Meiotic drivers distort transmission to the next generation in their favor, with detrimental effects on the fitness of their homologues and the rest of the genome. Male carriers of meiotic drivers commonly inflict costs on their mates through genetic incompatibility, reduced fecundity, or biased brood sex ratios. Given these costs, evidence for female discrimination against male carriers is surprisingly rare. One of few examples is the t haplotype in house mice, a meiotic driver that shows strong transmission distortion in males and is typically homozygote lethal. As a consequence, mating between 2 t heterozygous (+/t) mice leads to high embryo mortality. Previous experiments showing that +/t females avoid this incompatibility cost by prefe...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
Journal ArticleHouse mice prefer mates genetically dissimilar at the major histocompatibility comple...
The t haplotype in house mice is a well-known selfish genetic element with detrimental, nonadditive ...
The t haplotype in house mice is a well-known selfish genetic element with detrimental, nonadditive ...
The t haplotype in house mice is a well-known selfish genetic element with detrimental, nonadditive ...
In house mice, genetic compatibility is influenced by the t haplotype, a driving selfish genetic ele...
At first sight, biological organisms appear as harmonious entities, armed with features exquisitely ...
According to the Mendelian rules of inheritance, every chromosome or allele of a diploid organism ha...
Background - With female multiple mating (polyandry), male-male competition extends to after copulat...
The presence of selfish genetic elements can have fatal consequences for populations that harbor the...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
SummaryThe role of individual genetic heterozygosity in mate choice is the subject of much current d...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
Journal ArticleHouse mice prefer mates genetically dissimilar at the major histocompatibility comple...
The t haplotype in house mice is a well-known selfish genetic element with detrimental, nonadditive ...
The t haplotype in house mice is a well-known selfish genetic element with detrimental, nonadditive ...
The t haplotype in house mice is a well-known selfish genetic element with detrimental, nonadditive ...
In house mice, genetic compatibility is influenced by the t haplotype, a driving selfish genetic ele...
At first sight, biological organisms appear as harmonious entities, armed with features exquisitely ...
According to the Mendelian rules of inheritance, every chromosome or allele of a diploid organism ha...
Background - With female multiple mating (polyandry), male-male competition extends to after copulat...
The presence of selfish genetic elements can have fatal consequences for populations that harbor the...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
SummaryThe role of individual genetic heterozygosity in mate choice is the subject of much current d...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
The evolution of female preference for male genetic quality remains a controversial topic in sexual ...
Journal ArticleHouse mice prefer mates genetically dissimilar at the major histocompatibility comple...