Page 65 - 54th Annual Drosophila Research Conference Program Guide

POSTER SESSIONS
See page 14 for presentation schedule
Poster board number is in
bold
above title. The first author is the presenter. Full abstracts can be found online at dros-conf.org
63
NY.
507
C
Sperm utilization and fertility of mitochondrial introgression
genotypes in Drosophila.
James A. Mossman, David M.
Rand.
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University,
Providence, RI.
508
A
Viability in strains of
Drosophila melanogaster
submitted to
artificial selection for wing shape divergence.
Libéria Torquato,
Blanche Bitner-Mathé.
UFRJ, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
509
B
Purging of deleterious mutations through sexual selection: negative
evidence.
Jing Zhu, James Fry.
Biology Dept, University of
Rochester, Rochester, NY.
510
C
The Drosophila Early Ovarian Transcriptome Provides Insight to the
Molecular Causes of Recombination Rate Variation.
Andrew
Adrian
1,2
,
Josep Comeron
1,3
.
1)
Biology, University of Iowa, Iowa
City, IA; 2) Interdisciplinary Graduate Program in Informatics,
University of Iowa, IA; 3) Interdisiplinary Program in Genetics,
University of Iowa, IA.
511
A
Variability of 5' and 3' untranslated regions of
Dras1
gene in
the
Drosophila virilis
species group.
Anna I. Chekunova
1
,
Prokhor A. Proshakov
1
,
Maxim I. Barsukov
1
,
Ekaterina
Sivoplyas
1
,
George N. Bachtojarov
2
,
Svetlana Yu. Sorokina
1
,
Vladimir G. Mitrofanov
1
.
1)
Dept Genetics, Koltsov Inst Dev Biol,
RAS, Moscow, Russian Federation; 2) Mechnikov Research
Institute of Vaccines and Sera, RAMS, Moscow, Russian
Federation.
512
B
Extended open reading frames in
Drosophila
associated with small
introns are a useful genomic tool for the identification of rapidly
evolving coding sequence and splice junctions.
Robert C. Eisman,
Thomas C. Kaufman.
Dept Biol, Jordan Hall A505, Indiana Univ,
Bloomington, IN.
513
C
Evolution of a heterochromatic domain, the Muller F element, in
Drosophila / Sophophora.
SCR Elgin
1
,
M. Burg
2
,
J. DiAngelo
3
,
A.
Haberman
4
,
C. Jones
5
,
L. Kadlec
6
,
SCS Key
7
,
J. Leatherman
8
,
GP McNeil
9
,
H. Mistry
10
,
A. Nagengast
10
,
DW Paetkau
11
,
S.
Parrish
12
,
L. Reed
13
,
S. Schroeder
14
,
S. Smith
15
,
M. Wawersik
16
,
L. Zhou
17
,
CD Shaffer
1
,
W. Leung
1
.
1)
Washington U MO; 2)
Grand Valley St MI; 3) Hofstra U NY; 4) Oberlin OH; 5) Moravian
PA; 6) Wilkes U PA; 7) NC Central U NC; 8) Northern Colorado
CO; 9) York/CUNY NY; 10) Widener U PA; 11) St Mary's IN; 12)
McDaniel MD; 13) Alabama-Tuscaloosa AL; 14) Webster U MO;
15)
Arcadia U PA; 16) William & Mary VA; 17) U Pittsburgh PA.
514
A
Evolution of piRNA clusters in Anopheles gambiae M and S
forms.
Phillip George
1
,
Igor Sharakhov
1
,
Chantal Vaury
2
,
Silke
Jensen
2
.
1)
Department of Entomology, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg,
VA, USA; 2) Laboratoire Génétique, Reproduction et
Développement (GReD), Clermont-Ferrand, France.
515
B
Young retrogene detection in Drosophila.
Tatiana A. Gurbich
1
,
JJ
Emerson
2
,
Doris Bachtrog
1
.
1)
Integrative Biology, University of
California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA; 2) Ecology and Evolutionary
Biology, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA.
516
C
Lack of association between piRNA abundance and the deleterious
capacity of transposable element families in
Drosophila
melanogaster
.
Erin S. Kelleher, Daniel A. Barbash.
Molecular
Biology and Genetics, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY.
517
A
Evolutionary Constraints on DNA Shape.
Tevfik H. Kitapci,
Tianyin Zhou, Remo Rohs, Sergey V. Nuzhdin.
University of
Southern California, Los Angeles, CA.
518
B
Rapid evolution of the
Responder
satellite in
the
melanogaster
species subgroup.
Amanda M. Larracuente,
Daven C. Presgraves.
Biology, University of Rochester, Rochester,
NY.
519
C
The functional and evolutionary significance of nested genes.
Grace
Y. C. Lee
1
,
Hsiao-Han Chang
2
.
1)
Ecology and Evolution,
University of Chicago, Chicago, IL; 2) Organismic and
Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA.
520
A
Candidate genes contribute to behavioral isolation revealed by
comparative genomic approach.
Juan Li
1
,
Lan Jiang
1
,
Chung-I
Wu
1,2
,
Chau-Ti Ting
3
,
Xuemei Lu
1
.
1)
Beijing Institute of
Genomics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, People’s
Republic of China; 2) Department of Ecology and Evolution,
University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637; 3) Department of Life
Science, Institute of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, & Institute
of Zoology, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC.
521
B
Sex-specific embryonic gene expression at different stages of sex
chromosome evolution.
Susan E. Lott
1,4
,
Jacqueline E. Villalta
2
,
Doris Bachtrog
3
,
Michael B. Eisen
1,2,3
.
1)
Dept. of Molecular and
Cell Biology; 2) Howard Hughes Medical Institute; 3) Dept. of
Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA; 4)
Dept. of Evolution and Ecology, University of California, Davis,
CA.
522
C
Rapid evolution and differential expression of transcripts associated
with sex chromosome meiotic drive in stalk-eyed flies.
Josephine
A. Reinhardt
1
,
Richard H. Baker
2
,
Gerald S. Wilkinson
1
.
1)
Biology, University of Maryland College Park, College Park, MD;
2)
Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, American Museum
of Natural History, New York, NY.
523
A
Copy number variation and the limits of natural seleciton
in
Drosophila yakuba
and
Drosophila simulans
.
Rebekah L.
Rogers
1
,
Julie M. Cridland
2
,
Ling Shao
1
,
Kevin R. Thornton
1
.
1)
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine,
CA; 2) Department Of Evolution and Ecology, University of
California, Davis, CA.
524
B
The short life cycle of orphan genes in the
Drosophila
obscura
group explains the paradox of conserved gene number
across species.
Christian W. Schloetterer, Nicola Palmieri,
Carolin Kosiol, Viola Nolte.
Inst f Populationsgenetik, Vetmeduni
Vienna, Wien, Austria.
525
C
Transfer of mitochondrial DNA fragments into the nuclear genome
in flies and cell line of
D.virilis
.
Svetlana Y. Sorokina
1
,
Denis A.