Affiliation:
1. Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812, USA.
Abstract
Female meiotic drive, in which paired chromosomes compete for access to the egg, is a potentially powerful but rarely documented evolutionary force. In interspecific monkeyflower (
Mimulus
) hybrids, a driving
M. guttatus
allele (
D
) exhibits a 98:2 transmission advantage via female meiosis. We show that extreme interspecific drive is most likely caused by divergence in centromere-associated repeat domains and document cytogenetic and functional polymorphism for drive within a population of
M. guttatus.
In conspecific crosses,
D
had a 58:42 transmission advantage over nondriving alternative alleles. However, individuals homozygous for the driving allele suffered reduced pollen viability. These fitness effects and molecular population genetic data suggest that balancing selection prevents the fixation or loss of
D
and that selfish chromosomal transmission may affect both individual fitness and population genetic load.
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Cited by
259 articles.
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