Simon Y. W. Ho; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Robin G. Allaby

Ancient DNA sequences are able to offer valuable insights into molecular evolutionary processes, which are not directly accessible via modern DNA. They are particularly suitable for the estimation of substitution rates because their ages provide calibrating information in phylogenetic analyses, circumventing the difficult task of choosing independent calibration points. The substitution rates obtained from such datasets have typically been high, falling between the rates estimated from pedigrees and species phylogenies. Many of these estimates have been made using a Bayesian phylogenetic method that explicitly accommodates heterochronous data. Stimulated by recent criticism of this method, we present a comprehensive simulation study that validates its performance. For datasets of moderate size, it produces accurate estimates of rates, while appearing robust to assumptions about demographic history. We then analyse a large collection of 749 ancient and 727 modern DNA sequences from 19 species of animals, plants and bacteria. Our new estimates confirm that the substitution rates estimated from ancient DNA sequences are elevated above long-term phylogenetic levels.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Zoonotic Viruses Associated with Illegally Imported Wildlife Products

Kristine M. Smith; Simon J. Anthony; William M. Switzer; Jonathan H. Epstein; Tracie A. Seimon; Hongwei Jia; María Dolores Mínguez Sánchez; Thanh Thao Huynh; G. Gale Galland; Sheryl E. Shapiro; Jonathan M. Sleeman; Denise McAloose; Margot Stuchin; George Amato; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; W. Ian Lipkin; William B. Karesh; Peter Daszak; Nina Marano

The global trade in wildlife has historically contributed to the emergence and spread of infectious diseases. The United States is the worlds largest importer of wildlife and wildlife products, yet minimal pathogen surveillance has precluded assessment of the health risks posed by this practice. This report details the findings of a pilot project to establish surveillance methodology for zoonotic agents in confiscated wildlife products. Initial findings from samples collected at several international airports identified parts originating from nonhuman primate (NHP) and rodent species, including baboon, chimpanzee, mangabey, guenon, green monkey, cane rat and rat. Pathogen screening identified retroviruses (simian foamy virus) and/or herpesviruses (cytomegalovirus and lymphocryptovirus) in the NHP samples. These results are the first demonstration that illegal bushmeat importation into the United States could act as a conduit for pathogen spread, and suggest that implementation of disease surveillance of the wildlife trade will help facilitate prevention of disease emergence.


Systematic Biology | 2011

Bayesian Estimation of Substitution Rates from Ancient DNA Sequences with Low Information Content

Simon Y. W. Ho; Robert Lanfear; Matthew J. Phillips; Ian Barnes; Jessica A. Thomas; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Beth Shapiro

1Centre for Macroevolution and Macroecology, Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia; 2School of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia; 3School of Biological Sciences, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey TW20 0EX, UK; 4Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024, USA; and 5Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA; ∗Correspondence to be sent to: School of Biological Sciences, Macleay Building A12, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia; E-mail: [email protected].


Biology Letters | 2010

DNA barcodes reveal species-specific mercury levels in tuna sushi that pose a health risk to consumers

Jacob H. Lowenstein; Joanna Burger; Christian Jeitner; George Amato; Sergios-Orestis Kolokotronis; Michael Gochfeld

Excessive ingestion of mercury—a health hazard associated with consuming predatory fishes—damages neurological, sensory-motor and cardiovascular functioning. The mercury levels found in Bigeye Tuna (Thunnus obesus) and bluefin tuna species (Thunnus maccoyii, Thunnus orientalis, and Thunnus thynnus), exceed or approach levels permissible by Canada, the European Union, Japan, the US, and the World Health Organization. We used DNA barcodes to identify tuna sushi samples analysed for mercury and demonstrate that the ability to identify cryptic samples in the market place allows regulatory agencies to more accurately measure the risk faced by fish consumers and enact policies that better safeguard their health.

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Rob DeSalle

American Museum of Natural History

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Apurva Narechania

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Paul J. Planet

American Museum of Natural History

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Richard H. Baker

American Museum of Natural History

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