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1 en members of the resident community and the invader.
2 ich cause an epidemic phage infection of the invader.
3 equency-independent prey preferences for the invader.
4 e site of Cas nucleases in the genome of the invader.
5 ion of multiple spacers that target the same invader.
6 s and immunize the host against the matching invader.
7 f cells acquire short DNA sequences from the invader.
8 irect the Cas9 nuclease to its target on the invader.
9 triggers rapid primed adaptation against the invader.
10 sproportionate increases in herbivory on the invader.
11 ify a cleavage site within the genome of the invader.
12 atch between the invaded environment and the invader.
13 ing a competitive advantage in favour of the invader.
14 biological control agent, is now a worldwide invader.
15 invader-degrading Cas protein complex to the invader.
16 ricking neighboring cells into taking up the invader.
17 ident and density-dependent dispersal of the invader.
18 ic pathways in host containment of microbial invaders.
19 species are likely to become the next global invaders.
20 ffered as a reason not to manage troublesome invaders.
21 s in CRISPR arrays to defend against genetic invaders.
22 ost's CRISPR-Cas immune response against its invaders.
23 alls also act as barriers against pathogenic invaders.
24 may create a window of opportunity for these invaders.
25 against bacteria, viruses, and other foreign invaders.
26 gy to defend their cytosol against bacterial invaders.
27 uctions exceeded those induced by non-native invaders.
28 with different microbial pathogens and other invaders.
29 d microorganisms against diverse DNA and RNA invaders.
30 has devised strategies to sequester Mn from invaders.
31 atives based upon traits of the co-occurring invaders.
32 e in the coevolutionary arms race with their invaders.
33 mechanism for dealing with perceived foreign invaders.
34 evolved a variety of defenses against these invaders.
35 is a first line of defense against bacterial invaders.
36 prokaryotes, protecting them against foreign invaders.
37 to protect against a wide array of microbial invaders.
38 t the front lines of resistance to bacterial invaders.
39 arly important determinant of the success of invaders.
40 hat Cas13 can provide immunity against these invaders.
41 cts prokaryotes from viral(1) and plasmid(2) invaders.
42 on to identify and rank the most influential invaders.
43 pecies traits moderate pollen limitation for invaders?
44 reduce establishment of a currently prolific invader (A. petiolata) throughout New England driven by
46 However, only minor ecological impacts of invader abundance and phenotypic traits variation remain
54 ecological effects of native and non-native invaders across levels of biological organisations and r
56 expand their geographical ranges, whether as invaders, agricultural strains or climate migrants, is c
57 llows for the presence of a larger number of invader alleles at the wave front, where effective popul
58 lied either green leaves of the allelopathic invader Alliaria petiolata, a nonsystemic fungicide to s
64 Type III systems must differentiate between invader and native transcripts to prevent autoimmunity.
66 interface, and width of the interface (where invader and resident compete directly) should increase a
67 ter invaders and better defenders; (2) where invader and resident fitness difference is large, invasi
68 locate complementary RNA molecules from the invader and trigger an immune response that eliminates t
69 e short DNA sequences that are captured from invaders and added to the CRISPR array during a process
70 vasion: (1) larger communities evolve better invaders and better defenders; (2) where invader and res
72 ant ungulates enhance demographic success of invaders and depress natives' success, with broad implic
73 crRNAs) that include sequences captured from invaders and direct CRISPR-associated (Cas) proteins to
74 her-connectance food webs tend to host fewer invaders and exert stronger biotic resistance compared t
75 derstanding competitive interactions between invaders and functionally similar native species provide
77 by capturing short DNA sequences from these invaders and integrating them into the CRISPR locus of t
82 ributes to invasion success, if and only if, invaders and residents are competitively similar; (4) in
85 munity, given their role in the detection of invaders and the subsequent task of activating T cells t
87 del provides a key element to forecast novel invaders and to extend pathway-level risk analyses to in
88 dered proteins and regions to fight flexible invaders and viruses and to successfully overcome the vi
89 tively influence host responses to microbial invaders, and mutations in one pathway frequently disrup
90 ystem to limit the colonization potential of invaders, and they can directly compete through producti
91 a similar effect to increasing the number of invaders; and (5) more diverse communities more successf
93 ISPR-associated) genes: sequence segments of invaders are incorporated into host genomes at CRISPR lo
95 the immune response induced by the foreign "invader" are important factors in determining the capaci
96 in native populations and communities, while invaders at lower trophic levels had no consistent impac
100 reveals how to identify the most influential invaders based on statistical measures in dynamically ev
103 single-step reactions suggest that following invader binding, branch migration results in a 2:3 parti
105 this was linked to direct inhibition of the invader by antagonistic communities (antibiosis), and to
106 fic competition might slow the advance of an invader by reducing individual performance and overall p
109 This provides an effective way by which invaders can bypass downstream CRISPR effectors that rel
113 from adaptation should, in general, promote invader competitive ability, empirical demonstrations of
114 lly, a consortium of five cultured bacterial invaders conferred augmented CT-IgA responses in mice fe
115 es have also extensively radiated in counter-invader conflict systems where they serve as nodal nucle
116 In the absence of the higher predator, the invader consumed significantly more basal prey than the
117 erence to predator threat on the part of the invader contributes to its success and impacts within in
