2019
DOI: 10.1101/588152
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Hybridization promotes asexual reproduction inCaenorhabditisnematodes

Abstract: Although most unicellular organisms reproduce asexually, most multicellular eukaryotes are obligately sexual. This implies that there are strong barriers that prevent the origin or maintenance of asexuality arising from an obligately sexual ancestor. By studying rare asexual animal species we can gain a better understanding of the circumstances that facilitate their evolution from a sexual ancestor. Of the known asexual animal species, many originated by hybridization between two ancestral sexual species. The … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…This pattern, hybridization events responsible for the origin of parthenogenetic hybrids that cannot produce sexual (and fertile) hybrids simultaneously, has been described previously in taxa that generated parthenogenetic individuals via experimental crosses between two sexual species (fish: Schultz 1973; nematodes: Lamelza et al. 2019). Furthermore, other lizard groups with sexual and parthenogenetic hybrids also present the same pattern of widespread introgressive hybridization, but absence of gene flow between the parental pairs of asexual species ( Aspidoscelis : Barley et al.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 61%
“…This pattern, hybridization events responsible for the origin of parthenogenetic hybrids that cannot produce sexual (and fertile) hybrids simultaneously, has been described previously in taxa that generated parthenogenetic individuals via experimental crosses between two sexual species (fish: Schultz 1973; nematodes: Lamelza et al. 2019). Furthermore, other lizard groups with sexual and parthenogenetic hybrids also present the same pattern of widespread introgressive hybridization, but absence of gene flow between the parental pairs of asexual species ( Aspidoscelis : Barley et al.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 61%
“…To identify nurf-1 orthologs, we used homology information included in www.wormbase.org or by BLAST-searching C. elegans protein sequences against protein data provided by the Caenorhabditis genome project (http://blast.caenorhabditis.org). Genomic regions that contain the identified nurf-1 orthologs and related gff3 annotation data were downloaded from download.caenorhabditis.org or the WormBase public FTP site (data from Stein et al, 2003) (Mortazavi et al, 2010; Fierst et al, 2015; Slos et al, 2017; Kanzaki et al, 2018; Yin et al, 2018; Lamelza et al, 2019). Species with public RNA-seq data were identified in the SRA database.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%