Meiotic drivers are genetic variants that selfishly manipulate the production of gametes to increase their own rate of transmission, often to the detriment of the rest of the genome and the individual that carries them. This genomic conflict potentially occurs whenever a diploid organism produces a haploid stage, and can have profound evolutionary impacts on gametogenesis, fertility, individual behaviour, mating system, population survival, and reproductive isolation. Multiple research teams are developing artificial drive systems for pest control, utilising the transmission advantage of drive to alter or exterminate target species. Here, we review current knowledge of how natural drive systems function, how drivers spread through natural populations, and the factors that limit their invasion. Trends Box Both naturally occurring and synthetic "meiotic drivers" violate Mendel's law of equal segregation and can rapidly spread through populations even when they reduce the fitness of individuals carrying them. Synthetic drivers are being developed to spread desirable genes in natural populations of target species. How ecology influences the population dynamics of meiotic drivers is important for predicting the success of synthetic drive elements. An enduring puzzle concerns why some meiotic drivers persist at stable, intermediate frequencies rather than sweeping to fixation. Drivers can have a wide range of consequences from extinction to changes in mating system. preferentially associating with and moving toward the egg pole at Meiosis I) will be 75 transmitted to more than half of the maturing eggs. Although this bias does not necessarily 76 reduce the production of eggs (as only one egg matures per meiosis), the fitness of other 77 alleles at the same locus, that do not bias transmission, and alleles linked to them, is 78 reduced. Such meiotic drivers could reduce the fitness of individuals that carry them, if the 79 driving variant is genetically linked to deleterious mutations or has deleterious pleiotropic 80 effects. 81Male meiotic drive takes multiple forms -some at least partially meiotic, some entirely 82 post-meiotic -but all involve a driving element that prevents maturation or function of 83 sperm that do not contain it. Because haploid sperm within a single ejaculate compete to 84 fertilize the same pool of eggs, disabling non-carrier sperm results in transmission of the 85 driving element to more than half of the functional gametes and resulting offspring ([5], Box 86 1). However, disabling non-carrier sperm often reduces fertility [6]. 87Spore drive in fungi, in which the products of meiosis are packaged together in an ascus, 88 operates via similar mechanisms. Spores with one haploid genotype will kill or disable 89 spores of the alternative haplotype ([7], Box 1). If spores disperse long distances sibling 90 spores are unlikely to compete and killing them will not increase the killer's fitness. 91However, spore killing can be beneficial if there is local resource competition. 92Excit...
Glossary Critical thermal limits (CTL): CTLs are a suite of commonly used measures of the maximum and minimum temperatures at which organisms can viably function. Individuals are exposed to either static stressful temperatures or gradually ramping temperatures and observed for physiological failure; e.g., uncoordinated movement, heat coma, or death [1]. Typically, either the duration of exposure or the temperature at which loss of viability is observed is recorded as the thermal limit. Fecundity: The total number of offspring an individual can produce across a set interval or lifetime. Fertility: The ability of an organism to produce viable offspring. Fertility can be measured in a number of ways but always reaches its lower limit when conditions prevent an individual from producing any offspring (i.e. sterility). Hardening: Increased thermal tolerance shown by organisms after a short period of exposure to a stressful but non-lethal temperature within the same life stage. Hardening tests are one component of a species plastic response when exposed to stressful temperatures [2]. Sterility: Describes an individual that cannot produce any offspring over a defined period, and thus is synonymous with complete infertility. Thermal fertility limits (TFL): Outlined here for the first time, TFLs refer to a level and duration of thermal stress that renders individuals unable to reproduce. For populations and species this can be defined as the temperature at which a given proportion of individuals are qualitatively sterile and it includes both higher (TFMAX) and lower (TFMIN) thermal stress
A popular notion in sexual selection is that females are polyandrous and their offspring are commonly sired by more than a single male. We now have large-scale evidence from natural populations to be able to verify this assumption. Although we concur that polyandry is a generally common and ubiquitous phenomenon, we emphasise that it remains variable. In particular, the persistence of single paternity, both within and between populations, requires more careful consideration. We also explore an intriguing relation of polyandry with latitude. Several recent large-scale analyses of the relations between key population fitness variables, such as heterozygosity, effective population size (Ne), and inbreeding coefficients, make it possible to examine the global effects of polyandry on population fitness for the first time.
This is a repository copy of Temperatures that sterilize males better match global species distributions than lethal temperatures.
It is unknown why females mate with multiple males when mating is frequently costly and a single copulation often provides enough sperm to fertilize all a female's eggs. One possibility is that remating increases the fitness of offspring, because fertilization success is biased toward the sperm of high-fitness males. We show that female Drosophila pseudoobscura evolved increased remating rates when exposed to the risk of mating with males carrying a deleterious sex ratio-distorting gene that also reduces sperm competitive ability. Because selfish genetic elements that reduce sperm competitive ability are generally associated with low genetic fitness, they may represent a common driver of the evolution of polyandry.
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