Omar Rota-Stabelli

Omar Rota-Stabelli
Università degli Studi di Trento | UNITN · Center Agriculture Food Environment C3A

PhD in Molecular Evolution at UCL, Master in Molecular Biology at Milan University
Phylogenetics, phylogenomics and molecular clock of insects, other animals, MAGS, fungi, viruses and sometimes plants.

About

124
Publications
46,250
Reads
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4,689
Citations
Citations since 2017
69 Research Items
3355 Citations
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Introduction
Omar Rota-Stabelli is professor of Zoology at the Centre C3A University of Trento and a research associate of Fondazione Edmund Mach. He leads the Research Line "Evolutionary Genomics" within the Agrarian Entomology Unit. Current projects include 'Drosophila suzukii applied genomics', 'Aedes phylogeny and phylogenomics', 'Divergence times of genomes extracted from metagenomes', 'Origin and diversity of viruses'.
Additional affiliations
February 2017 - present
Fondazione Edmund Mach - Istituto Agrario San Michele All'Adige
Position
  • Researcher
March 2014 - January 2017
March 2011 - February 2014
Fondazione Edmund Mach - Istituto Agrario San Michele All'Adige
Position
  • Cofound PAT-Marie Curie fellow
Education
September 2005 - April 2010
University College London
Field of study
  • Molecuar Evolution
September 1997 - January 2003
University of Milan
Field of study
  • Biology

Publications

Publications (124)
Article
Full-text available
The European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) is one of the most widespread forest trees in Europe whose distribution and intraspecific diversity has been largely shaped by repeated glacial cycles. Previous studies, mainly based on palaeobotanical evidence and a limited set of chloroplast and nuclear genetic markers, highlighted a complex phylogeographic...
Article
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West Nile virus (WNV) is a mosquito-borne virus potentially causing serious illness in humans and other animals. Since 2004, several studies have highlighted the progressive spread of WNV Lineage 2 (L2) in Europe, with Italy being one of the countries with the highest number of cases of West Nile disease reported. In this paper, we give an overview...
Article
Termites (Insecta, Blattodea, Termitoidae) are a widespread and diverse group of eusocial insects known for their ability to digest wood matter. Herein, we report the draft genome of the subterranean termite Reticulitermes lucifugus, an economically important species and among the most studied taxa with respect to eusocial organisation and mating s...
Article
Phytoplasmas are obligatory intracellular bacteria that colonize the phloem of many plant species and cause hundreds of plant diseases worldwide. In nature, phytoplasmas are primarily transmitted by hemipteran vectors. While all phloem‐feeding insects could in principle transmit phytoplasmas, only a limited number of species have been confirmed as...
Article
Full-text available
Several true fruit flies (Tephritidae) cause major damage to agriculture worldwide. Among them, species of the genus Bactrocera are extensively studied to understand the traits associated with their invasiveness and ecology. Comparative approaches based on a reliable phylogenetic framework are particularly effective, but several nodes of the Bactro...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Trentino is an Italian province with a tourism-based economy, bordering the regions of Lombardy and Veneto, where the two earliest and largest outbreaks of COVID-19 occurred in Italy. The earliest cases in Trentino were reported in the first week of March 2020, with most of the cases occurring in the winter sport areas in the Dolomites...
Article
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The contribution of domestic cattle in human societies is enormous, making cattle, along with other essential benefits, the economically most important domestic animal in the world today. To expand existing knowledge on cattle domestication and mitogenome diversity, we performed a comprehensive complete mitogenome analysis of the species (802 seque...
Research
Full-text available
Accepted Article This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved The contribution of domestic cattle in human societies is enormous, making cattle, along with other essential benefits, the economically most important domestic animal in the world today. To expand existing knowledge on cattle domestication and mitogenome diversity, we per...
Article
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We subjected human paleofeces dating from the Bronze Age to the Baroque period (18th century AD) to in-depth microscopic, metagenomic, and proteomic analyses. The paleofeces were preserved in the underground salt mines of the UNESCO World Heritage site of Hallstatt in Austria. This allowed us to reconstruct the diet of the former population and gai...
