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| Open AccessConvergent evolutionary patterns of heterostyly across angiosperms support the pollination-precision hypothesis
Heterostylous plants have floral morphs bearing female and male sex organs at reciprocal heights. Here the authors show that, across angiosperms, heterostyly is associated with tubed flowers pollinated by long-tongued insects, supporting the Darwinian hypothesis about precise pollen transfer between heterostylous morphs.
- Violeta Simón-Porcar
- , Marcial Escudero
- & Juan Arroyo
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Article
| Open AccessDelayed increase in stone tool cutting-edge productivity at the Middle-Upper Paleolithic transition in southern Jordan
Lithic cutting-edge productivity is a way of quantifying prehistoric human technological evolution. Here, the authors examine the Middle-to-Upper Paleolithic transition across eight assemblages in the eastern Mediterranean, finding the transition to be later than expected and associated with bladelet technology development.
- Seiji Kadowaki
- , Joe Yuichiro Wakano
- & Sate Massadeh
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Article
| Open AccessRepeated upslope biome shifts in Saxifraga during late-Cenozoic climate cooling
The origins of alpine plant diversity are unclear. Here, the authors provide a time-calibrated molecular phylogenetic tree for Saxifraga, a diverse alpine plant clade, and show that upslope biome shifts into the alpine zone occurred more often than dispersal between alpine regions.
- Tom Carruthers
- , Michelangelo S. Moerland
- & Wolf L. Eiserhardt
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Article
| Open AccessHost association and intracellularity evolved multiple times independently in the Rickettsiales
Rickettsiales encompass diverse host-associated bacteria, including pathogens, parasites, and mutualists. This study shows that obligate associations with their hosts likely evolved multiple times independently, thus providing an alternative, generalisable view, on evolution of intracellularity.
- Michele Castelli
- , Tiago Nardi
- & Davide Sassera
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Article
| Open AccessPredicting the risk and speed of drug resistance emerging in soil-transmitted helminths during preventive chemotherapy
Resistance to chemotherapy for soil-transmitted helminth infection has been detected in veterinary settings but not yet in human infections. Here, the authors investigate the risk of resistance in humans and how it may change as a result of scaling-up preventative deworming programs.
- Luc E. Coffeng
- , Wilma A. Stolk
- & Sake J. de Vlas
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Article
| Open AccessEvolution of chemosensory tissues and cells across ecologically diverse Drosophilids
Chemosensory tissues are remarkably variable between species but the cause of this diversity is unclear. Here, the authors conduct transcriptomic analyses of chemosensory tissues from diverse Drosophila species, revealing evidence of stabilizing selection and recent species- and sex-specific changes.
- Gwénaëlle Bontonou
- , Bastien Saint-Leandre
- & J. Roman Arguello
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Article
| Open AccessUnzipped genome assemblies of polyploid root-knot nematodes reveal unusual and clade-specific telomeric repeats
Telomeres protect the extremities of linear chromosomes and are involved in ageing, senescence and genome stability. Here, the authors have identified peculiar and specific telomeric DNA repeats in the genomes of devastating plant-parasitic nematodes, opening new perspectives for their control.
- Ana Paula Zotta Mota
- , Georgios D. Koutsovoulos
- & Etienne G. J. Danchin
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Article
| Open AccessEffects of climate and environmental heterogeneity on the phylogenetic structure of regional angiosperm floras worldwide
Using a dataset that included 341,846 species in 391 angiosperm floras worldwide, this study finds that the global phylogenetic structure of angiosperms shows clear and meaningful relationships with environmental factors and that current climatic variables have the highest predictive power for phylogenetic metrics reflecting recent evolutionary relationships.
- Hong Qian
- , Shenhua Qian
- & Michael Kessler
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Article
| Open AccessAnti-CRISPR Anopheles mosquitoes inhibit gene drive spread under challenging behavioural conditions in large cages
CRISPR-based gene drives have the potential to spread within populations and are considered as promising vector control tools. Here the authors show an anti-drive mosquito strain that prevents the spread and collapse of a population suppression gene drive in laboratory Anopheles mosquito large cage trials in complex ecological and behavioral conditions.
