Spore killers in fungi are selfish genetic elements that distort Mendelian segregation in their favor. It remains unclear how many species harbor them and how diverse their mechanisms are. Here, we discover two spore killers from a natural isolate of the fission yeast . Both killers belong to the previously uncharacterized gene family with 25 members in the reference genome. These two killers act in strain-background-independent and genome-location-independent manners to perturb the maturation of spores not inheriting them. Spores carrying one killer are protected from its killing effect but not that of the other killer. The killing and protecting activities can be uncoupled by mutation. The numbers and sequences of genes vary considerably between isolates, indicating rapid divergence. We propose that genes contribute to the extensive intraspecific reproductive isolation in , and represent ideal models for understanding how segregation-distorting elements act and evolve.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5478263 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.26057 | DOI Listing |
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