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E-grāmata: Spiderwebs and Silk: Tracing Evolution From Molecules to Genes to Phenotypes

(Museum Associate, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University)
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Aug-2003
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190284596
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
  • Cena: 17,83 €*
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 21-Aug-2003
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780190284596

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Craig (comparative zoology, Harvard U. and biology and biotechnology, Tufts U.) examines the silk produced by spiders, in the form of webs, making comparison with silk produced by various insects to explore the evolutionary path, benefits, and cost of such production. She seeks to identify a relationship between organismal, ecology, gene, and protein evolution that can be linked to rates of evolutionary change. Annotation (c) Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

This book links the molecular evolution of silk proteins to the evolution and behavioral ecology of web-spinning spiders and other arthropods. Craig's book draws together studies from biochemistry through molecular genetics, cellular physiology, ecology, and behavior to present an integrated understanding of an interesting biological system at the molecular and organizational levels.

Recenzijas

[ Craig] gives a fascinating and vivid account of evolution of spider silks ... The book is a well-written, informative spider silk monograph ... will stimulate further research efforts in artificial silk synthesis ... will serve as an important source of information on all aspects of spider silk proteins. * Heredity * Craigs 'Spider Webs and Silks' brings a fascinating and important subject to a potentially broad audience. And it might even turn some arachnophobes into arachnophiles. * Nature *