Article
Insects comprise over half of all described animal species. Together with the Protura (coneheads), Collembola (springtails) and Diplura (two-pronged bristletails), insects form the Hexapoda, a terrestrial arthropod lineage characterised by possessing six legs. Exponential growth of genome-scale data for the hexapods has substantially altered our un...
Article
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Background Dental calculus (mineralised dental plaque) preserves many types of microfossils and biomolecules, including microbial and host DNA, and ancient calculus are thus an important source of information regarding our ancestral human oral microbiome. In this study, we taxonomically characterised the dental calculus microbiome from 20 ancient h...
Preprint
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The evolution of wings propelled insects to their present mega-diversity. However, interordinal relationships of early-diverging winged insects and the timescale of their evolution are difficult to resolve, in part due to uncertainties in the placement of the enigmatic and species-poor order Zoraptera. The 'Zoraptera problem' has remained a content...
Article
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Background Glossina species (tsetse flies), the sole vectors of African trypanosomes, maintained along their long evolutionary history a unique reproductive strategy, adenotrophic viviparity. Viviparity reduces their reproductive rate and, as such, imposes strong selective pressures on males for reproductive success. These species live in sub-Sahar...
Preprint
Full-text available
True fruit flies (Tephritidae) include several species that cause extensive damage to agriculture worldwide. Among them, species of the genus Bactrocera are widely studied to understand the traits associated to their invasiveness and ecology. Comparative approaches based on a reliable phylogenetic framework are particularly effective, but, to date,...
Article
Full-text available
Drosophila melanogaster is a leading model in population genetics and genomics, and a growing number of whole-genome data sets from natural populations of this species have been published over the last years. A major challenge is the integration of disparate data sets, often generated using different sequencing technologies and bioinformatic pipeli...
Article
Full-text available
Drosophila melanogaster is a leading model in population genetics and genomics, and a growing number of whole-genome datasets from natural populations of this species have been published over the last years. A major challenge is the integration of disparate datasets, often generated using different sequencing technologies and bioinformatic pipeline...
Article
Full-text available
Reconstructing past events of hybridization and population size changes are required to understand speciation mechanisms and current patterns of genetic diversity, and ultimately contribute to species' conservation. Sea turtles are ancient species currently facing anthropogenic threats including climate change, fisheries, and illegal hunting. Five...
Article
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Diptera is one of the biggest insect orders and displays a large diversity of visual adaptations. Similarly to other animals, the dipteran visual process is mediated by opsin genes. While the diversity and function of these genes is well studied in key model species, a comprehensive comparative genomic study across the dipteran phylogeny is missing...
Article
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Loss of gut microbial diversity 1–6 in industrial populations is associated with chronic diseases ⁷ , underscoring the importance of studying our ancestral gut microbiome. However, relatively little is known about the composition of pre-industrial gut microbiomes. Here we performed a large-scale de novo assembly of microbial genomes from palaeofaec...
Article
Full-text available
Drosophila melanogaster is an important model for antiviral immunity in arthropods, but very few DNA viruses have been described from the family Drosophilidae. This deficiency limits our opportunity to use natural host-pathogen combinations in experimental studies, and may bias our understanding of the Drosophila virome. Here we report fourteen DNA...
Article
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Background Cryptoendolithic communities are microbial ecosystems dwelling inside porous rocks that are able to persist at the edge of the biological potential for life in the ice-free areas of the Antarctic desert. These regions include the McMurdo Dry Valleys, often accounted as the closest terrestrial counterpart of the Martian environment and t...
Article
Full-text available
One-third of all mosquitoes belong to the Aedini, a tribe comprising common vectors of viral zoonoses such as Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus. To improve our understanding of their evolution, we present an updated multigene estimate of Aedini phylogeny and divergence, focusing on the disentanglement between nuclear and mitochondrial phylogenetic...