- Rocco D’Amato
- , Chrysanthi Taxiarchi
- & Ruth Müller
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Article
| Open AccessEvolutionary trajectory of pattern recognition receptors in plants
Plant cell-surface receptors perceive both self- and nonself-molecules to regulate biological processes. Here the authors show that a subclass of phytohormone and immune receptors share a common origin, which have diverged to perceive distinct ligands and activate differential downstream responses.
- Bruno Pok Man Ngou
- , Michele Wyler
- & Ken Shirasu
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Article
| Open AccessContScout: sensitive detection and removal of contamination from annotated genomes
It is unclear whether naturally evolved de novo proteins have stable, folded structures. Here, systematic identification and structural modeling of de novo genes, this study reveals that a small subset of these proteins may have well-folded structures, and were likely born with these structures.
- Balázs Bálint
- , Zsolt Merényi
- & László G. Nagy
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Article
| Open AccessCompetition-driven eco-evolutionary feedback reshapes bacteriophage lambda’s fitness landscape and enables speciation
Niche theory is often invoked to explain biodiversity, but it does not explain how species evolve to exploit unique niches. Using a combination of experimental and computational approaches, this study shows that resource competition can deform fitness landscapes, opening new pathways that promote ecological speciation.
- Michael B. Doud
- , Animesh Gupta
- & Justin R. Meyer
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| Open AccessThe origin and structural evolution of de novo genes in Drosophila
It is unclear whether naturally evolved de novo proteins have stable, folded structures. Here, through systematic identification and structural modeling of de novo genes, this study reveals that a small subset of these proteins may have well-folded structures, and were likely born with these structures.
- Junhui Peng
- & Li Zhao
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Article
| Open AccessLife-history stage determines the diet of ectoparasitic mites on their honey bee hosts
Varroa and Tropilaelaps mites threaten honeybee health. This study finds that mites alter feeding habits depends on their own, and hosts’, life history stage. Mites feed on the host hemolymph when parasitizing pupae during their reproductive stage but consume fat body during their dispersal stage.
- Bin Han
- , Jiangli Wu
- & Shufa Xu
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Article
| Open AccessUltraconserved bacteriophage genome sequence identified in 1300-year-old human palaeofaeces
Bacterial viruses (phages) are generally recognised as rapidly evolving biological entities. Here, Rozwalak et al. analyse DNA sequence datasets generated from ancient palaeofaeces and identify 298 phage genomes from the last 5300 years, including a 1300-year-old phage genome nearly identical to a present-day virus that infects human gut bacteria.
- Piotr Rozwalak
- , Jakub Barylski
- & Andrzej Zielezinski
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Article
| Open AccessThe angiosperm radiation played a dual role in the diversification of insects and insect pollinators
Interactions with angiosperms are thought to have had a significant impact on insect diversification. Here, the authors use a Bayesian process-based approach to find that angiosperm radiation played a dual role that changed through time, mitigating insect extinction in the Cretaceous and promoting insect origination in the Cenozoic.
- David Peris
- & Fabien L. Condamine
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Article
| Open AccessUsing big sequencing data to identify chronic SARS-Coronavirus-2 infections
Chronic SARS-CoV-2 infections have been hypothesised to be sources of new variants. Here, the authors use large-scale genome sequencing data to identify mutations predictive of chronic infections, which may therefore be relevant in future variants.
- Sheri Harari
- , Danielle Miller
- & Adi Stern
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Article
| Open AccessMarkets as drivers of selection for highly virulent poultry pathogens
Live poultry markets in rural areas can be hotspots for transmission of pathogens, but the effects of markets on selection of viral virulence are not known. This study demonstrates through mathematical modelling that high turnover rate and persistence of viral particles can select for highly virulent pathogens in markets.
- Justin K. Sheen
- , Fidisoa Rasambainarivo
- & C. Jessica E. Metcalf
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Article
| Open AccessConserved chromatin and repetitive patterns reveal slow genome evolution in frogs
Frogs are an ancient and ecologically diverse group of amphibians that include important model systems. This paper reports genome sequences of multiple frog species, revealing remarkable stability of frog chromosomes and centromeres, along with highly recombinogenic extended subtelomeres.
