Publications by authors named "Zaak Walton"

Selfish genetic elements drive in meiosis to distort their transmission ratio and increase their representation in gametes, violating Mendel's law of segregation. The two established paradigms for meiotic drive, gamete killing and biased segregation, are fundamentally different. In gamete killing, typically observed with male meiosis, selfish elements sabotage gametes that do not contain them.

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During meiosis, homologous chromosomes segregate so that alleles are transmitted equally to haploid gametes, following Mendel's Law of Segregation. However, some selfish genetic elements drive in meiosis to distort the transmission ratio and increase their representation in gametes. The established paradigms for drive are fundamentally different for female vs male meiosis.

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Article Synopsis
  • Recent advancements in sequencing technology have sparked renewed interest in understanding insect phylogeny by generating extensive genomic and transcriptomic data rapidly.
  • Accurate phylogenetic reconstruction depends not just on the number of genetic markers but also on the choice of sequence evolution models and sufficient taxonomic sampling.
  • A new study sequenced the transcriptomes of seven insect species and confirmed that Strepsiptera is a sister group to Coleoptera, using robust models to avoid previous pitfalls in phylogenetic analysis.
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Dosage compensation has arisen in response to the evolution of distinct male (XY) and female (XX) karyotypes. In Drosophila melanogaster, the MSL complex increases male X transcription approximately twofold. X-specific targeting is thought to occur through sequence-dependent binding to chromatin entry sites (CESs), followed by spreading in cis to active genes.

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To further our understanding of FOG gene function during cardiac development, we utilized zebrafish to examine FOG's role in the early steps of heart morphogenesis. We identified fragments of three fog genes in the zebrafish genomic database and isolated full-length coding sequences for each of these genes by using a combination of RT-PCR and 5'-RACE. One gene was similar to murine FOG-1 (fog1), while the remaining two were similar to murine FOG-2 (fog2a and fog2b).

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