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doi: 10.5061/dryad.2m916
A maternally inherited, all-female trait is widely found among arthropods, which is caused by bacterial endosymbionts such as Wolbachia, Rickettsia, Spiroplasma and Cardinium We discovered a single female of Drosophila biauraria, collected from Tomakomai, Hokkaido, Japan, that produced all-female offspring. This all-female trait was maternally inherited in the iso-female line (SP12F) by backcrossing with males of a normal line (SP11-20) with a 1:1 sex ratio derived from the same population. The all-female trait was not affected by tetracycline treatment performed for two consecutive generations. However, the microinjection of filter-sterilised homogenate of SP12F females into SP11-20 females established all-female matrilines. Our data suggest the role of transmissible agents, most likely viruses, but not bacteria or protists, as the possible cause of the all-female phenotype, which is likely to be achieved by killing of male embryos because egg hatch rates of SP12F were nearly half as those of SP11-20. This is the first report in Diptera to demonstrate a maternally inherited virus-like element as the cause of the male-killing phenotype in D. biauraria.
Raw data for tetracycline treatmentNumber of male and female adults appeared following tetracycline treatment.RawData_File1_TetTreatment.xlsxRaw data for egg hatch ratesEgg hatch rates of all-female and normal lines.RawData_File2_EggHatchRate.xlsx
male killing, Holocene, Drosophila biauraria, virus-like element, sex ratio distortion
male killing, Holocene, Drosophila biauraria, virus-like element, sex ratio distortion
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