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1 , diatoms, haptophytes, dinoflagellates, and ciliates).
2 mpact, such as the micro- and macronuclei in ciliates).
3 s are surprisingly common in some species of ciliates.
4 e allosteric regulation first appears in the Ciliates.
5 lveolates, that also includes the SC-lacking ciliates.
6 le variation in chromosomal processing among ciliates.
7 istantly related organisms such as yeast and ciliates.
8 nscrambling, in the genome of stichotrichous ciliates.
9 etic code has changed in several lineages of ciliates.
10 ell type, which is capable of ingesting prey ciliates.
11 eins that coat the surface of hymenostomatid ciliates.
12 ngth during the evolution of four oxytrichid ciliates.
13 size to the full-length telomerase RNAs from ciliates.
14 d, comprising 21 tintinnids and 11 aloricate ciliates.
15 estigating the DNA elimination mechanisms of ciliates.
16 ntributes to membrane curvature induction in ciliates.
17 compact, gene-rich somatic genomes of other ciliates.
18 nery closely related to the one described in ciliates.
19 has so far only been shown in one species of ciliates.
20 es and molecular components with free-living ciliates.
21 -dependent system found in other contractile ciliates.
22 odes arose after Stentor branched from other ciliates.
23 ound intracellularly in Onychodromopsis-like ciliates.
24 ally regulated genome rearrangements in some ciliates.
25 ep in the evolution of secretory granules in ciliates.
26 chanism is in fact used extensively in these ciliates.
27 y and diverse single-celled organisms called ciliates.
28 ms as diverse as fungi, animals, plants, and ciliates.
29 lutionally conserved between vertebrates and ciliates.
30 as colonies are consumed by copepods but not ciliates.
31 s important link using mechanistic models of ciliates, a clade of single-celled eukaryotes that eithe
32 ymena thermophila is the best studied of the ciliates, a diversified and successful lineage of eukary
33 Morphospecies are particularly common among ciliates, a group of unicellular eukaryotes that separat
44 oacidin in several lower organisms including ciliates and flagellates suggest the protein plays a rol
47 ic biomass but a relatively low diversity of ciliates and fungi, which significantly impacts feed dig
48 were exposed to chemical cues from copepods, ciliates and heterotrophic dinoflagellates, respectively
50 oflagellates and apicomplexan parasites from ciliates and may have accompanied the acquisition of pla
51 y digitize and track the dynamics of complex ciliates and mine these data for the hidden structure, p
54 onment (bioconcentration) was limited in the ciliates and no quantum dot enrichment (biomagnification
55 ging plastid-lacking chromalveolates such as ciliates and oomycetes would be explained by plastid los
57 l differences between ATP synthase dimers of ciliates and other eukaryotes, the formation of ATP synt
60 or the existence of IESs in phyllopharyngean ciliates and suggest that IES processing in C. uncinata
62 ate the changes in organelle function in the Ciliates and then later used to link amino acid cataboli
63 ans who were interested in the locomotion of ciliates and who considered the undulations of the envel
64 Protists (mostly Rhizaria, Syndinales, and ciliates) and metazoa (predominantly pelagic mollusks an
65 Protists, including amoebae, flagellates, ciliates, and algae, are also vital constituents of glob
66 ties had an increased abundance of fungi and ciliates, and decreased abundances of diatoms and cercoz
67 insects, nematodes, fungi, plants, amoebas, ciliates, and excavates spontaneously and rapidly phase-
71 tophytes, and stramenopiles) and alveolates (ciliates, apicomplexans, and dinoflagellates) share a co
75 ear DNA molecules of a group of hypotrichous ciliates are anomalous in composition, consisting of 61%
76 mber and position in the beta-TP genes among ciliates are in sharp contrast to the stability of the i
77 onuclear versions of genes in stichotrichous ciliates are interrupted by multiple, short, non-coding
78 rmline (micronuclear) genome of hypotrichous ciliates are interrupted by multiple, short, non-coding,
79 rm-line (micronuclear) genes in hypotrichous ciliates are interrupted by numerous, short, noncoding,
84 nts with those in animals, in plants, and in ciliates are remarkable because these distinct histone H
86 ed protist, Euplotes; bacterial symbionts of ciliates are still poorly known because of a lack of ext
89 A prominent group of granule proteins, in ciliates as well as in vertebrate neuronal and endocrine
90 t in high levels of copy number variation in ciliates, as dividing daughter cells can have variable c
91 influenced by salinity variations; tintinnid ciliates attained high abundance and richness at high sa
93 t the EC(50)) as compared to fish, daphnids, ciliates, bacteria, zebrafish embryo, and cell lines.
