Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Sexual Conflict through Mother’s Curse and Father’s Curse

View through CrossRef
AbstractIn contrast with autosomes, lineages of sex chromosomes reside for different amounts of time in males and females, and this transmission asymmetry makes them hotspots for sexual conflict. Similarly, the maternal inheritance of the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) means that mutations that are beneficial in females can spread in a population even if they are deleterious in males, a form of sexual conflict known as Mother’s Curse. While both Mother’s Curse and sex chromosome induced sexual conflict have been well studied on their own, the interaction between mitochondrial genes and genes on sex chromosomes is poorly understood. Here, we use analytical models and computer simulations to perform a comprehensive examination of how transmission asymmetries of nuclear, mitochondrial, and sex chromosome-linked genes may both cause and resolve sexual conflicts. For example, the accumulation of male-biased Mother’s Curse mtDNA mutations will lead to selection in males for compensatory nuclear modifier loci that alleviate the effect. We show how the Y chromosome, being strictly paternally transmitted provides a particularly safe harbor for such modifiers. This analytical framework also allows us to discover a novel kind of sexual conflict, by which Y chromosome-autosome epistasis may result in the spread of male beneficial but female deleterious mutations in a population. We christen this phenomenon Father’s Curse. Extending this analytical framework to ZW sex chromosome systems, where males are the heterogametic sex, we also show how W-autosome epistasis can lead to a novel kind of nuclear Mother’s Curse. Overall, this study provides a comprehensive framework to understand how genetic transmission asymmetries may both cause and resolve sexual conflicts.
Title: Sexual Conflict through Mother’s Curse and Father’s Curse
Description:
AbstractIn contrast with autosomes, lineages of sex chromosomes reside for different amounts of time in males and females, and this transmission asymmetry makes them hotspots for sexual conflict.
Similarly, the maternal inheritance of the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) means that mutations that are beneficial in females can spread in a population even if they are deleterious in males, a form of sexual conflict known as Mother’s Curse.
While both Mother’s Curse and sex chromosome induced sexual conflict have been well studied on their own, the interaction between mitochondrial genes and genes on sex chromosomes is poorly understood.
Here, we use analytical models and computer simulations to perform a comprehensive examination of how transmission asymmetries of nuclear, mitochondrial, and sex chromosome-linked genes may both cause and resolve sexual conflicts.
For example, the accumulation of male-biased Mother’s Curse mtDNA mutations will lead to selection in males for compensatory nuclear modifier loci that alleviate the effect.
We show how the Y chromosome, being strictly paternally transmitted provides a particularly safe harbor for such modifiers.
This analytical framework also allows us to discover a novel kind of sexual conflict, by which Y chromosome-autosome epistasis may result in the spread of male beneficial but female deleterious mutations in a population.
We christen this phenomenon Father’s Curse.
Extending this analytical framework to ZW sex chromosome systems, where males are the heterogametic sex, we also show how W-autosome epistasis can lead to a novel kind of nuclear Mother’s Curse.
Overall, this study provides a comprehensive framework to understand how genetic transmission asymmetries may both cause and resolve sexual conflicts.

Related Results

Slaveri hos Tuaregerne i Sahara
Slaveri hos Tuaregerne i Sahara
Slavery among the Tuareg in the SaharaA preliminary analysis of its structure.Slavery is an institution of very considerable age. In Europe and the Orient it has been common for as...
The Sexual Functioning Profile of a Nonforensic Sample of Individuals Reporting Sexual Aggression Against Women
The Sexual Functioning Profile of a Nonforensic Sample of Individuals Reporting Sexual Aggression Against Women
ABSTRACTIntroductionSexual offenders are believed to present marked sexual difficulties. However, most of the studies characterizing sex offenders' sexual functioning were conducte...
Conflict Management
Conflict Management
Any attempt to define conflict management is not an easy feat. It is a dynamic concept with blurry boundaries. In its most simple form, as Dennis Sandole says, conflict management ...
Girl Child Sexual Abuse in Lusaka Urban
Girl Child Sexual Abuse in Lusaka Urban
The study on girl child sexual abuse and whose findings are presented in this article was conducted in 2010 as an academic requirement for the purpose of completing a Master’s degr...
(184) The Prevalence of Sexual Dysfunction in Women Seeking Infertility Treatment in Vietnam
(184) The Prevalence of Sexual Dysfunction in Women Seeking Infertility Treatment in Vietnam
Abstract Introduction Sexual function plays a crucial role in women's psychosocial and overall well-being, significantly impacti...
Unbundling task conflict and relationship conflict
Unbundling task conflict and relationship conflict
PurposeThis study seeks to explore team goal orientation as a team characteristic that affects team members' self‐regulation, and conflict management approach as a self‐regulation ...
Sexual violence and risk factors among night shift female college students in Hawassa city, South Ethiopia, 2020
Sexual violence and risk factors among night shift female college students in Hawassa city, South Ethiopia, 2020
Abstract Background Sexual violence is any sexual act, attempt to obtain a sexual act, unwanted sexual comments or advances, against a person’s sexu...
Sexual experiences among early adolescents aged 12-14 Years in four districts of Rwanda: a cross-sectional study
Sexual experiences among early adolescents aged 12-14 Years in four districts of Rwanda: a cross-sectional study
AbstractBackgroundGlobally, early adolescents (10-14 years) represent 8% of the world population, and Africa accounts for 25% of them. Although a minority of early adolescents have...

Back to Top