119 RISPR-derived RNA (crRNA), which directs the invader-degrading Cas protein complex to the invader.
120 unity, the Cas1-2 integrase complex captures invader-derived prespacer DNA and specifically integrate
122 ied as the nuclease responsible for ultimate invader destruction, is also essential for adaptation.
123 eing riparian specialists, and that riparian invaders disperse in more ways, including by water and h
126 system built from capture and integration of invader DNA into CRISPR (Clustered Regularly Interspaced
129 his model, RecG and Cas3 proteins respond to invader DNA replication forks that are blocked by Cascad
131 Host immunity is based on incorporation of invader DNA sequences in a memory locus (CRISPR), the fo
132 immunity against viruses by capturing short invader DNA sequences, termed spacers, and incorporating
133 In Escherichia coli, Cascade-Cas3 degrades invader DNA to effect immunity, termed 'Interference'.
135 ontrast to most Cas nucleases, which destroy invader DNA(4-7), the type VI effector nuclease Cas13 us
139 ly, warming shifted the plant community from invader-dominated to native-dominated but only in the pr
141 es with a high catabolic similarity with the invader efficiently reduced the invader relative density
142 tions can resist invasion by all multichoice invaders, even while engaging in relatively little punis
145 ta cylindrica), and to determine whether the invader exhibited greater plasticity than six native spe
148 emerge for a wide range of assumptions about invader fitness, competition dynamics, and network struc
150 ISPR response against diversified or related invaders, giving microbes an advantage in the coevolutio
151 t that persistence time can decrease even as invader growth rates (IGRs) increase, which potentially
153 ely similar; (4) increasing the diversity of invaders has a similar effect to increasing the number o
154 preciated, quantifying the impacts of native invaders has important implications because human-assist
155 usly high impact and ecosystem destabilising invader, has rapidly spread across Europe, and is of con
157 comparative methods, we show that successful invaders have fast traits, such as large and frequent cl
163 pests and to modulate responses to specific invaders in a time-of-day-dependent manner (gating).
165 nd future distributions of four forest plant invaders in Minnesota: common buckthorn (Rhamnus cathart
166 her Type III systems, Cmr eliminates plasmid invaders in Pyrococcus furiosus by a mechanism that depe
167 o successfully identify the most influential invaders in the case of weak selection, while a ranking
168 measurements when assessing the impact of an invader, including density dependence, multifunctionalit
169 possess an array of defenses against foreign invaders, including a broadly distributed bacteriophage
170 cteria are continually challenged by foreign invaders, including bacteriophages, and have evolved a v
171 lizes a diverse array of processes to combat invaders, including the restriction of availability of e
172 equences are captured from the genome of the invader, integrated into the CRISPR locus, and transcrib
173 100 years have been colonized by any of the invaders investigated, despite offering climatically sui
174 nt component of studying and managing forest invaders involves knowing where the species are, or coul
175 proposes that the demographic success of an invader is largely affected by the availability of resou
181 ms are used by prokaryotes to defend against invaders like viruses and other mobile genetic elements.
183 e suggests that the successful control of an invader may not necessarily result in beneficial outcome
185 st efficiently recognize the presence of the invader, mobilize cells to the site of infection, and de
186 sponse is host protective to contain foreign invaders, much of today's pharmacopeia can cause serious
192 ple act of nutritional warfare, starving the invader of an essential element, is an effective means o
194 sts show the same small-genome tendencies of invaders of more open habitats, supporting genome size a
196 trand displacement synthesis in which short 'invader' oligonucleotides unwind an RNA duplex through a
198 re due to a proportionately larger effect of invaders on common species, suggesting that rare species
199 ably linked to generate positive feedback of invaders on soil systems through stimulating nutrient cy
200 hat lead to AD are derived not from external invaders or amyloid but from oxidative damage of our own
201 s), where they constitutively defend against invaders or are induced to respond to new assaults.
