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Laurence D. Hurst

Researcher at University of Bath

Publications -  310
Citations -  24738

Laurence D. Hurst is an academic researcher from University of Bath. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Genome. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 296 publications receiving 22836 citations. Previous affiliations of Laurence D. Hurst include University of Chicago & University of Oxford.

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Epigenetic Inheritance and Evolutionary Adaptation

TL;DR: The mechanisms behind the heritable potential of (1) metabolic steady-state systems, (2) cellular structural elements and (3) chromatin marks including DNA methylation are described, and the experimental evidences for the transmis- sion of Chromatin marks through meiosis are discussed.
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Evidence for a priming effect on maternal resource allocation: implications for interbrood competition.

TL;DR: It was found that females that invested little into their first brood also invested little (compared with other second broods) into their second brood, suggesting that the assumptions of classical models of parent-offspring conflict are overly simplistic but cannot disprove the existence of interbrood competition.
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Unique cost dynamics elucidate the role of frameshifting errors in promoting translational robustness.

TL;DR: It is proposed that selection on tRNA repertoires may operate to reduce frameshifted errors, and the prediction, unique to frameshifting errors, that differences in translational robustness between the 5′ and 3′ ends of genes should be less pronounced in genomes with higher GC content is derived.
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Accelerated molecular evolution of insect orthologues of ERG28/C14orf1: a link with ecdysteroid metabolism?

TL;DR: This analysis of the evolution ofERG28/C14orf1 suggests that the insect orthologues are evolving today at rates similar to those of the remaining members of the family.
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Evolutionary genomics: reading the bands.

TL;DR: Recent work by Matassi and colleagues has revealed what might be a new and unexpected banding pattern in the human genome and has found that the genes which are close together on the chromosome have similar rates of evolution.