linkedin post 2017-09-29 07:02:48

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MOVING SEX GENES. "When sex is determined by a single locus or chromosomal region, the corresponding chromosome pair becomes the sex chromosomes. However, the affiliation of the master sex-determining gene and a chromosome are not always forever. The same sex-determining gene can reside on different chromosomes in closely related species, for example in the salmonids (rainbow trout, salmon, and relatives)." http://www.pnas.org/content/112/34/10575.full View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2017-09-29 06:59:10

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TRANSITION SETS. "Curiously, outside of mammals and birds, the phylogenetic patterns of these two obviously contrary modes of sex determination indicate many transitions. Many cases have been documented where closely related lineages switch between XY or ZW sex chromosomes, demonstrating that transitions between male and female heterogamety have occurred quite frequently in the evolutionary past of vertebrates." http://www.pnas.org/content/112/34/10575.full View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2017-09-29 06:55:44

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STANDARD SETS. "In vertebrates the most widespread situation is that a pair of sex chromosomes differs in males and females. Either females can be XX and produce only one type of gamete, being the “homogametic” sex, and then males are XY and thus heterogametic, like most mammals; or if females are heterogametic (in analogy: ZW), then males have two copies of the same sex chromosome and are ZZ, like in birds." http://www.pnas.org/content/112/34/10575.full View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2017-09-29 06:52:13

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GREAT DIVERSITY. "Sex determination shows a great diversity of mechanisms, ranging from temperature and other environmental cues to strict chromosomal control over this process. In the case of genetic sex determination, this variability is linked to a similarly high variation of sex chromosome differentiation." https://lnkd.in/gmexnVU View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2017-09-28 06:43:38

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NEW SPECIES. "From the evolutionary point of view, the presence of males and diploid females with normal meiosis in parthenogenetic populations could be significant as they exhibit the potential to re-evolve either a new sexual species of parthenogenetic ancestry or a new parthenogenetic species by contagious parthenogenesis." https://lnkd.in/gnDJkzh View in LinkedIn
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