https://www.pagepress.org/journals/eb/issue/feed Trends in Evolutionary Biology 2017-03-21T11:04:12+00:00 Teresa Carrara teresa.carrara@pagepress.org Open Journal Systems <!--<p><strong>Trends in Evolutionary Biology</strong> is an online-only Open Access peer-reviewed journal, publishing articles that span the breadth of modern evolutionary biology. Articles can range in scope from the origin of life to the evolutionary diversification of life and of biomacromolecules, from experimental evolution to evolutionary bioinformatics. <strong>Trends in Evolutionary Biology</strong> publishes original articles, brief reports, editorials and commentaries, review articles, and book reviews.</p>--> <h1>Announcement of closure</h1> <p><strong>Trends in Evolutionary Biology</strong> is no longer open to new submissions. All papers that have been published will be permanently accessible under the terms of open access, at: <a href="https://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/eb/issue/archive">https://www.pagepress.org/journals/index.php/eb/issue/archive</a>.<br /><br />PAGEPress would like to thank the past Editor-in-Chief, and the Editorial Board for all their efforts over the past years.<br /><br />Unfortunately, the number of authors in this field contributing to the journal was not as high as expected.</p> https://www.pagepress.org/journals/eb/article/view/6514 Potential impact of primate-specific SVA retrotransposons during the evolution of human cognitive function 2017-03-21T11:04:12+00:00 Olga Vasieva O.Vasieva@Liverpool.ac.uk Sultan Cetiner sultancetiner@hotmail.com Abigail Savage alsavage4@hotmail.com Gerald G. Schumann Gerald.Schumann@pei.de Vivien J. Bubb jillbubb@liverpool.ac.uk John P. Quinn jquinn@liverpool.ac.uk The SVA family of hominid-specific non-LTR retrotransposon comprises the youngest group of transposable elements in the human genome. The propagation of the most ancient SVA subfamily took place about 13.5 million years ago, and the youngest SVA subfamily appeared in the human genome after the human/chimpanzee divergence. Functional analysis of genes associated with SVA insertions demonstrated their link to multiple ontological categories, with one of the major categories being attributed to brain function. Further analysis of this subset demonstrated that SVA elements expanded their presence in the human genome at different stages of hominoid evolution and were associated with progressively evolving behavioral features that indicate a potential impact of SVA propagation on the cognitive ability of a modern human. Our analysis suggests a potential role of SVAs in the evolution of human central nervous system and especially in the emergence of functional trends relevant to social and parental behavior. Coevolution of behavioral features and reproductive functions are suggested by our analysis and discussed. 2017-02-13T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2017 Olga Vasieva, Sultan Cetiner, Abigail Savage, Gerald G. Schumann, Vivien J. Bubb, John P. Quinn