202 R arrays-whether to defend against different invaders or mediate multi-target editing, regulation, im
203 stion is: What is the probability that a new invader (or a new mutant) will take over a resident popu
204 also assessed whether competition with the "invader" or range-expanding species could reduce individ
206 ed to rapidly exert biocidal effects against invader pathobiotic bacteria, such as Porphyromonas ging
207 would facilitate the establishment of alien invaders phylogenetically distinct from the native flora
209 is effective in triggering degradation of an invader plasmid carrying the matching protospacer sequen
213 Principal component analysis revealed that invader populations from different native ranges consist
214 Variation in phenotypic plasticity among invader populations suggests the potential for evolution
215 ion of plasticity, and greater plasticity of invader populations than native species may underlie inv
216 demonstrate that certain pseudocomplementary Invader probe designs result in very efficient and speci
220 present study, we explore the properties of Invader probes based on larger intercalators, i.e., pery
222 between pseudocomplementary DNA (pcDNA) and Invader probes, which are activated for mixed-sequence d
223 y to recognize and destroy virus and plasmid invaders, prokaryotic CRISPR-Cas systems capture fragmen
224 this, we assessed the growth of a bacterial invader, Ralstonia solanacearum, when introduced into co
225 ity with the invader efficiently reduced the invader relative density, while at high resource availab
229 ies in ecosystems challenged by allelopathic invaders: RFS mutualism disruption drives carbon stress,
230 ctioning as a standalone RNase that degrades invader RNA transcripts, but the mechanism linking invad
232 complex as a novel DNA nuclease activated by invader RNAs containing a crRNA target sequence and a rP
233 complex of the Type III-B Cmr system cleaves invader RNAs recognized by the CRISPR RNA (crRNA ) of th
236 ll CRISPR RNAs that are complementary to the invader's genome and specify the targets of RNA-guided C
238 nization phase, in which short pieces of the invader's genome, known as spacers, are captured and int
239 h the insertion of a short sequence from the invader's genome, known as the 'spacer', into the CRISPR
241 niche divergence, which would facilitate the invader's integration into the community and their coexi
243 on-native prey displace native prey, then an invader's net influence should depend on both its abunda
246 r RNA transcripts, but the mechanism linking invader sensing to Csm6 activity is not understood.
247 partial Csa (Type I-A) module (lacking known invader sequence acquisition and crRNA processing genes)
250 The increased litter quantity and quality of invaders should increase nutrient cycling through faster
252 valuated as a function of dispersal rate and invader source region relative to a control without nati
256 ons could inform more precise predictions of invader spread and impacts across heterogeneous resource
257 cate that a single base pair mismatch in the invader stalls branch migration and displacement occurs
258 single-stranded segments of DNA to which an invader strand can bind to initiate branch migration, th
260 e was found as the main determinant of plant invader success (i.e., establishment, growth, and flower
261 esting that competition is the main limit on invader success at low elevations, as opposed to low-gro
266 QS were less effective at defending against invaders targeted by any of the three CRISPR-Cas systems
269 resistance depends on latitude, habitat and invader taxon, in addition to distinguishing between com
271 rn as they have traits that make them better invaders than their European counterpart (e.g. flight ca
272 ut labile litter, whereas the soils under an invader that input labile litter (kudzu, Pueraria lobata
274 ess in a glasshouse experiment with a forest invader that produces known anti-fungal allelochemicals.
275 S. aureus (MRSA) is a potential bloodstream invader that requires aggressive antimicrobial treatment
276 e new asexual lineages really those powerful invaders that could quickly displace their sexual ancest
277 fungal symbionts (RFSs) for soil resources, invaders that disrupt plant-RFS mutualisms can significa
278 tects bacteria and archaea from nucleic acid invaders through an RNA-mediated nucleic acid cleavage m
281 ems function by acquiring genetic records of invaders to facilitate robust interference upon reinfect
282 We suggest that the phenotypic responses of invaders to the removal programme have strong effects on
284 ancy was primarily associated with traits of invaders, traits of recipient communities, and invader-c
286 tion (biotic resistance to a notorious woody invader), underscoring the potential for restoring ecolo
288 reveals how to identify the most influential invaders using statistical measures in structured commun
292 We found that the relative density of the invader was reduced by increasing resident community ric
293 Whilst impacts are well-documented for many invaders, we lack tools to predict biotic resistance and
295 n successfully identify the most influential invaders when the selection strength is weak, while more
297 ce against the competitive effects of strong invaders, which likely promoted their persistence in inv
298 based on their state of adaptation to repel invaders while recruiting beneficial resident bacteria t
299 ccessful early in stand development, whereas invaders with conservative carbon capture strategies per