posted on 2024-01-15, 21:50authored byTOM MATTHEW ALLISON
The energy that organisms use to grow and reproduce is made by stripping electrons from fuel sources and passing them to oxygen; a process called oxidative phosphorylation. For the first two billion years of life, oxidative phosphorylation was governed by a single genome and subject to a single form of selection: natural selection. In modern animals, not only is this process governed by two distinct genomes, each with their own unique inheritance patterns, but it is potentially subject to a new form of selection (in addition to natural selection); that is sexual selection. This thesis examines the consequences of these ecological differences in oxidative phosphorylation.