Preprint
Full-text available
Drosophila melanogaster is a leading model in population genetics and genomics, and a growing number of whole-genome datasets from natural populations of this species have been published over the last 20 years. A major challenge is the integration of these disparate datasets, often generated using different sequencing technologies and bioinformatic...
Preprint
Full-text available
Drosophila melanogaster is an important model for antiviral immunity in arthropods, but very few DNA viruses have been described in association with the Drosophilidae. This has limited the opportunity to use natural host-pathogen combinations in experimental studies, and may have biased our understanding of the Drosophila virome. Here we describe f...
Article
Full-text available
Wolbachia is an iconic example of a successful intracellular bacterium. Despite its importance as a manipulator of invertebrate biology, its evolutionary dynamics have been poorly studied from a genomic viewpoint. To expand the number of Wolbachia genomes, we screen over 30,000 publicly available shotgun DNA sequencing samples from 500 hosts. By as...
Article
Full-text available
Polyploidization is a frequent phenomenon in plants, which entails the increase from one generation to the next by multiples of the haploid number of chromosomes. While tetraploidization is arguably the most common and stable outcome of polyploidization, over evolutionary time triploids often constitute only a transient phase, or a “triploid bridge...
Article
Opsins are genes underpinning vision in animals. A new study shows that they are also involved in taste perception in fruit flies, significantly expanding their scope of action. This has important implications for our understanding of the evolution of vision.
Article
Drosophila suzukii is an invasive pest that prefers to lay eggs in ripening fruits, whereas most closely related Drosophila species exclusively use rotten fruit as oviposition site. This behaviour is allowed by an enlarged and serrated ovipositor that can pierce intact fruit skin, and by multiple contact sensory systems (mechanosensation and taste)...
Article
Viruses can modify the usage of their synonymous codons to mimic that of their hosts: investigation of codon usage may therefore help increase our understanding of virus biology. The similarity index (SiD or (D(A,B)) is a recent method for estimating the resemblance of the overall codon usage of the hosts to that of a certain virus. Here we report...
Preprint
Full-text available
Opsin receptors mediate the visual process in animals and their evolutionary history can provide precious hints on the ecological factors that underpin their diversification. Here we mined the genomes of more than 60 Dipteran species and reconstructed the evolution of their opsin genes in a phylogenetic framework. Our phylogenies indicate that dipt...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Eubacterium rectale is one of the most prevalent human gut bacteria, but its diversity and population genetics are not well understood because large-scale whole-genome investigations of this microbe have not been carried out. Results: Here, we leverage metagenomic assembly followed by a reference-based binning strategy to screen over...
Article
Full-text available
Genetic variation is the fuel of evolution, with standing genetic variation especially important for short-term evolution and local adaptation. To date, studies of spatio-temporal patterns of genetic variation in natural populations have been challenging, as comprehensive sampling is logistically difficult, and sequencing of entire populations cost...
Article
Full-text available
The bacterial symbiont Wolbachia can protect insects against viral pathogens, and the varying levels of antiviral protection are correlated with the endosymbiont load within the insects. To understand why Wolbachia strains differ in their antiviral effects, we investigated the factors controlling Wolbachia density in five closely related strains in...
Preprint
Full-text available
Cryptoendolithic communities are microbial ecosystems dwelling inside porous rocks. They are able to persist at the edge of the biological potential for life in the ice-free areas of continental Antarctica. These areas include the McMurdo Dry Valleys, often cited as a Terrestrial analog of the Martian environment. Despite their interest as a model...
Article
Full-text available
A clearer understanding of the structure of pest populations in newly invaded areas is a key step towards their effective management. Here, we use Drosophila suzukii as a model to highlight how populations from separate geographical regions differ in their genetic and phenotypic traits, including those associated with their invasiveness. New X-link...
Article
Didymosphaeriaceae is a cosmopolitan family of Ascomycetes including pathogens, saprobes, and endophytes living in a variety of substrates. While a monophyletic origin of the family is now widely accepted, the monophyly of some species, their worldwide distribution, and the timing of their origin is still disputed or unexplored. We first investigat...
