Week in Review: May 6 – 10

Telomeres and disease; Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes may fight malaria; bat tongue mops nectar; newly sequenced genomes

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WIKIPEDIA, NASASome genes near the ends of chromosomes are expressed more frequently as telomeres—bits of protective DNA—shrink with age, according to new research. Specifically, researchers found that a gene responsible for the genetic disease facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) begins to be expressed as telomeres shorten, which could explain why the disease tends to arise relatively late in childhood. The researchers also found that the expression of other genes—including one that sits 1,000 kilobases away from the chromosome’s end—may be altered as telomeres shrink.

“This was completely unexpected,” coauthor Guido Stadler at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas told The Scientist.

Anopheles stephensiWIKIMEDIA, RSABBATINIAfter decades of trying, researchers have succeeded in creating a stable, heritable infection of Wolbachia bacteria, known to protect their hosts from parasitic infection, in Anopheles stephensi, mosquitoes that transmit the human malaria-causing parasite. Such Wolbachia-infected mosquitoes suppressed the development of the malaria-causing sporozoite stage 3 to 4 fold—a level the authors suggest could translate to complete resistance in the field.

CALLY HARPERThe Glossophaga soricana bat, which feeds on rich nectar, boasts a tongue covered in hair-like filaments, known as papillae, that inflate to help get the most out of every flower. Within an eighth of second, the papillae flare out in all directions, a process driven by the tongue’s intricate vascular system.

“I don't believe anyone suspected that the brush-like papillae on the tips of these bat tongues were so organized, let alone dynamic and moveable,” Kurt Schwenk, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Connecticut who was not involved in the study, said in an email to The Scientist. “The use of pressurized blood to erect ...

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Meet the Author

  • Jef Akst

    Jef Akst was managing editor of The Scientist, where she started as an intern in 2009 after receiving a master’s degree from Indiana University in April 2009 studying the mating behavior of seahorses.
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