Research Interests | ||
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Current research interests
Nedelcu AM. Volvox. (in press). In World Book Encyclopedia. World Book Publishing.
Nedelcu AM,
Borza T, and
Figueroa-Martinez F, Nedelcu AM,
Smith DR, A Reyes-Prieto. 2015. When the lights go out: the evolutionary
fate of free-living colorless green algae.New Phytologist 206:972-982. Keeling
PJ et al. 2014. The Marine Microbial Eukaryote Transcriptome Sequencing
Project (MMETSP):
Illuminating the functional diversity of eukaryotic
life in the oceans through transcriptome sequencing. PLoS Biology. 12(6): e1001889
Lang BF and AM Nedelcu.
2011. Plastid genomes of algae. In Bock R and Knoop V (eds) Genomics
of Chloroplasts and Mitochondria. Advances in Photosynthesis and Respiration
Series. Springer Vol. 35. pp. 59-87.
Burger G and AM Nedelcu. 2011. Mitochondrial genomes of
algae. In Bock R and Knoop V (eds) Genomics of Chloroplasts and
Mitochondria. Advances in Photosynthesis and Respiration Series. Springer Vol. 35. pp. 127-157.
Sprouffske K,
Aktipis CA,
Radich JP, Carroll M, Nedelcu AM, and
Maley CC. 2013. An evolutionary explanation for the
presence of cancer non-stem cells in neoplasms Evolutionary Applications 6:92-101. Nedelcu AM and Caulin A.
2011. The evolution of cancer suppressor mechanisms. In Maley C (ed)
"Frontiers of Evolution in Cancer". Springer (submitted).
Nedelcu AM and C. Tan.
2007.
Early diversification and complex evolutionary history of the p53 tumor
suppressor gene family. Development Genes and Evolution 217:
801-806.
Nedelcu AM, Driscoll WW, Durand PM, Herron M, and Rashidi E. 2011. On the paradigm of adaptive suicide in the unicellular world. Evolution 65:3-20. Nedelcu AM. 2009. Comparative genomics of phylogenetically diverse unicellular eukaryotes provide new insights into the genetic basis for the evolution of the programmed cell death machinery. Journal of Molecular Evolution 68: 256-268. Nedelcu AM. 2006. Evidence for p53-like-mediated stress responses in green algae. FEBS Letters 580:3013-3017
Nedelcu AM, A Blakney and K Logue. 2009. Functional replacement of a primary metabolic pathway via multiple independent eukaryote-to-eukaryote gene transfers and selective retention. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 22: 1882-1894 Nedelcu AM, I Miles, K Karol, A Fagir. 2008. Adaptive eukaryote-to eukaryote gene transfer: Stress-related genes of algal origin in the closest unicellular relatives of animals. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 21: 1852-1860
Michod RE.,
Bernstein H,
Nedelcu AM. 2008.
Adaptive Value of Sex in Microbial Pathogens.
Infection, Genetics and Evolution 8: 267-285. Nedelcu AM. 2005.
Sex as a response to oxidative stress: Stress genes co-opted for sex.
Proceedings of Royal Society London B,
Biological Sciences 272: 1935-1940 Nedelcu AM, Marcu O,
and RE Michod.
2004. Sex as a response to oxidative stress: A
two-fold increase in cellular reactive oxygen species activates
sex genes.
Proceedings of Royal Society London B,
Biological Sciences 271: 1591-1596; download
pdf
here Nedelcu AM and RE Michod. 2003. Sex
as a response to oxidative stress: The effect of antioxidants on sexual
induction in a facultatively sexual lineage. Proc. Royal Society
London B, Biological Sciences 270: S136-S139; download reprint
here. |
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This site was last updated 05/17/11