NLM DIR Seminar Schedule
UPCOMING SEMINARS
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Jan. 20, 2026 Anastasia Gulyaeva
TBD -
Jan. 22, 2026 Mario Flores
AI Pipeline for Characterization of the Tumor Microenvironment -
Jan. 27, 2026 Zhaohui Liang
TBD -
Jan. 29, 2026 Mehdi Bagheri Hamaneh
FastSpel: A simple peptide spectrum predictor that achieves deep learning-level performance at a fraction of the computational cost -
Feb. 3, 2026 Matthew Diller
TBD
RECENT SEMINARS
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Jan. 8, 2026 Won Gyu Kim
LitSense 2.0: AI-powered biomedical information retrieval with sentence and passage level knowledge discovery -
Dec. 16, 2025 Sarvesh Soni
ArchEHR-QA: A Dataset and Shared Task for Grounded Question Answering from Electronic Health Records -
Dec. 2, 2025 Qingqing Zhu
CT-Bench & CARE-CT: Building Reliable Multimodal AI for Lesion Analysis in Computed Tomography -
Nov. 25, 2025 Jing Wang
MIMIC-EXT-TE: Millions Clinical Temporal Event Time-Series Dataset -
Oct. 21, 2025 Yifan Yang
TBD
Scheduled Seminars on Feb. 4, 2025
In-person: Building 38A/B2N14 NCBI Library or Meeting Link
Contact NLMDIRSeminarScheduling@mail.nih.gov with questions about this seminar.
Abstract:
The origin of eukaryotes is one of the key problems in evolutionary biology. The demonstration that the Last Eukaryotic Common Ancestor (LECA) already contained the mitochondrion, an endosymbiotic organelle derived from an alphaproteobacterium, and the discovery of Asgard archaea, the closest archaeal relatives of eukaryotes inform and constrain evolutionary scenarios of eukaryogenesis. We undertook a comprehensive analysis of the origins of the core eukaryotic genes tracing to the LECA within a rigorous statistical framework centered around evolutionary hypotheses testing using constrained phylogenetic trees. The results reveal dominant contributions of Asgard archaea to the origin of most of the conserved eukaryotic functional systems and pathways. A limited contribution from Alphaproteobacteria was identified, primarily relating to the energy transformation systems and Fe-S cluster biogenesis, whereas ancestry from other bacterial phyla was scattered across the eukaryotic functional landscape, without consistent trends. These findings suggest a model of eukaryogenesis in which key features of eukaryotic cell organization evolved in the Asgard ancestor, followed by the capture of the Alphaproteobacterial endosymbiont, and augmented by numerous but sporadic horizontal acquisition of genes from other bacteria both before and after endosymbiosis.