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Meiotic drive at the Om locus in wild-derived inbred mouse strains
Authors:KUIKWON KIM  SANLARE THOMAS  I. BRIAN HOWARD  TIMOTHY A. BELL  HEATHER E. DOHERTY  FOLAMI IDERAABDULLAH  DAVID A. DETWILER   FERNANDO PARDO-MANUEL DE VILLENA
Affiliation:Department of Genetics,; Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center,; Curriculum in Genetics and Molecular Biology and; Carolina Center for Genomic Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA
Abstract:Meiotic drive is an evolutionary force in which natural selection is uncoupled from organismal fitness. Recently, it has been proposed that meiotic drive and genetic drift represent major forces in the evolution of the mammalian karyotype. Meiotic drive involves two types of genetic elements, Responders and Distorters , the latter being required to induce transmission ratio distortion at the former. We have previously described the Om meiotic drive system in mouse chromosome 11. To investigate the natural history of this drive system we have characterized the alleles present at the distorter in wild-derived inbred strains. Our analysis of transmission of maternal alleles in both classical and wild-derived inbred strains indicated that driving alleles are found at high frequency in natural populations and that the existence of driving alleles predates the split between the Mus spicilegus and M. musculus lineages.  © 2005 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society , 2005, 84 , 487–492.
Keywords:distorter    evolution    segregation distortion    transmission ratio distortion
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