PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Decoding the selfish gene, from evolutionary cheaters to disease control

2025-09-18
(Press-News.org) Decoding the selfish gene, from evolutionary cheaters to disease control

 

Scientists from the University of Sheffield have uncovered how to potentially control harmful insect populations by studying a "selfish gene" that manipulates inheritance

The new research focuses on meiotic drive, a process where a selfish gene gives itself a better chance of being passed on to the next generation, disrupting the normal 50/50 inheritance pattern

By studying the Malaysian stalk-eyed fly, researchers discovered that a selfish gene can damage rival sperm carrying a Y chromosome, leading to a population with far more females than males

Understanding this genetic mechanism could provide a new way to control insects that spread disease and cause food shortages by causing their populations to become unsustainably female-biased
 

New research is shining a light on one of genetics’ enduring puzzles - how the workings of the so-called “selfish gene” could be harnessed to control harmful insect populations.

 

By understanding the molecular basis of a selfish gene and the way it operates, scientists believe they could identify novel methods to control certain insects that are globally significant pests and disease carriers. 

 

The research - involving an international team of scientists led by the University of Sheffield - is focusing on what is known as “meiotic drive”, where a selfish gene is able to disrupt the normal pattern of inheritance. 

 

Meiosis is a type of cell division that creates gametes - sperm and egg cells that carry half the genetic material of each parent. When they fuse during fertilisation, they form new offspring. 

 

According to classical genetics, the maternal and paternal versions of each gene in the gametes have an equal chance of being passed onto the offspring. But that process is subverted by meiotic drive, where selfish genes dramatically increase the odds that they will successfully pass on their genetic code. 

 

Dr Alison Wright, from the University of Sheffield’s School of Biosciences and principal investigator in the research, said: “All genes are selfish, but some are more selfish than others. Meiotic drive is a powerful mechanism and, in the insect world, some selfish genes can have a major effect on the numbers of male and female offspring that are produced. 

 

“Ultimately, this can cause insect populations carrying these selfish genes to go extinct. By studying how that happens at a fundamental level, scientists will be able to exploit that knowledge and put it to good use to control insect populations that are responsible for major disease outbreaks and food shortages.”

 

The Sheffield-led research has investigated a selfish gene carried by the Malaysian stalk-eyed fly (Teleopsis dalmanni). Using single-cell RNA sequencing, the scientists profiled gene expression in individual sperm cells during their formation, a new technique for investigating the molecular mechanism of meiotic drive. 

 

Dr Peter Price, from the University of Sheffield’s School of Biosciences and the lead author of the study, said: “This novel approach allowed us to find several genes essential for normal sperm development whose activity are altered in the presence of the selfish gene. 

 

“The selfish gene is able to damage the mobility of rival sperm that carry a Y chromosome, which results in fewer male offspring. Over time, this meiotic drive results in an extremely female-biased sex ratio where very few males are present, with severe consequences for the existence and fertility of the population.”

 

The Malaysian stalk-eyed fly is not a pest itself, but it offers a valuable insight into how meiotic drive and a selfish gene operate. Next, the scientists will apply their new approach to test the origins of this selfish gene and its long-term consequences for the fate of insect populations.

 

END

 

Note to editors

 

For further information - or if you wish to have a preview copy of the paper, please contact:mediateam@sheffield.ac.uk

 

The study - Single-cell consequences of X-linked meiotic drive in stalk-eyed flies - is published in PLoS Genetics. When the embargo lifts, the paper will be downloadable from the following link: https://journals.plos.org/plosgenetics/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgen.1011816

 

Image

A high res image of a Malaysian stalk-eyed fly (Teleopsis dalmanni) can be used with this story. Please credit the image: Paul Richards


The image can be accessed by following the link to Google Drive: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1RmOx84wUDCEZAoib_GA4S7dEl8_uybxz/view?usp=sharing

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Major review highlights latest evidence on real-time test for blood – clotting in childbirth emergencies

2025-09-18
Postpartum hemorrhage, severe bleeding after childbirth, is a leading cause of maternal mortality around the world. But many of these deaths can be prevented—and a real-time blood-monitoring technology called viscoelastic testing (VET) could play a crucial role. Though used in parts of Europe, VET is not yet a standard part of maternity care in the United States. A new sweeping review from the Southern California Evidence Review Center, part of the Keck School of Medicine of USC, brings U.S. hospitals a step closer ...

Inspired by bacteria’s defense strategies

2025-09-18
Targeted editing of genetic information has advanced at an extraordinary pace in recent years. Tools such as the CRISPR-Cas9 “gene scissors” and base editing—a technique that makes precise, single-letter changes to DNA without cutting it—have already become standard in research and clinical development. These technologies are being used to treat genetic disorders, enhance crop resistance, and engineer bacteria for biotechnological purposes. Turning the battle between bacteria and viruses into scientific progress Researchers at the Helmholtz Institute ...

Research spotlight: Combination therapy shows promise for overcoming treatment resistance in glioblastoma

2025-09-18
Rakesh Jain, PhD, director of the Edwin Steele Laboratories for Tumor Biology in the Department of Radiation Oncology at Massachusetts General Hospital and Andrew Werk Professor of Radiation Oncology at Harvard Medical School, is senior and corresponding author of a new paper in PNAS, “Wnt Inhibition Alleviates Resistance to Anti-PD1 Therapy and Improves Anti-Tumor Immunity in Glioblastoma." Q: How would you summarize your study for a lay audience? Brain tumor patients with glioblastoma (GBM) face extremely limited treatment options and show poor responses to current immunotherapies. New treatment strategies are ...