96 elopment of left-right asymmetry not only in ciliates, but perhaps also in development of left-right
97 t underlie membrane trafficking processes in ciliates, calcium-dependent, phospholipid-binding protei
100 sertion that the unusual genomic features of ciliates can result in rapid and unpredicted patterns of
101 We discuss the potential usefulness of the ciliates' characteristic nuclear duality for further ana
102 cronucleus from the germline micronucleus in ciliates, chromosome rearrangements occur in which speci
104 ses from a wide variety of algae, as well as ciliates (close relatives of apicomplexa), to determine
105 th runoff variables, while the bacterivorous ciliates Colpidium colpoda, Glaucoma scintillans, and Vo
108 from other budding yeasts, vertebrates, and ciliates, define a minimal universal core for telomerase
110 wo other hallmarks of nuclear development in ciliates-domesticated DDE-family transposases and editin
111 heless, some unicellular lineages, including ciliates, early-branching fungi and the alga Chlamydomon
112 he likely scenarios for algal-gene origin in ciliates either via multiple rounds of horizontal gene t
113 In contrast, chemical cues from grazing ciliates enhance colony formation by >25%, a response th
114 m the peroxisomes to the mitochondria as the Ciliates evolved away from plants, fungi, and other prot
118 imentally investigate how Stylonychia lemnae ciliates form feeding clusters of independent cells arou
121 , a response that should be adaptive because ciliates grow three times faster when fed solitary cells
128 s develop patterns, they are most obvious in ciliates; hence, we have turned to a classical unicellul
129 microbial ecosystems consisting of algae and ciliates, imaged in toto at single-cell resolution with
130 oskeletal organization in free-living cells, ciliates in particular, in which these processes are mos
131 ly important clades of microbial eukaryotes, ciliates in the subclasses Oligotrichia and Choreotrichi
135 giant ciliate Stentor coeruleus.(16)(,)(17) Ciliates, including Stentor, have highly polarized cell
137 reveals numerous genetic code alterations in ciliates, including UGA --> tryptophan in Blepharisma am
138 typic variables, such as partitioning of the ciliates into distinct size classes and clumping of the
142 discovered 6 mA methyltransferase complex in ciliates, is composed of MTA1, MTA9, p1 and p2 subunits
143 he insertions--which we find in apicomplexa, ciliates, land plants, and charophyte green algae--direc
145 many eukaryotes but are most exaggerated in ciliates, making them ideal model systems for epigenetic
147 that the use of noncanonical stop codons in ciliates may have coevolved with codon usage biases to a
148 genes in the mature MAC genome, making these ciliates model organisms to study the process of somatic
149 vel lineages of free-living marine anaerobic ciliates, Muranotrichea, cl. nov. and Parablepharismea,
150 e compare the diverse mechanisms employed by ciliates, nematodes, copepods, and lamprey to downsize t
154 among protists within aquatic ecosystems.(1) Ciliates of the Mesodinium rubrum species complex are un
156 e feeding behavior of Tetrahymena pyriformis ciliates on 13 viruses, including bacteriophages, enteri
160 he IESs in C. uncinata with those of 'model' ciliates-Paramecium, Tetrahymena, Euplotes, Oxytricha an
163 overage varies by life strategy: for sessile ciliates, prey encounter is most efficient when cilia ar
164 almost all colpodean and oligohymenophorean ciliates, probably facilitating the extended survival of
165 with larval cultures that did not encounter ciliates, proteins implicated in the response to ciliate
166 nes scrambled in as many as 51 pieces, these ciliates rely on sequence and structural cues to rebuild
167 isting of stramenopiles, dinoflagellates and ciliates represented in both the transcript and protein
168 process of gene unscrambling in hypotrichous ciliates represents one of nature's ingenious solutions
169 l metabolism of representatives from the APM ciliates reveals functional adaptations of metabolic pat
170 ly involve heterotrophic protists, including ciliates, Rhizaria (amoebae, foraminifera, radiolaria) a
171 germ line and soma into distinct cell types, ciliates separate germ line and soma into two distinct n
176 data are consistent with the hypothesis that ciliates such as T.thermophila utilize a Rad51-dependent
178 explain DNA rearrangements in some groups of ciliates, such as Stylonychia or Oxytricha, where extens
179 ly in Archaeplastida but also in diatoms and ciliates, suggesting that PRC2 deposited H3K27me3 to sil
180 o a family of kinases shared with plants and ciliates, suggesting that related CDPKs may have a funct
181 y definition elements in mammals, yeast, and ciliates suggests diverse mechanisms for template bounda
185 ranged in bands around oral structures while ciliates that swim display diverse ciliary arrangements
188 have provided insight into the phylogeny of ciliates, the few studies assessing intraspecific variat
189 n the germline micronucleus of spirotrichous ciliates, the gene segments, or macronuclear destined se
190 ins mediate self/nonself recognition in both ciliates, the mechanisms of mating type determination di
191 emove internal segments of DNA, and, in some ciliates, the reordering of scrambled gene segments.
192 ic G-rich overhangs are precisely defined in ciliates; the length and the terminal nucleotides are fi
194 rocess, which we call MDS shuffling, enables ciliates to generate novel genetic material and gene pro
195 of heterochromatin in organisms ranging from ciliates to humans and provide further evidence that HP1
197 tionary consequences of viable mechanisms in ciliates to transmit acquired characters may create an a
199 rast to all other non-plant eukaryotes (from ciliates to yeast to sea urchins to mammals) where sperm
200 odons at internal mRNA positions in Euplotes ciliates ultimately specify ribosomal frameshifting by o
202 t the above hypothesis, we take advantage of ciliates-unicellular eukaryotes that contain in the same
206 s (IESs) and gene scrambling in hypotrichous ciliates we determined the structure of the micronuclear
207 standing of the evolution of anaerobiosis in ciliates, we predicted the mitochondrial metabolism of c
208 st the idea of a photosynthetic ancestry for ciliates, we used the 27,446 predicted proteins from the
211 re analyzed on days 4-10 post-fertilization; ciliates were present on days 8 and 10 post-fertilizatio
212 ion at microtubule-rich structures unique to ciliates, whereas the fourth is not expressed under cond
213 tem, the replication band (RB) in spirotrich ciliates, which is a localized, motile hub that traverse
216 e usage frequency of CAG(Q) is much lower in ciliates with reassigned TAA(Q) and TAG(Q) codons than i
219 small RNA biogenesis mechanisms, even among ciliates with similar DNA elimination processes, and thu
222 study raises the possibility that taxa like ciliates, with only female meiosis, may therefore underg
223 don reassignment is surprisingly frequent in ciliates, with UGA --> tryptophan occurring twice indepe
224 orm a major clade of obligate anaerobes (APM ciliates) within the Spirotrichea, Armophorea, and Litos