- Jessen V. Bredeson
- , Austin B. Mudd
- & Daniel S. Rokhsar
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Article
| Open AccessMeta-analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animals
A key assumption of ageing research is that old males are less fertile. A meta-analysis of ejaculate traits challenges this, by showing senescence is not consistently observed across 157 species of animals, but is specific to only certain taxa and ejaculate traits. The study also highlights methodological factors that might modulate the evidence for reproductive senescence.
- Krish Sanghvi
- , Regina Vega-Trejo
- & Irem Sepil
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Article
| Open AccessTowards estimating the number of strains that make up a natural bacterial population
What a microbial strain is and how many strains make up a natural bacterial population remain elusive concepts. Here, Viver et al. analyse Salinibacter ruber isolates and metagenomes from two solar salterns, revealing gaps within the species sequence space that they use to define and quantify sub-species categories, such as genomovars and strains, that co-exist in a saltern pond.
- Tomeu Viver
- , Roth E. Conrad
- & Ramon Rossello-Mora
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Article
| Open AccessEvolution of optimal growth temperature in Asgard archaea inferred from the temperature dependence of GDP binding to EF-1A
The archaeal ancestor of eukaryotes belonged to the phylum Asgardarchaeota, or Asgard archaea. Here, the authors use ancestral sequence reconstruction and experimentally determine the optimal GDP-binding temperature of a translation elongation factor from ancient and extant Asgard archaea, to infer optimal growth temperatures for eukaryotes’ ancestors.
- Zhongyi Lu
- , Runyue Xia
- & Meng Li
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Article
| Open AccessIntegrative single-cell characterization of a frugivorous and an insectivorous bat kidney and pancreas
Frugivory evolved multiple times in mammals, including bats. Here, the authors use integrative single-cell sequencing on fruit and insect bat kidneys and pancreases and identify cell population, gene expression and regulatory differences associated with frugivory that also relate to diabetes.
- Wei E. Gordon
- , Seungbyn Baek
- & Nadav Ahituv
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Article
| Open AccessVESPA: an optimized protocol for accurate metabarcoding-based characterization of vertebrate eukaryotic endosymbiont and parasite assemblages
DNA sequencing methods for characterizing microbial communities are well developed for bacteria, archaea and fungi, but less so for eukaryotic parasites and commensals. Here, the authors present an optimized and validated metabarcoding protocol for host-associated eukaryotic communities.
- Leah A. Owens
- , Sagan Friant
- & Tony L. Goldberg
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Article
| Open AccessMesozoic evolution of cicadas and their origins of vocalization and root feeding
The evolution of cicadas is unclear due to a lack of understanding of transitional features. Here, the authors assess adult and nymph mid-Cretaceous cicadas, to elucidate their morphological evolution and identify evidence of the origins of cicada sound-generation and subterranean lifestyle.
- Hui Jiang
- , Jacek Szwedo
- & Bo Wang
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Article
| Open AccessSilica-associated proteins from hexactinellid sponges support an alternative evolutionary scenario for biomineralization in Porifera
Sponges, being early-diverging metazoans and the only animals to develop extensive skeletons of silica, have potential to inform about the evolutionary steps of metazoan traits, including biomineralization. Here, the authors characterize two proteins associated with the hexactinellid sponge silica.
- Katsuhiko Shimizu
- , Michika Nishi
- & Manuel Maldonado
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Article
| Open AccessFunctional host-specific adaptation of the intestinal microbiome in hominids
Here, Rühlemann et al. analyze the gut microbiome of wild-living African great apes (Gorillas, Bonobos, Chimpanzees) in comparison to that of humans, identifying host specific patterns and shared evolutionary conserved traits disrupted in humans.
- M. C. Rühlemann
- , C. Bang
- & A. Franke
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Article
| Open AccessUnfamiliarity generates costly aggression in interspecific avian dominance hierarchies
Although intraspecific dominance hierarchies are common, large scale interspecific dominance hierarchies are unknown. Using data from hundreds of avian species, the authors find that species that are more familiar with each other engage in less aggression and the aggression is resolved more directly.
- Gavin M. Leighton
- , Jonathan P. Drury
- & Eliot T. Miller
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Article
| Open AccessDental morphology in Homo habilis and its implications for the evolution of early Homo
The origin of the genus Homo is debated. Here, the authors investigate the morphology of the H. habilis enamel-dentine junction using a sample of 911 hominin and extant ape teeth, finding that H. habilis has more in common with Australopithecus than later members of the genus Homo.
