The epigenetic phenomenon of genomic imprinting has motivated the development of numerous theories for its evolutionary origins and genomic distribution. In this review, we examine the three theories that have best withstood theoretical and empirical scrutiny. These are: Haig and colleagues’ kinship theory; Day and Bonduriansky’s sexual antagonism theory; and Wolf and Hager’s maternal–offspring coadaptation theory. These theories have fundamentally different perspectives on the adaptive significance of imprinting. The kinship theory views imprinting as a mechanism to change gene dosage, with imprinting evolving because of the differential effect that gene dosage has on the fitness of matrilineal and patrilineal relatives. The sexual antagon...
�� 2016 The Authors. Published by Wiley. This is an open access article available under a Creative C...
The evolutionary advantages of genomic imprinting are puzzling. We propose that genomic imprinting e...
The Kinship Theory provides a compelling explanation for the evolution of genomic imprinting at many...
How phenomena like helping, dispersal, or the sex ratio evolve depends critically on demographic and...
We explore three possible pathways for the evolution of genomic imprinting. (1) Imprinting may be ad...
A subset of genes in mammals, known as imprinted genes, show a conditional expression strategy in wh...
The term "imprinted gene'' refers to genes whose expression is conditioned by their parental origin....
Genomic imprinting is a process whereby expression of an allele differs depending upon its parent of...
The close interaction between mother and offspring in mammals is thought to contribute to the evolut...
Genomic imprinting refers to genes that are silenced when inherited via sperm or via egg. The silenc...
<p>The genome of each individual is represented by two symbolic chromosomes, with the left chromosom...
Although numerous imprinted genes have been described in several lineages, the phenomenon of genomic...
What is the status of the dichotomy proposed and the nosological validity of the contrasting patholo...
The expression pattern of genes in mammals and plants can depend upon the parent from which the gene...
What is the status of the dichotomy proposed and the nosological validity of the contrasting patholo...
�� 2016 The Authors. Published by Wiley. This is an open access article available under a Creative C...
The evolutionary advantages of genomic imprinting are puzzling. We propose that genomic imprinting e...
The Kinship Theory provides a compelling explanation for the evolution of genomic imprinting at many...
How phenomena like helping, dispersal, or the sex ratio evolve depends critically on demographic and...
We explore three possible pathways for the evolution of genomic imprinting. (1) Imprinting may be ad...
A subset of genes in mammals, known as imprinted genes, show a conditional expression strategy in wh...
The term "imprinted gene'' refers to genes whose expression is conditioned by their parental origin....
Genomic imprinting is a process whereby expression of an allele differs depending upon its parent of...
The close interaction between mother and offspring in mammals is thought to contribute to the evolut...
Genomic imprinting refers to genes that are silenced when inherited via sperm or via egg. The silenc...
<p>The genome of each individual is represented by two symbolic chromosomes, with the left chromosom...
Although numerous imprinted genes have been described in several lineages, the phenomenon of genomic...
What is the status of the dichotomy proposed and the nosological validity of the contrasting patholo...
The expression pattern of genes in mammals and plants can depend upon the parent from which the gene...
What is the status of the dichotomy proposed and the nosological validity of the contrasting patholo...
�� 2016 The Authors. Published by Wiley. This is an open access article available under a Creative C...
The evolutionary advantages of genomic imprinting are puzzling. We propose that genomic imprinting e...
The Kinship Theory provides a compelling explanation for the evolution of genomic imprinting at many...