Title of article
Genetic conflicts and the evolutionary origin of genomic imprinting
Author/Authors
HAMISH G. SPENCER، نويسنده , , Andrew G. Clark، نويسنده , , Marcus W. Feldman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
5
From page
197
To page
201
Abstract
In mammals, both paternally and maternally inherited copies of most genes are expressed. For a small number of genes, however, only the paternal copy is active, whereas in other cases only the maternal gene is transcribed. This form of nonmendelian expression, known as genomic imprinting, amounts to functional haploidy. The most intriguing explanation for why such a system should evolve when diploidy is omnipresent invokes conflicts between genetic interests of mothers, fathers and their offspring. Recent approaches to modelling the evolutionary origin of imprinting support this hypothesis but make different predictions about its prevalence and the likelihood of polymorphism.
Journal title
Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Record number
770400
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