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  1.  8
    BioEssays 1/2021.Diego Hojsgaard & Manfred Schartl - 2021 - Bioessays 43 (1):2170011.
    Graphical AbstractThe origins of asexuality in plants as well as animals have long puzzled researchers. In article 2000111, Diego Hojsgaard and Manfred Schartl integrate old ideas with recent molecular and genomic data and provide a single mechanistic model for this phenomenon. They highlight two usually overlooked conditions to understand the molecular nature of clonal organisms to explain asexuals' developmental diversity and biologically vague cases such as automixis and polyploidy.
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  2.  8
    Skipping sex: A nonrecombinant genomic assemblage of complementary reproductive modules.Diego Hojsgaard & Manfred Schartl - 2021 - Bioessays 43 (1):2000111.
    The unusual occurrence and developmental diversity of asexual eukaryotes remain a puzzle. De novo formation of a functioning asexual genome requires a unique assembly of sets of genes or gene states to disrupt cellular mechanisms of meiosis and gametogenesis, and to affect discrete components of sexuality and produce clonal or hemiclonal offspring. We highlight two usually overlooked but essential conditions to understand the molecular nature of clonal organisms, that is, a nonrecombinant genomic assemblage retaining modifiers of the sexual program, and (...)
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    Melanoma formation in xiphophorus: A model system for the role of receptor tyrosine kinases in tumorigenesis.Barbara Malitschek, Dorothee Förnzler & Manfred Schartl - 1995 - Bioessays 17 (12):1017-1023.
    Cancer is one of the most frequent fatal human diseases. It is a genetic disease, and molecular analysis of the genes involved revealed that they belong to several distinct classes of molecules, one of which is the receptor tyrosine kinases. Neoplastic transformation is regarded as the result of a multistep process and, in most cases, it is hard to evaluate what the initial events in tumor formation are. What makes it difficult to approach this question is the paucity of animal (...)
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  4.  29
    Evolution of Xmrk: an oncogene, but also a speciation gene?Manfred Schartl - 2008 - Bioessays 30 (9):822-832.
    Genes that exert their function when they are introduced into a foreign genetic background pose many questions to our current understanding of the forces and mechanisms that promote either the maintenance or divergence of gene functions over evolutionary time. The melanoma inducing Xmrk oncogene of the Southern platyfish (Xiphophorus maculatus) is a stable constituent of the genome of this species. It displays its tumorigenic function, however, almost exclusively only after inter‐populational or, even more severely, interspecific hybridization events. The Xiphophorus hybrid (...)
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