Zafer Bulut
Purdue University
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Featured researches published by Zafer Bulut.
Molecular Ecology | 2009
David H. Bos; Rod N. Williams; David Gopurenko; Zafer Bulut; J. Andrew DeWoody
Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) alleles likely have adaptive value because of overdominance, in which case MHC heterozygous individuals have increased fitness relative to homozygotes. Because of this potential benefit, the evolution of sexual reproduction between MHC‐divergent individuals (i.e. negative assortative mating, NAM) may be favoured. However, the strongest evidence for MHC‐based NAM comes from inbred animals, and context‐dependent mating preferences have rarely been evaluated although they often occur in nature. We assessed the extent MHC‐based mating preferences among wild tiger salamanders (Ambystoma tigrinum) using multiple molecular approaches. We genotyped 102 adults and 864 larvae from 36 breeding trials at both microsatellite and MHC loci. Parentage analysis revealed that reproductive success among males was positively associated with increased tail length and that with respect to the focal female, MHC‐similar males sired a significantly higher number of offspring than more dissimilar males. This trend was consistent, even under context‐dependent scenarios that favour traditional MHC‐based NAM. These results suggest that the most MHC‐divergent males may be at a reproductive disadvantage in pairwise breeding trials. Our data add to a growing body of evidence that suggests where it exists, MHC‐based choice is probably dynamic and mediated by many factors that vary in the wild, notably signals from other indicator traits and by the quality and quantity of potential mates.
Journal of Molecular Evolution | 2008
Zafer Bulut; Cory R. McCORMICK; David H. Bos; J. Andrew DeWoody
Alternative splicing (AS) of mRNA transcripts is increasingly recognized as a source of transcriptome diversity. To date, most AS studies have focused either on comparisons across taxa or on intragenomic comparisons across gene families. We generated a novel data set that represents one of the first population genetic comparisons of AS across individuals. In ambystomatid salamanders, AS of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class IIβ gene (Amti-DAB) produces two transcripts, one full-length and one truncated. The full-length transcript is functional, but the truncated transcript is missing the critical β1 domain that forms half of the peptide binding region in the intact MHC class II molecule. We captured wild salamander larvae (Ambystoma tigrinum tigrinum) and genotyped them at Amti-DAB via DNA sequencing. From these same larvae, we extracted RNA from gill and spleen and evaluated the relative expression level of Amti-DAB in each tissue. Across individuals, 21% of the transcripts were truncated (alternatively spliced), and the absolute level of alternative transcript expression was higher in gill. The high level of nucleotide variation among seven Amti-DAB alleles provides the ability to detect substitutions (or linked DNA polymorphisms) that might have influenced AS. The data reveal no correlation between AS and haplotype, allele, or zygosity. However, indirect evidence (comparative expression patterns across 3 million years of evolution) suggests that the truncated Amti-DAB transcript may be functional and maintained by natural selection.
Journal of Raptor Research | 2016
Zafer Bulut; Evgeny A. Bragin; J. Andrew DeWoody; Melissa A. Braham; Todd E. Katzner; Jacqueline M. Doyle
Abstract Movement and space use are important components of animal interactions with the environment. However, for hard-to-monitor raptor species, there are substantial gaps in our understanding of these key determinants. We used noninvasive genetic tools to evaluate the details of space use over a 3-yr period by White-tailed Eagles (Haliaeetus albicilla) at the Naurzum Zapovednik in northern Kazakhstan. We genotyped, at 10 microsatellite markers and one mitochondrial marker, 859 eagle feathers and assigned naturally shed feathers to individuals. We identified 124 White-tailed Eagles, including both members of 5–10 pairs per year, and were able to monitor birds across years. Distances between eagle nests and hunting perches were always greater than nearest neighbor distances, eagles never used the closest available hunting perch, and hunting perches were always shared with other eagles. When eagles switched nests between years, the nests they chose were almost always well outside the space that theory predicted they defended the prior year. Our data are inconsistent with classical territorial and colonial models of resource use; they more closely resemble semi-colonial behavior. It is unlikely that standard methods of animal tracking (e.g., marking and telemetry), would have provided a similarly cost-effective mechanism to gain these insights into spatial and temporal aspects of eagle behavior. When combined with existing information on space use of other local species, these data suggest that partitioning of spatial resources among White-tailed Eagles and other eagles at the Zapovednik may be facilitated by the alternative strategies of space use they employ.
Genetica | 2009
Zafer Bulut; Cory R. McCORMICK; David Gopurenko; Rod N. Williams; David H. Bos; J. Andrew DeWoody
Revue De Medecine Veterinaire | 2005
M. I. Soysal; Evren Koban; Emel Ozkan; V. Altunok; Zafer Bulut; Mehmet Nizamlıoğlu; İnci Togan
Turkish Journal of Biology | 2014
Yusuf Özşensoy; Ercan Kurar; Zafer Bulut; Mehmet Nizamlioğlu
Archive | 2010
Ercan Kurar; Zafer Bulut; V. Altunok; Sorumlu Yazar
Avrasya Veteriner Bilimleri Dergisi | 2013
Ercan Kurar; Zafer Bulut; Mehmet Nizamlıoğlu
Universal Journal of Agricultural Research | 2017
Müge Doğan; Mehmet Nizamlıoğlu; Yusuf Özşensoy; Ercan Kurar; Zafer Bulut; Vahdettin Altunok; Ayşe Işık; Aysun Çamlıdağ
Eurasian Journal of Veterinary Sciences | 2017
Zafer Bulut; Ercan Kurar; Yusuf Özşensoy; Müge Doğan; Mehmet Nizamlıoğlu; İclal Şahin