- Thomas W. Davies
- , Philipp Gunz
- & Matthew M. Skinner
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Article
| Open AccessAfrican bushpigs exhibit porous species boundaries and appeared in Madagascar concurrently with human arrival
The evolutionary history of pigs in Africa is unclear. Here, the authors examine 67 whole genomes, finding incomplete speciation between bushpigs and red river hogs as well as evidence suggesting that humans brought bushpigs to Madagascar 1000-5000 years ago.
- Renzo F. Balboa
- , Laura D. Bertola
- & Rasmus Heller
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Article
| Open AccessThe polyketide to fatty acid transition in the evolution of animal lipid metabolism
Much is still unknown of the evolution of animal metabolic enzymes. This study describes a new enzyme family bridging the production of polyketides and membrane lipids. This expands the known biochemical repertoire of animals for making ecologically and biomedically important natural products.
- Zhenjian Lin
- , Feng Li
- & Eric W. Schmidt
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Article
| Open AccessInferring language dispersal patterns with velocity field estimation
Reconstructing language dispersal patterns is important for understanding cultural spread and demic diffusion. Here, the authors use a computational approach based on velocity field estimation to infer the dispersal patterns of Indo-European, Sino-Tibetan, Bantu, and Arawak language families.
- Sizhe Yang
- , Xiaoru Sun
- & Menghan Zhang
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Article
| Open AccessA genus in the bacterial phylum Aquificota appears to be endemic to Aotearoa-New Zealand
Previous reports of microbial endemism have been restricted to sub-genus level taxa. Here, Power et al. present evidence supporting that a bacterial genus, Venenivibrio, is endemic to Aotearoa-New Zealand.
- Jean F. Power
- , Carlo R. Carere
- & Matthew B. Stott
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Article
| Open AccessEffects of plant tissue permeability on invasion and population bottlenecks of a phytopathogen
Bottleneck effects of plant barriers on pathogenic invasions remain unclear. Using a random barcoding approach, this study investigates how plant root permeability limits the invasion and population bottlenecks of a phytopathogenic Ralstonia.
- Gaofei Jiang
- , Yuling Zhang
- & Zhong Wei
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Article
| Open AccessGene regulation and speciation in a migratory divide between songbirds
Little is known about the genetic basis of many natural behaviours and how they contribute to speciation. Here the authors address this by identifying genes linked to migration of a songbird, investigating how these gene are regulated, and connecting them to potential barriers between species.
- Matthew I. M. Louder
- , Hannah Justen
- & Kira E. Delmore
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Article
| Open AccessQuantifying negative selection in human 3ʹ UTRs uncovers constrained targets of RNA-binding proteins
Identifying functional genetic variants in non-coding regions of the human genome is challenging. Here the authors apply their iMAPS approach to 3ʹ untranslated regions, identifying thousands of variants that disrupt post-transcriptional gene regulation.
- Scott D. Findlay
- , Lindsay Romo
- & Christopher B. Burge
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Article
| Open AccessThe evolution of centriole degradation in mouse sperm
Centrioles have a conserved structure and function but have diversified in sperm. Here the authors provide insight into the molecular mechanisms and adaptive evolution underlying this diversification.
- Sushil Khanal
- , Ankit Jaiswal
- & Tomer Avidor-Reiss
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Article
| Open AccessGenomic portrait and relatedness patterns of the Iron Age Log Coffin culture in northwestern Thailand
Large log coffins placed on stilts in natural caves characterize the Iron Age of northwestern Thailand. Here, the authors conduct archaeogenetic analyses of 33 individuals, identifying a large, well-connected community, where genetic relatedness played a significant role in the mortuary ritual.
- Selina Carlhoff
- , Wibhu Kutanan
- & Johannes Krause
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Article
| Open AccessPervasive epistasis exposes intramolecular networks in adaptive enzyme evolution
Here, the authors perform statistical analyses to demonstrate that epistasis is highly pervasive in adaptive evolutionary trajectories of enzymes. Using epistatic data, they expose higher-order rewiring of intramolecular amino acid networks.
