“Hopeful monsters,” transposons, and Metazoan radiation
- 1 September 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 81 (17) , 5482-5483
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.81.17.5482
Abstract
The appearance of many novel morphologies, frequently expressed taxonomically as new phyla, classes or orders, occurs with such rapidity in evolutionary time that microevolutionary substitutions involving structural genes seem an implausible mechanism. Such novelties may be produced by changes in developmental and regulatory structures and patterns rather than by an accumulation of single structural gene changes. The horizontal transmission of genetic material via RNA-based viruses between members of a population may rapidly create intrafertile subpopulations that differ markedly from their parents and form the basis of new morphological types, avoiding the usual fitness problems associated with hopeful monsters.This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Retroviral transforming genes in normal cells?Nature, 1983
- Endogenous retrovirusesCell, 1983
- Molecular drive: a cohesive mode of species evolutionNature, 1982
- Cellular Transforming GenesScience, 1982
- Form and Function of Retroviral ProvirusesScience, 1982
- Rapid Evolution of RNA GenomesScience, 1982
- The Problem of Missing Links: Today and YesterdayThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1981
- Mutator genes—pacemakers of evolutionNature, 1978
- Transposable genetic elements as agents of gene instability and chromosomal rearrangementsNature, 1977
- Repetitive and Non-Repetitive DNA Sequences and a Speculation on the Origins of Evolutionary NoveltyThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1971