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Chau-Ti Ting

Researcher at National Taiwan University

Publications -  29
Citations -  2325

Chau-Ti Ting is an academic researcher from National Taiwan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Drosophila melanogaster. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 25 publications receiving 2158 citations. Previous affiliations of Chau-Ti Ting include University of Chicago & National Tsing Hua University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Genes and speciation

TL;DR: Molecular studies of a handful of genes that are involved in maintaining reproductive isolation between species have provided some striking insights, suggesting that despite being strongly influenced by positive selection, speciation genes are often non-essential, having functions that are only loosely coupled to reproductive isolation.
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A Rapidly Evolving Homeobox at the Site of a Hybrid Sterility Gene

TL;DR: The homeodomain is a DNA binding motif that is usually conserved among diverse taxa and has experienced more amino acid substitutions than it did in the preceding 700 million years; during this period, it has also evolved faster than other parts of the protein or even the introns.
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The phylogeny of closely related species as revealed by the genealogy of a speciation gene, Odysseus.

TL;DR: Interestingly, DNA variation only a short distance away (1.8 kb) appears not to be influenced by the forces that shape the recent evolution of the OdsH coding region, and this locus thus may represent a test case of inferring phylogeny of very closely related species.
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The normal function of a speciation gene, Odysseus, and its hybrid sterility effect.

TL;DR: The combined evidence suggests that the sterility phenotype represents a novel manifestation of the gene function rather than the reduction or loss of the normal one in Drosophila.
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Positive selection driving the evolution of a gene of male reproduction, Acp26Aa, of Drosophila: II. Divergence versus polymorphism.

TL;DR: It is suggested that positive selection is active, but may be weak, for each amino acid change in the Acp26Aa gene.