- Karol Buda
- , Charlotte M. Miton
- & Nobuhiko Tokuriki
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Article
| Open AccessMultiple independent losses of the biosynthetic pathway for two tropane alkaloids in the Solanaceae family
Hyoscyamine and scopolamine (HS) are two tropane alkaloids with medicinal significance produced by distantly related lineages in the Solanaceae family. Here, the authors assemble the genome of three HS-producing and one non-HS-producing species within Solanaceae, and reveal the evolution of the biosynthetic pathway.
- Jiao Yang
- , Ying Wu
- & Jianquan Liu
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Article
| Open AccessA histone demethylase links the loss of plasticity to nongenetic inheritance and morphological change
A challenge for understanding plasticity is connecting macroevolutionary patterns to molecular mechanisms. Using a nematode model, this study identifies a mediator of nongenetic inheritance which is linked to multigenerational shifts in plasticity and morphology.
- Nicholas A. Levis
- & Erik J. Ragsdale
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Article
| Open AccessDiversity and dissemination of viruses in pathogenic protozoa
Heeren et al study the evolutionary genomics of leishmaniasis in Peru and Bolivia to show that parasite hybridization increases the prevalence, diversity and spread of viruses that have been previously associated with disease severity and treatment failure.
- Senne Heeren
- , Ilse Maes
- & Frederik Van den Broeck
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Article
| Open AccessMaternal dominance contributes to subgenome differentiation in allopolyploid fishes
Cyprinids fish species contain multiple subgenomes as a result of past duplications. Here, Xu et al. report new genomes of 21 cyprinid fish and conclude that observed subgenome dominance patterns are likely due to both maternal dominance and transposable element densities in each polyploid.
- Min-Rui-Xuan Xu
- , Zhen-Yang Liao
- & Hua-Hao Zhang
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Article
| Open AccessTandem gene duplications contributed to high-level azole resistance in a rapidly expanding Candida tropicalis population
Candida tropicalis is a cause of invasive candidiasis infection in humans that has been increasingly associated with azole drug resistance. In this study, the authors investigate the genetic basis for azole resistance through analysis of whole-genome sequencing and multilocus sequence typing data.
- Xin Fan
- , Rong-Chen Dai
- & Meng Xiao
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Article
| Open AccessUbiquitination-mediated Golgi-to-endosome sorting determines the toxin-antidote duality of fission yeast wtf meiotic drivers
Meiotic drivers of the wtf family kill progeny lacking the driver by producing a toxin and an antidote. Here, authors reveal that ubiquitination-mediated sorting of the antidote prevents it from becoming toxic and enables it to neutralize the toxin.
- Jin-Xin Zheng
- , Tong-Yang Du
- & Li-Lin Du
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Article
| Open AccessEvolutionary modelling indicates that mosquito metabolism shapes the life-history strategies of Plasmodium parasites
Little is known about how malaria parasites adapt the speed of their development to their mosquito vectors. Using an evolutionary modelling framework, this study predicts that the metabolic status of mosquitoes shapes the parasites’ life-history strategies and transmission dynamics.
- Paola Carrillo-Bustamante
- , Giulia Costa
- & Elena A. Levashina
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Article
| Open AccessTopological structures and syntenic conservation in sea anemone genomes
Slowly evolving cnidarians are useful models to study genome architecture. This study shows that sea anemones have a high degree of chromosomal macrosynteny, but poor microsynteny conservation. This is correlated with a small genome size and short distances of cis-regulatory elements to genes.
- Bob Zimmermann
- , Juan D. Montenegro
- & Ulrich Technau
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Matters Arising
| Open AccessReply to: Revisiting the identification of Syllipsimopodi bideni and timing of the decabrachian-octobrachian divergence
- Christopher D. Whalen
- & Neil H. Landman
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Article
| Open AccessPhylogeny and molecular evolution of the first local monkeypox virus cluster in Guangdong Province, China
The first known local mpox outbreak in Guangdong Province, China occurred in June 2023. Here, the authors perform phylogenetic and molecular evolution analysis of ten mpox virus genome sequences from this outbreak, and place them in the context of other samples detected in surrounding regions.
- Jianhai Yu
- , Xin Zhang
- & Baisheng Li
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