Publication | Open Access
Critical experimental test of the possibility of "paternal leakage" of mitochondrial DNA.
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Citations
18
References
1983
Year
Genetic TestingGeneticsEntomologyDna AnalysisMolecular GeneticsMendelian InheritanceRare Mtdna MoleculesMolecular EcologyPublic HealthMitochondrial DnaGenetic PredispositionPaternal LeakageCritical Experimental TestDna ReplicationEvolutionary GeneticsGenetic VariationPopulation GeneticsBiologyMitochondrial FunctionEvolutionary BiologyMitochondrial MedicineGenetic AdmixtureMedicinePaternal Mtdna Molecules
Most previous data suggesting maternal inheritance of mtDNA have come from single-generation mating experiments, and most of the analytical techniques utilized would not have detected paternal mtDNA molecules in progeny at levels less than about 5%. Long-term mating experiments, in which a fertile female lineage derived from hybridization of two species with distinguishable mtDNAs is backcrossed recurrently to the male parental species, provide an ideal opportunity to assess possible low-level paternal leakage. We have analyzed the 45- and 91-generation backcross progeny of such matings between two species of lepidopteran insects [Heliothis (Noctuidae)], using autoradiographic techniques that can detect rare mtDNA molecules in less than 1 part per 500. The analysis failed to detect any paternal mtDNA and sets an upper limit of paternal leakage at about 1 molecule per 25,000 per generation in this system.
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