R2d2 is a mouse genomic locus that is sometimes a selfish region.

R2d2 is short for "Responder to meiotic drive 2", It was discovered by UNC School of Medicine researchers to display transmission bias. [1]

R2d2 is a stretch of DNA on mouse chromosome 2 that contains multiple copies of the Cwc22 gene. When seven or more copies of that latter gene are present, R2d2 becomes selfish.

In one lab breeding population, in a selective sweep, R2d2 increased from being in 50 percent of the lab mice's chromosomes to 85 percent in 10 generations. By 15 generations, it reached fixation.

In female mice, R2d2 somehow displaces the chromosome that doesn't contain it and it is preferentially incorporated into eggs. It has spread in the wild to several parts of the world.[2]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "R2d2 beats Mendel: Scientists find selfish gene that breaks long-held law of inheritance". phys.org.
  2. ^ Saey, Tina Hesman (March 9, 2016). "'Selfish' DNA flouts rules of inheritance". Science News.