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Dioecious Silene at the X-road: the reasons Y
Authors:F Monéger  N Barbacar  I Negrutiu
Institution:(1) Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, Reproduction et Développement des Plantes, 46 Allée d’Italie, 69364 Lyon Cedex 07, France e-mail: Ioan.Negrutiu@ens-lyon.fr Fax: +33-04-72-72-8600, FR
Abstract:Among the variety of breeding systems developed by flowering plants, those based on heteromorphic sex chromosomes are the most intellectually challenging in evolutionary terms. This is because, among other things, they enable us to compare sex determination processes between plants and animals. White campion (Silene latifolia, also named Lychnis or Melandrium) is dioecious and, much like us, females are homogametic (XX) and males are heterogametic (XY). Sexual dimorphism in white campion is controlled by two independent developmental pathways operating from the Y chromosome at very early developmental stages and within distinct regions of the flower. In addition, all basic steps in the evolution from the bisexual to the dioecious condition with heteromorphic sex chromosomes are known and available to experimentation in the genus Silene. This group of species has been under scrutiny for more than a century. Such an ideal experimental system enables us to tackle, with novel methodological tools, several classical questions in biology. These include the question of how sexual dimorphism evolved and how dimorphic development is controlled, as well as questions of how sex chromosomes evolve in the absence of meiotic recombination or how male-female genetic conflicts are generated. At the turn of the century, the time is now ripe to have a closer look. Received: 21 September 1999 / Accepted: 11 October 1999
Keywords:  Sex chromosomes  Dioecy  Sex chromosome evolution  Silene latifolia
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