TY - JOUR AU - Lunt, David H. PY - 2008 DA - 2008/07/07 TI - Genetic tests of ancient asexuality in Root Knot Nematodes reveal recent hybrid origins JO - BMC Evolutionary Biology SP - 194 VL - 8 IS - 1 AB - The existence of "ancient asexuals", taxa that have persisted for long periods of evolutionary history without sexual recombination, is both controversial and important for our understanding of the evolution and maintenance of sexual reproduction. A lack of sex has consequences not only for the ecology of the asexual organism but also for its genome. Several genetic signatures are predicted from long-term asexual (apomictic) reproduction including (i) large "allelic" sequence divergence (ii) lack of phylogenetic clustering of "alleles" within morphological species and (iii) decay and loss of genes specific to meiosis and sexual reproduction. These genetic signatures can be hard to assess since it is difficult to demonstrate the allelic nature of very divergent sequences, divergence levels may be complicated by processes such as inter-specific hybridization, and genes may have secondary roles unrelated to sexual reproduction. Apomictic species of Meloidogyne root knot nematodes have been suggested previously to be ancient asexuals. Their relatives reproduce by meiotic parthenogenesis or facultative sexuality, which in combination with the abundance of nematode genomic sequence data, makes them a powerful system in which to study the consequences of reproductive mode on genomic divergence. SN - 1471-2148 UR - https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-8-194 DO - 10.1186/1471-2148-8-194 ID - Lunt2008 ER -