Taxonomic composition and environmental distribution of post-extinction rhynchonelliform brachiopod faunas: Constraints on short-term survival and the role of anoxia in the end-Permian mass extinction

2013 ◽  
Vol 374 ◽  
pp. 284-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew E. Clapham ◽  
Margaret L. Fraiser ◽  
Pedro J. Marenco ◽  
Shu-zhong Shen
Paleobiology ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 187-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas H. Erwin

Paleozoic and post-Paleozoic marine faunas are strikingly different in composition. Paleozoic marine gastropods may be divided into archaic and modern groups based on taxonomic composition, ecological role, and morphology. Paleozoic assemblages were dominated by pleurotomariids (Eotomariidae and Phymatopleuridae), the Pseudozygopleuridae, and, to a lesser extent, the Euomphalidae, while Triassic assemblages were dominated by the Trochiina, Amberleyacea, and new groups of Loxonematoidea and Pleurotomariina. Several new groups of caenogastropods appeared as well. Yet the importance of the end-Permian mass extinction in generating these changes has been questioned. As part of a study of the diversity history of upper Paleozoic and Triassic gastropods, to test the extent to which taxonomic and morphologic trends established in the late Paleozoic are continued after the extinction, and to determine the patterns of selectivity operating during the extinction, I assembled generic and morphologic diversity data for 396 genera in 75 families from the Famennian through the Norian stages. Within this interval, gastropod genera underwent an adaptive radiation during the Visean and Namurian, largely of pleurotomariids, a subsequent period of dynamic stability through the Leonardian, a broad-based decline during the end-Permian mass extinction, and a two-phase post-extinction rebound during the Triassic. The patterns of generic diversity within superfamily-level clades were analyzed using Q-mode factor analysis and detrended correspondence analysis.The results demonstrate that taxonomic affinity, previous clade history, generic age, and gross morphology did not determine survival probability of genera during the end-Permian extinction, with the exception of the bellerophontids, nor did increasing diversity within clades or expansion of particular morphologies prior to the extinction facilitate survival during the extinction or success after it. The pleurotomariids diversified during the Lower Permian, but were heavily hit by the extinction. Similarly, trochiform and turriculate morphologies, among those which Vermeij (1987) has identified as having increased predation resistance, were expanding in the late Paleozoic, but suffered similar extinction rates to other nondiversifying clades. Survival was a consequence of broad geographic and environmental distribution, as was the case during background periods.


2002 ◽  
Vol 70 (3) ◽  
pp. 1640-1644 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aroem Naroeni ◽  
Françoise Porte

ABSTRACT Brucella species are gram-negative, facultative intracellular bacteria that infect humans and animals. These organisms can survive and replicate within a membrane-bound compartment inside professional and nonprofessional phagocytic cells. Inhibition of phagosome-lysosome fusion has been proposed as a mechanism for intracellular survival in both types of cells. We have previously shown that the maturation inhibition of the Brucella-containing phagosome appears to be restricted at the phagosomal membrane, but the precise molecular mechanisms and factors involved in this inhibition have yet to be identified. Interestingly, recent studies have revealed that caveolae or lipid rafts are implicated in the entry of some microorganisms into host cells and mediate an endocytic pathway avoiding fusion with lysosomes. In this study, we investigated the role of cholesterol and the ganglioside GM1, two components of lipid rafts, in entry and short-term survival of Brucella suis in murine macrophages, by using cholesterol-sequestering (filipin and β-methyl cyclodextrin) and GM1-binding (cholera toxin B) molecules. Our results suggest that lipid rafts may provide a portal for entry of Brucella into murine macrophages under nonopsonic conditions, thus allowing phagosome-lysosome fusion inhibition, and provide further evidence to support the idea that the phagosome maturation inhibition is restricted at the phagosomal membrane.


Author(s):  
Jack A. Lesser ◽  
Donald E. Saunders

In 1975, Cundiff (1975) wrote an editorial in the Journal of Marketing titled, What is the Role of Marketing in a Recession? The 1974/1975 recession was more damaging to the economy than any recession since the Great Depression. Implicit in his editorial was the momentary concern corporations would emphasize cost reduction over marketing innovation to insure their short-term survival. Numerous articles were published in response to his article about how marketing and consumers appeared to be changing during the period.


2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (6-S4) ◽  
pp. 228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert S. Svatek ◽  
Arlene Siefker-Radtke ◽  
Colin P. Dinney

Metastatic or unresectable disease is identified in approximately20% of patients presenting with invasive urothelial cancer. Inaddition, up to 50% of patients will develop metastases followingradical cystectomy for clinically localized disease. Multiagentcisplatin-based chemotherapy is considered standard first-linetreatment for these patients. Although urothelial cancer is considereda chemosensitive tumour, metastatic disease is associatedwith poor prognosis and short-term survival. Here, we review therole of a multidisciplinary approach to treating patients with metastaticurothelial cancer.


Lung Cancer ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 221-229 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ping Yang ◽  
Akira Yokomizo ◽  
Henry D Tazelaar ◽  
Randolph S Marks ◽  
Timothy G Lesnick ◽  
...  

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