ExLibris header image
SFX Logo
Title: Deleterious mutations and the evolution of sex
Source:

Science [0036-8075] Keightley, P D yr:2000


Collapse list of basic services Basic
Sorry, no full text available...
Please use the document delivery service (see below)  
Holding information
Holdings in library search engine ALBERT GO
Document delivery
Request document via Library/Bibliothek GO
Users interested in this article also expressed an interest in the following:
1. Kondrashov, A S S. "Deleterious mutations and the evolution of sexual reproduction." Nature 336.6198 (1989): 435-40. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
2. West, S.A. A. "A pluralist approach to sex and recombination." Journal of evolutionary biology 12.6 (1999): 1003-1012. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
3. Lynch, M. "The origins of genome complexity." Science 302.5649 (2003): 1401-1404. Link to SFX for this item
4. Tuzel, E. "Evolutionary route to diploidy and sex." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 98.24 (2001): 13774-13777. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
5. Glémin, S. "HOW ARE DELETERIOUS MUTATIONS PURGED? DRIFT VERSUS NONRANDOM MATING." Evolution 57.12 (2003): 2678-2687. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
6. BERNSTEIN, H. "EVOLUTION OF SEXUAL REPRODUCTION IMPORTANCE OF DNA REPAIR COMPLEMENTATION AND VARIATION." American Naturalist, The 117.4 (1981): 537-549. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
7. Randerson, James P. "The uncertain evolution of the sexes." Trends in ecology & evolution 16.10 (2001): 571-579. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
8. Blackwell, M. "Evolution - Terrestrial life - Fungal from the start?" Science 289.5486 (2000): 1884-1885. Link to SFX for this item
9. LIVELY, C. "The maintenance of sex: host-parasite coevolution with density-dependent virulence." Journal of evolutionary biology 22.10 (2009): 2086-2093. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
10. Otto, S P P. "Why have sex? The population genetics of sex and recombination." Biochemical society transactions 34.4 (2006): 519-522. Link to SFX for this item
11. de Visser, J. "The evolution of sex: empirical insights into the roles of epistasis and drift." Nature reviews. Genetics 8.2 (2007): 139-149. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
12. Lively, C M M. "Evidence from a New Zealand snail for the maintenance of sex by parasitism." Nature 328.6130 (1987): 519-521. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
13. Barton, N H H. "Why sex and recombination?" Science 281.5385 (1998): 1986-90. Link to SFX for this item
14. Vinogradov, E. "Testing genome complexity." Science 304.5669 (2004): 389-390. Link to SFX for this item
15. Vinogradov, Alexander E E. "Evolution of genome size: Multilevel selection, mutation bias or dynamical chaos?" Current opinion in genetics & development 14.6 (2004): 620-626. Link to SFX for this item
16. Otto, S. "Resolving the paradox of sex and recombination." Nature reviews. Genetics 3.4 (2002): 252-261. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
17. Lynch, M. "The frailty of adaptive hypotheses for the origins of organismal complexity." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104.Suppl. 1 (2007): 8597-8604. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
18. Lynch, M. "The Origins of Eukaryotic Gene Structure." Molecular biology and evolution 23.2 (2006): 450-468. Link to SFX for this item
19. West, SA. "Sex may need more than one." Journal of evolutionary biology 12.6 (1999): 1053-1055. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
20. Moore, Richard C. C. "The early stages of duplicate gene evolution." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 100.26 (2003): 15682-15687. Link to Full Text for this item Link to SFX for this item
View More...
View Less...
Select All Clear All

Expand list of advanced services Advanced