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Dissecting natural variation in sexually dimorphic gene expression (2019-2024)

Abstract

This project aims to understand the origins of sex differences by dissecting heritable variation in sexually dimorphic gene expression. Sexual dimorphism constitutes a large fraction of phenotypic diversity and arises mainly from sex differences in gene expression that permit males and females of a species to escape sexual conflict caused by a shared genome. The project uses multi-population quantitative genetics and allele-specific expression assays to merge the studies of sex-specific local adaptation and sexually dimorphic regulatory variation. The project will help to understand how cis- and trans- regulatory factors can affect natural variation differently in males and females, shaping their phenotypic similarities and differences.

Experts

Professor Steve Chenoweth

Head of School, School of the Envir
Faculty of Science
Head of School of the Environment
School of the Environment
Faculty of Science
Steve Chenoweth
Steve Chenoweth