Genetic segments that can enhance their own transmission at the expense of other genes
Selfish genetic elements (historically also referred to as selfish genes, ultra-selfish genes, selfish DNA, parasitic DNA and genomic outlaws) are genetic segments that can enhance their own transmission at the expense of other genes in the genome, even if this has no positive or a net negative effect on organismal fitness.[1][2][3][4][5][6] Genomes have traditionally been viewed as cohesive units, with genes acting together to improve the fitness of the organism.
Early observations of selfish genetic elements were made almost a century ago, but the topic did not get widespread attention until several decades later. Inspired by the gene-centred views of evolution popularized by George Williams[7] and Richard Dawkins,[8] two papers were published back-to-back in Nature in 1980 – by Leslie Orgel and Francis Crick[9] and by Ford Doolittle and Carmen Sapienza[10] – introducing the concept of selfish genetic elements (at the time called "selfish DNA") to the wider scientific community. Both papers emphasized that genes can spread in a population regardless of their effect on organismal fitness as long as they have a transmission advantage.
Selfish genetic elements have now been described in most groups of organisms, and they demonstrate a remarkable diversity in the ways by which they promote their own transmission.[11] Though long dismissed as genetic curiosities, with little relevance for evolution, they are now recognized to affect a wide swath of biological processes, ranging from genome size and architecture to speciation.[12]
^Hurst GD, Hurst LD, Johnstone RA (November 1992). "Intranuclear conflict and its role in evolution". Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 7 (11): 373–8. doi:10.1016/0169-5347(92)90007-x. PMID21236071.
^Hurst LD, Atlan A, Bengtsson BO (September 1996). "Genetic conflicts". The Quarterly Review of Biology. 71 (3): 317–64. doi:10.1086/419442. PMID8828237. S2CID24853836.
^Hurst GD, Werren JH (August 2001). "The role of selfish genetic elements in eukaryotic evolution". Nature Reviews. Genetics. 2 (8): 597–606. doi:10.1038/35084545. PMID11483984. S2CID2715605.
^Williams GC (1966). Adaptation and Natural Selection: A Critique of Some Current Evolutionary Thought. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. doi:10.1515/9781400820108. ISBN978-1-4008-2010-8.