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. 1998 Dec 10;396(6711):572-5.
doi: 10.1038/25126.

Selective sweep of a newly evolved sperm-specific gene in Drosophila

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Selective sweep of a newly evolved sperm-specific gene in Drosophila

D I Nurminsky et al. Nature. .

Abstract

The pattern of genetic variation across the genome of Drosophila melanogaster is consistent with the occurrence of frequent 'selective sweeps', in which new favourable mutations become incorporated into the species so quickly that linked alleles can 'hitchhike' and also become fixed. Because of the hitchhiking of linked genes, it is generally difficult to identify the target of any putative selective sweep. Here, however, we identify a new gene in D. melanogaster that codes for a sperm-specific axonemal dynein subunit. The gene has a new testes-specific promoter derived from a protein-coding region in a gene encoding the cell-adhesion protein annexin X (AnnX), and it contains a new protein-coding exon derived from an intron in a gene encoding a cytoplasmic dynein intermediate chain (Cdic). The new transcription unit, designated Sdic (for sperm-specific dynein intermediate chain), has been duplicated about tenfold in a tandem array. Consistent with the selective sweep of this gene, the level of genetic polymorphism near Sdic is unusually low. The discovery of this gene supports other results that point to the rapid molecular evolution of male reproductive functions.

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Comment in

  • Evolutionary biology. A plastic genome.
    Capy P. Capy P. Nature. 1998 Dec 10;396(6711):522-3. doi: 10.1038/25007. Nature. 1998. PMID: 9859983 No abstract available.
  • How was the Sdic gene fixed?
    Charlesworth B, Charlesworth D. Charlesworth B, et al. Nature. 1999 Aug 5;400(6744):519-20. doi: 10.1038/22922. Nature. 1999. PMID: 10448854 No abstract available.

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