Article
Full-text available
Thousands of eukaryotes transcriptomes have been generated, mainly to investigate nuclear genes expression, and the amount of available data is constantly increasing. A neglected but promising use of this large amount of data is to assemble organelle genomes. To assess the reliability of this approach, we attempted to reconstruct complete mitochond...
Article
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Prevotella copri is a common human gut microbe that has been both positively and negatively associated with host health. In a cross-continent meta-analysis exploiting >6,500 metagenomes, we obtained >1,000 genomes and explored the genetic and population structure of P. copri. P. copri encompasses four distinct clades (>10% inter-clade genetic diver...
Article
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The codling moth Cydia pomonella, a major invasive pest of pome fruit, has spread around the globe in the last half century. We generated a chromosome-level scaffold assembly including the Z chromosome and a portion of the W chromosome. This assembly reveals the duplication of an olfactory receptor gene (OR3), which we demonstrate enhances the abil...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Tsetse flies (Glossina sp.) are the vectors of human and animal trypanosomiasis throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Tsetse flies are distinguished from other Diptera by unique adaptations, including lactation and the birthing of live young (obligate viviparity), a vertebrate blood-specific diet by both sexes, and obligate bacterial symbiosi...
Preprint
Full-text available
Drosophila suzukii is an invasive agricultural pest species that lays eggs in fruit during ripening, while most closely related Drosophila species use rotten matter as oviposition substrates. This behaviour is allowed by an enlarged and serrated ovipositor that can pierce intact fruit skin. D. suzukii combines multiple sensory systems (mechanosensa...
Preprint
Full-text available
Prevotella copri is a common inhabitant of the human gut. Interest in P. copri has gathered pace due to conflicting reports on whether it is beneficial or detrimental to health. In a cross-continent meta-analysis exploiting >6,500 available metagenomes supported by new isolate sequencing and recovery of high-quality genomes from metagenomes, we obt...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background: Tsetse flies (Glossina sp.) are the sole vectors of human and animal trypanosomiasis throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Tsetse are distinguished from other Diptera by unique adaptations, including lactation and the birthing of live young (obligate viviparity), a vertebrate blood specific diet by both sexes and obligate bacterial symbiosis....
Article
Full-text available
Background Staphylococcus aureus is an opportunistic pathogen and a leading cause of nosocomial infections. It can acquire resistance to all the antibiotics that entered the clinics to date, and the World Health Organization defined it as a high-priority pathogen for research and development of new antibiotics. A deeper understanding of the genetic...
Preprint
Full-text available
Genetic variation is the fuel of evolution. However, analyzing dynamics of evolutionary change in natural populations is challenging, genome sequencing of entire populations remains costly and comprehensive sample collection logistically challenging. To tackle this issue and to define relevant spatial and temporal scales of variation for a populati...
Chapter
!e concept of phylo-evo-devo highlights the bene"ts of reciprocal illumination between studies of phylogeny and of developmental biology when studying character evolution. Here we consider the case of the evolution of a segmented body plan within the major animal clade of Ecdysozoa. Speci"cally, we consider developmental studies supporting the homo...
Article
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The relationships at the root of the animal tree have proven difficult to resolve, with the current debate focusing on whether sponges (phylum Porifera) or comb jellies (phylum Ctenophora) are the sister group of all other animals [1–5]. The choice of evolu- tionary models seems to be at the core of the prob- lem because Porifera tends to emerge as...
Article
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Ability to distinguish between closely related Wolbachia strains is crucial for understanding the evolution of Wolbachia-host interactions and the diversity of Wolbachia-induced phenotypes. A useful model to tackle these issues is the Drosophila suzukii – Wolbachia association. D. suzukii, a destructive insect pest, harbor a non-CI inducing Wolbach...
Article
Full-text available
Significance A small and relict population of brown bears lives in complete isolation in the Italian Apennine Mountains, providing a unique opportunity to study the impact of drift and selection on the genomes of a large endangered mammal and reconstruct the phenotypic consequences and the conservation implications of such evolutionary processes. T...