Difference between revisions of "Beeman et al. 1992"

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(Created page with "=Citation= Beeman, R. W., Friesen, K. S., & Denell, R. E. (1992). Maternal-effect selfish genes in flour beetles. Science, 256(5053), 89-92. =Links= *http://science.sciencema...")
 
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*http://science.sciencemag.org/content/256/5053/89
 
*http://science.sciencemag.org/content/256/5053/89
 
*http://hawaiireedlab.com/pdf/b/beemanetal1992.pdf (internal lab link only)
 
*http://hawaiireedlab.com/pdf/b/beemanetal1992.pdf (internal lab link only)
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=Published Abstract=
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A previously unknown class of dominant, maternal-effect lethal M factors was found to be widespread in natural populations of the flour beetle, ''Tribolium castaneum'', collected on several continents. Such factors are integrated into the host chromosomes at variable locations and show the remarkable property of self-selection by maternal-effect lethality to all hatchlings that do not inherit a copy of the factor itself. Offspring are rescued by either paternally or maternally inherited copies. The M-bearing chromosome is thereby perpetuated at the expense of its non-M homolog. M factors that map to different regions of the genome do not rescue one another's maternal-effect lethality. Factors expressing these properties are predicted to spread in a population, even in the absence of any additional selective advantage. Similar factors also occur in the related species ''T. confusum''.
  
 
[[Category:Publication]]
 
[[Category:Publication]]

Revision as of 08:30, 21 October 2018

Citation

Beeman, R. W., Friesen, K. S., & Denell, R. E. (1992). Maternal-effect selfish genes in flour beetles. Science, 256(5053), 89-92.

Links

Published Abstract

A previously unknown class of dominant, maternal-effect lethal M factors was found to be widespread in natural populations of the flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, collected on several continents. Such factors are integrated into the host chromosomes at variable locations and show the remarkable property of self-selection by maternal-effect lethality to all hatchlings that do not inherit a copy of the factor itself. Offspring are rescued by either paternally or maternally inherited copies. The M-bearing chromosome is thereby perpetuated at the expense of its non-M homolog. M factors that map to different regions of the genome do not rescue one another's maternal-effect lethality. Factors expressing these properties are predicted to spread in a population, even in the absence of any additional selective advantage. Similar factors also occur in the related species T. confusum.