@article{8b1a1fa872754df2b5e8009f04a9d3cd,
title = "Centromere-associated meiotic drive and female fitness variation in Mimulus",
abstract = "Female meiotic drive, in which chromosomal variants preferentially segregate to the egg pole during asymmetric female meiosis, is a theoretically pervasive but still mysterious form of selfish evolution. Like other selfish genetic elements, driving chromosomes may be maintained as balanced polymorphisms by pleiotropic or linked fitness costs. A centromere-associated driver (D) with a ∼58:42 female-specific transmission advantage occurs at intermediate frequency (32-40\%) in the Iron Mountain population of the yellow monkeyflower, Mimulus guttatus. Previously determined male fertility costs are sufficient to prevent the fixation of D, but predict a higher equilibrium frequency. To better understand the dynamics and effects of D, we developed a new population genetic model and measured genotype-specific lifetime female fitness in the wild. In three of four years, and across all years, D imposed significant recessive seedset costs, most likely due to hitchhiking by deleterious mutations. With both male and female costs as measured, and 58:42 drive, our model predicts an equilibrium frequency of D (38\%) very close to the observed value. Thus, D represents a rare selfish genetic element whose local population genetic dynamics have been fully parameterized, and the observation of equilibrium sets the stage for investigations of coevolution with suppressors.",
keywords = "Balancing selection, Centromere, Genetic conflict, Polymorphism, Seedset, Selfish genetic element, Standing variation",
author = "Lila Fishman and Kelly, \{John K.\}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2015 The Author(s).",
year = "2015",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/evo.12661",
language = "English",
volume = "69",
pages = "1208--1218",
journal = "Evolution",
issn = "0014-3820",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "5",
}