Our Chemists published a groundbreaking achievement in structural biology! With their colleagues, they developed a new method to determine high-resolution protein structure from a single crystal grown inside a living cell. https://t.co/gb652oypu3
First article on the immune responses of poppy from the Department of Experimental Plant Biology and other collaborators. We described the response of four poppy cultivars after treatment with a peptide derived from bacterial flagellin: https://t.co/3LFjmZt8pz
The largest scientific study to date on neophobia has revealed why some bird species are more fearful than others. The research, with a Czech connection, shows that key factors include dietary requirements and migratory behavior. https://t.co/d7TYpAfq7e
Study by our PhD student, Thinles Chondol, explores how high Himalayan plants (4200–5300 m) sustain photochemical performance across the cold-arid Ladakh Range. Are they stressed or functionally adapted to extreme conditions and seasonal changes? https://t.co/JeYiSznS6z
📣New paper alert📣
Michiel D. de Groot ran laboratory experiments at the University of South Bohemia, which revealed that abiotic factors DO significantly affect parasitism of Harmonia axyridis by Hesperomyces harmoniae. Congratulations! Read more: https://t.co/B1mp6kQzHd
New article in Genome Biology and Evolution. Blues have high chromosome numbers associated with increased diversification and their karyotypes reveal strategies to maintain genomic integrity amidst profound karyotypic changes: https://t.co/KK6L0SpuPZ
Salicylic acid plays a key role in plant immunity. Researchers from FSc USB and IEB CAS revealed that its high concentration suppresses the production of anthocyanins. They uncovered a previously unknown mechanism in plant defense strategies. https://t.co/lzq5vU7xmW
Neoadjuvant MBTA immunotherapy prevents cancer recurrence and metastases. One of the authors of the article is our former student Ondřej Uher. Read more: https://t.co/pYLUkY9Zvo
The book Handbook of Trait-Based Ecology: From Theory to R Tools by Assoc. Prof. Francesco de Bello from the Department of Botany at the FSc USB, is now also being released in Japanese.
Parasites are expected to speciate by adapting to specific hosts, but examples of it are rare. New research reveals that it is happening in sympatry, when strong Darwinian selection overpowers gene exchange between populations of a fish parasite. https://t.co/8khgAKgkFV
Researching amber revealed two of the oldest undescribed species of fossil animal-pathogenic fungi. This study found that Ophiocordyceps fungi originated around 100-140 million years ago and offers a glimpse into early insect-fungal interactions! https://t.co/R1wSONxWnl
The review by Dr. Adam Bajgar and Dr. Gabriela Krejcova explores antiviral & antibacterial immune memory, highlights key open questions, and presents Drosophila melanogaster as a model for innate immune memory and potential insect vaccination.
https://t.co/5dciYWZIS5
Immune cells don’t just fight infection—they manage the body’s energy too. A Trends in Biochemical Sciences spotlight on Nedbalova et al. shows they release adenosine, signaling other tissues to dial down energy use.
https://t.co/ZiYpJfUdj7
https://t.co/ygftg9XfbG
Congratulations to our student Gabriela Krejčová for receiving a runner-up recognition for her phd thesis by the European Drosophila Society!
https://t.co/NvgOFf7bAb
New global study of dark diversity by #DarkDivNet led by Meelis Pärtel, where Aleš, Maruška, and Eva are co-authors with the dataset from Novohradské Hory, is now out in @Nature: https://t.co/0GJnWmafJx
The retreat of glaciers and the creation of new coasts: a team led by a glaciologist from FSc USB published a groundbreaking study in Nature Climate Change. https://t.co/dRJQ72odyV
Paper on the diversity of malaria in threatened passerines, by our phd student Dragomir Damnjanović, is featured on the cover page of the International Journal for Parasitology. https://t.co/SKNWcFhyqW
Traditional grasslands face biodiversity loss from mismanagement. A 30-year experiment showed that fertilization had stronger negative effects than mowing abandonment, with slower community recovery post-fertilization suggesting that resilience depends on past land use.
Secondly: Half a Century of Temperate Non-Forest Vegetation Changes: No Net Loss in Species Richness, but Considerable Shifts in Taxonomic and Functional Composition was published in Global Change Biology - https://t.co/p0uIagSN1m.