Chromosomal drive and the evolution of meiotic nondisjunction and trisomy in humans
- 3 March 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 95 (5) , 2361-2365
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.95.5.2361
Abstract
Trisomy is a genetic abnormality of considerable medical importance. The most familiar example is trisomy 21, which causes Down Syndrome [Cummings, M. R. (1988) Human Heredity: Principles and Issues (West Publishing Company, New York)]. In a classic paper, Axelrod and Hamilton [Axelrod, R. & Hamilton, W. D. (1981) Science 211, 1390–1396] offered a chromosomal drive (CD) hypothesis based on the game iterated prisoner’s dilemma (IPD) to explain the evolution of an increased frequency of trisomic pregnancies with maternal age. In this paper we explore this hypothesis and its predictions in detail. On closer examination we find that IPD does not provide an adequate model for the CD hypothesis. Therefore, we develop a more suitable model and explore the conditions necessary for it to explain maternal age-dependent trisomy. Our results demonstrate that a relationship between the decay of a female’s reproductive potential and chromosomal drive must exist for the CD hypothesis to work. With appropriate parameter values, a comparison of model predictions with empirical estimates for the age-dependence of trisomy reveals a striking correspondence. We point out a close correspondence between other predictions made by the CD hypothesis and empirical observations, as well.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hamilton's rule meets the Hamiltonian: kin selection on dynamic charactersProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1997
- Meiotic nondisjunction does the two–stepNature Genetics, 1996
- Genetic ConflictsThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1996
- Separation anxiety: the etiology of nondisjunction in flies and peopleHuman Molecular Genetics, 1994
- Women's Reproductive Cancers in Evolutionary ContextThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1994
- First meiotic division abnormalities in human oocytes: mechanism of trisomy formationCytogenetic and Genome Research, 1994
- Paternal nondisjunction in trisomy 21: excess of male patientsHuman Molecular Genetics, 1993
- Genetic scrambling as a defence against meiotic driveJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1991
- Chromosome error propagation and cancerTrends in Genetics, 1989
- ATTRITION OF TRISOMIES AS A MATERNAL SCREENING DEVICE: An Explanation of the Association of Trisomy 21 with Maternal AgeThe Lancet, 1986