University of Houston co-leads $25 million NIH-funded grant to study the delay of nearsightedness in children

2025-09-18
Key Takeaways  University of Houston College of Optometry professor is co-leading a national $25 million NIH-funded clinical trial to delay the development of myopia.  Researchers are testing whether low-concentrate atropine drops can delay onset of myopia in children.  The more nearsighted someone becomes, the greater their risk of sight-threatening complications later as an adult.  The University of Houston is co-leading a national study, the first of its kind in the United States, ...

NRG Oncology PREDICT-RT study completes patient accrual, tests individualized concurrent therapy and radiation for high-risk prostate cancer

2025-09-18
PHILADELPHIA, PA – The NRG Oncology NRG-GU009 (PREDICT-RT) study evaluating intensified and de-intensified concurrent radiation regimens based on the genomic risk of patients with high-risk prostate cancer completed accrual and met its accrual milestone of 2,478 patients approximately two years earlier than the trial’s anticipated accrual completion date. “The incidence of men receiving high-risk prostate cancer diagnoses is on the increase in recent years. The PREDICT-RT study was designed to improve quality of life and outcomes for these patients while tailoring treatments to meet each individual’s needs based on their Decipher Prostate Genomic Classifier ...

Taking aim at nearsightedness in kids before it’s diagnosed

2025-09-18
COLUMBUS, Ohio – For the first time, researchers are leading a national study to see if the onset of nearsightedness can be delayed – and consequently reduced in magnitude over a lifetime – with the use of eyedrops in young children. Scientists at The Ohio State University and the University of Houston have received two grants from the National Institutes of Health totaling $25 million to test daily drops of atropine as a nearsightedness preventive therapy in children age 6-11 years old. “The more nearsightedness you have, the ...

With no prior training, dogs can infer how similar types of toys work, even when they don’t look alike

2025-09-18
As infants, humans naturally learn new words and their associations—like the fact that forks are related to bowls because both are used to consume food. In a study publishing in the Cell Press journal Current Biology on September 18, a team of animal behavior experts demonstrate that dogs can categorize objects by function, too. In a series of playful interactions with their owners, a group of Gifted Word Learner (GWL) dogs were able to distinguish between toys used for tugging versus fetching, even when the toys in question didn’t share any obvious physical ...

Three deadliest risk factors of a common liver disease identified in new study

2025-09-18
LOS ANGELES — More than a third of the world’s population is affected by metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, or MASLD, the most common chronic liver disease in the world.   MASLD occurs when fat builds up in the liver and is associated with one or more of five conditions: obesity, Type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, high blood sugar and low HDL cholesterol, known as “good” cholesterol. These conditions are characterized as cardiometabolic risk ...

Dogs can extend word meanings to new objects based on function, not appearance

2025-09-18
BUDAPEST, Hungary — A new study publishing in Current Biology on September 18 by the Department of Ethology at Eötvös Loránd University reveals that dogs with a vocabulary of toy names—known as Gifted Word Learners—can extend learned labels to entirely new objects, not because the objects look similar, but because they are used in the same way. In humans, “label extension” is a cornerstone of early language development. In non-humans, until now, it had only been documented in few so-called language-trained individual animals, after years of intensive training in captivity. But ...

Palaeontology: South American amber deposit ‘abuzz’ with ancient insects

2025-09-18
The first amber deposits in South America containing preserved insects have been discovered in a quarry in Ecuador, reports a paper in Communications Earth & Environment. The finding provides a snapshot of a 112-million-year-old forest on the supercontinent Gondwana, and presents new possibilities for studying a currently little-known ancient ecosystem. Amber (fossilised tree resin) samples have a wide date range, with the earliest dated to 320 million years ago, but there is a notable increase in the number of samples in the fossil record between 120 million and 70 million years ago, during the Cretaceous era ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Parched soils can spark hot drought a nation away

Uncovering new physics in metals manufacturing

Sped-up evolution may help bacteria take hold in gut microbiome, UCLA-led research team finds

The dose-dependent effects of dissolved biochar on C. elegans: Insights into the physiological and transcriptomic responses

New research reveals genetic link to most common pediatric bone cancer

Research conducted during 2024 eclipse reveals importance of light on bird behavior

Why does female fertility decline so fast? The key is the ovary

Total solar eclipse triggers dawn behavior in birds

Europe’s largest bats hunt and eat migrating birds on the wing, high in the sky

China’s emerging AI regulation could foster an open and safe future for AI

The secret to naked mole-rat’s longevity: Enhanced DNA repair

Acidic tumor environment promotes survival and growth of cancer cells

New biosensor tracks plants’ immune hormone in real time

New study finds gaps in REDD+ forest carbon offsets with most overstating climate impacts

Mystery solved: How Europe’s largest bat catches and eats passerines mid-air

Pan-disease atlas maps molecular fingerprints of health, disease and aging

New clinical trial to target cancer’s elusive growth switch

Ochsner Health launches Genetic Wellness Assessment to identify cancer risks early

Researchers find potential link between chronic pain, immune condition

A study by UPF reveals discrimination on grounds of ethnic background in Spain’s leading online second-hand marketplace, especially when buying

Research examines the good, bad and ugly of true crime media

Research shows National Living Wage has reduced labor mobility across firms, but at what cost?

New technique detects genetic mutations in brain tumors during surgery within just 25 minutes

UMass Amherst researchers create nanoparticle vaccine that prevents cancer in mice

Animal behavior: Dogs pawsitively hooked on toys

The ISSCR launches roadmap for developing pluripotent stem cell-derived cellular therapies

Parasite paparazzi take millions of photos of secret malaria proteins

Lung cancer incidence after September 11, 2001, among World Trade Center responders

City of Hope Research Spotlight, September 2025

Streamlining the consciousness debate, from trees to hermit crabs

[Press-News.org] Decoding the selfish gene, from evolutionary cheaters to disease control