1 Silk Proteins: Breakdown and Evolutionary Pathways 3(28)
Silks and fibrous proteins are made up of amino acids that exhibit diverse secondary and tertiary configurations
3(4)
Current hypotheses suggest that fibrous proteins produced by the Chelicerata and Hexapoda evolved independently
7(7)
Comparative phylogenetic analyses pinpoint the taxa most likely to yield insight into the origins and biology of silk-producing systems
14(4)
The ability to secrete fibrous proteins is a primitive character of the hexapods and first evolved in the Diplura
18(2)
The ability to secrete silk fibroins correlates with the evolution of spinning behavior
20(5)
The structural organization of spider silk is correlated with the evolution of a muscular and innervated spinneret
25(2)
Silk production in insects and spiders is hypothesized to have evolved via two pathways: a systemic gland pathway and a surficial gland pathway
27(2)
Summary
29(2)
2 The Comparative Architecture of Silks, Fibrous Proteins, and Their Encoding Genes in Insects and Spiders (with C. Riekel) 31(20)
The known silk fibroins and fibrous glues are encoded by members of the same gene family
32(3)
Most silk fibroins contain crystalline and noncrystalline regions
35(3)
All of the sequenced fibroin silks (Fhc, MA, and Flag) are made up of hierarchically organized, repetitive arrays of amino acids
38(3)
Fhc fibroin genes (and perhaps MA genes) are characterized by a similar molecular genetic architecture of two exons and one intron, but the organization and size of these units differ
41(2)
The Flag, Ser, and BR genes are made up of multiple exons and introns
43(3)
Sequences coding for crystalline and noncrystalline protein domains are integrated in the repetitive regions of Fhc and MA exons, but not in the protein glues Ser1 and BR-1
46(1)
Genetic "hot-spots" promote recombination errors in Fhc, MA, and Flag
46(1)
Codon bias, structural constraint, point mutations, and shortened coding arrays are alternative means of stabilizing precursor mRNA transcripts
47(1)
Differential regulation of gene expression and selective splicing may allow rapid adaptation of silk functional properties to different environments
48(1)
Summary
49(2)
3 The Mechanical Functions of Silks and Their Correlated Structural Properties (with C. Riekel) 51(33)
Ancestral araneomorph spiders spin "dry" capture silks into irregular webs; derived araneomorph spiders (here, the Orbiculariae) spin dry and "wet" capture silks into symmetrical webs
55(5)
The Orbiculariae spin nets that are suspended under tension and that approximate minimum volume architectures
60(3)
Web function is determined by the interaction between web architecture and the material properties of silks
63(5)
The webs and silks spun by the ancestral Deinopoidea are stiff; their ability to both withstand prey impact and to retain prey is a function of fiber strength
68(1)
The diversification of the Araneoidea correlates with a shift in web functional mechanism
69(1)
Silk fibroins produced by derived spiders contain either highly oriented crystalline regions or no crystalline regions at all
70(11)
Despite the advantages of araneoid webs and silks, the cribellate spiders have persisted through evolution
81(1)
Summary
82(2)
4 Insect Spatial Vision Is a Potential Selective Factor on the Evolution of Silk Achromatic Properties and Web Architecture (with M. Lehrer) 84(24)
Insect spatial resolution is a function of the anatomy and the optics of the eye
84(2)
Contrast resolution is the prerequisite of object detection
86(1)
Insects possess a high temporal resolution capacity
87(3)
Motion parallax cues provide the insect with depth information
90(1)
Insect vision and flight maneuverability function as potential selective forces on silk and web properties
91(1)
Distorted and oscillating webs may enhance insect interception
92(4)
The translucent properties of frame (MA) and spiral (Flag) silk minimize contrast between webs and their background
96(2)
Insects' response to webs is independent of ambient light conditions
98(5)
Web visibility is determined by specific web-background combinations in specific ambient light conditions
103(3)
Visible and invisible webs might have evolved in parallel
106(2)
5 Insect Color Vision Is a Potential Selective Factor on the Evolution of Silk Chromatic Properties and Web Design (with M. Lehrer) 108(15)
Most insects have UV-, blue-, and green-sensitive photoreceptors
108(5)
Detection of colored objects is based on their contrast against the background
113(1)
The perceptions of chromatic contrast and achromatic contrast are independent processes
114(1)
Webs of ancestral and derived spiders differ in their spectral reflectance
115(7)
Do the differences in UV-reflection of silks result from selective effects of insect color vision?
122(1)
6 Insect Learning Capacity Is a Potential Selective Factor in the Evolution of Silk Color and the Decorative Silk Patterns Spun by Spiders 123(33)
Insect responses to visual cues are either innate or learned
124(1)
Some silks possess particular spectral or spatial features that vary with ambient light
125(4)
Some silks and webs possess particular spectral or spatial features that might be attractive to insects
129(5)
Drosophile may be attracted to UV-reflecting silk due to their spontaneous open-space response
134(2)
Studies on web avoidance learning show that bees are able to dissociate color cues from the information with which it is paired
136(5)
Web decorations attract prey and their variable orientations may disrupt insect pattern learning
141(11)
Decorative silk patterns that attract prey are also likely to attract the predators of spiders
152(4)
7 Inter-Gland Competition for Amino Acids and the ATP Costs of Silk Synthesis 156(17)
The amino acids organisms synthesize are those needed in large quantities and on a predictable basis
157(1)
The central metabolic pathways provide a common currency, ATP, through which the costs of protein synthesis can be compared
158(7)
The amino acid compositions of silks spun by arthropods vary in proportions of alanine, glycine, and serine
165(2)
Direct comparison of amino acid costs suggests that dragline (MA) silks produced by araneomorph spiders are more costly than cocoon (Fhc) silks produced by herbivores
167(1)
Comparison of MA silk produced by ancestral and derived species suggests a trend toward reduced silk costs among the cribellates and between the MA and Flag silks of the Araneoidea
168(1)
Spider silk glands may have evolved through intra-gland competition for amino acids that the spiders synthesize
169(2)
Gene organization that allows selective expression and/or selective editing of proteins may allow spiders to reduce silk costs during periods of food stress
171(1)
The ability to recycle silks allows the araneoids to reduce the metabolic costs of producing silk
172(1)
8 A One-Dimensional Developmental System and Life-Long Silk Synthesis May Preclude the Evolution of Higher Eusociality in Spiders 173(20)
Multiple selective factors favor the evolution of eusociality
174(5)
Insects have three developmental pathways, but spiders have only one
179(2)
Ecdysteroids regulate metamorphosis in the absence of JH
181(2)
Ecdysteroids regulate silk synthesis in the Lepidoptera
183(2)
JH inhibits the action of ecdysone
185(3)
Ecdysone may regulate silk synthesis in some spider glands, but silk production in the MA gland seems to be neurally regulated
188(1)
Developmental flexibility may be a precondition for the evolution of caste systems
189(2)
Conclusion
191(2)
9 Conclusions and Looking Forward 193
Natural selection, the repetitive organization of silk genes, and energy exchange are the major factors that direct the evolution of silk proteins and the spiders that produce them
194(2)
Evolutionary analyses of silk protein evolvability, the effects of predators on prey sensory systems, and cost selection are three promising avenues for future evolutionary research and specifically for evolutionary research on spiders
196(2)
The accessibility of silk systems allows us to link evolutionary effects from gene to organism
198(1)
References
199(24)
Index
223