In a groundbreaking study that challenges long-held paradigms in evolutionary genetics, researchers at Duke University have revealed that the predominant causes of lethal mutations in wild populations of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster are not the small-scale DNA errors traditionally assumed, but instead are largely driven by the activity of transposable elements, commonly known as “jumping genes.” This revelation, recently published in PLOS Biology, reshapes our understanding of genetic variation and its evolutionary consequences, while also raising important implications for conservation biology and genome evolution at large.
For decades, evolutionary biologists have conceptualized lethal mutations—the genetic changes that cause inviability or death—as primarily arising from subtle nucleotide substitutions or small insertions and deletions within the genome. These small-scale mutations, while individually disruptive, were thought to be efficiently purged from populations by natural selection. Yet, paradoxically, researchers observe that virtually every individual across various species carries at least one lethal mutation, a phenomenon that remained somewhat enigmatic. The new Duke study elucidates this puzzle by illuminating the outsized role played by transposable elements.
Transposable elements are mobile segments of DNA capable of moving from one genomic location to another through “cut and paste” or “copy and paste” mechanisms. Originating from discoveries in maize, these genetic elements were once dismissed as nonfunctional “junk DNA.” Nevertheless, it is now recognized that transposable elements constitute a substantial fraction—ranging from 20% to 80%—of many eukaryotic genomes, including humans. Their ability to insert themselves into essential genes can disrupt gene expression, leading to loss of function and sometimes lethal phenotypic outcomes.
Sarah Marion, the study’s lead author and a postdoctoral researcher at Reed College who initiated the project during her graduate tenure at Duke, embarked on an ambitious, long-term investigation to quantify and characterize lethal mutations in wild fruit flies. To capture natural genetic diversity, her team employed a field-collection strategy wherein wild Drosophila populations were trapped using baited buckets containing rum, bananas, and yeast—mimicking natural feeding environments. From these collections, they established approximately 300 distinct fly lineages, each harboring lethal mutations on a single chromosome.
Over the course of five years and a staggering 21,000 fly pairings, the researchers conducted extensive genetic crosses, systematically tracking how lethal mutations propagated through the population. This expansive dataset allowed them to dissect the molecular underpinnings of lethality at a population scale. Contrary to expectations based on classical genetics, they found that the majority of lethal variants were not point mutations or small-scale indels but rather caused by two specific families of transposable elements that had recently infiltrated the Drosophila genome through horizontal transfer from closely related species.
These “invader” transposons create waves of mutational disruption by inserting themselves into critical coding or regulatory regions of genes, thereby interrupting normal gene function and resulting in lethal phenotypes. This discovery underscores the dynamic, invasive nature of transposable elements as potent sources of genetic change that can temporarily overwhelm the cleansing power of natural selection.
Critically, the team observed that the initial introduction of novel transposons triggers a transient surge in lethal mutation rates—a genomic “storm”—followed by a gradual decline as host defense mechanisms evolve. These defenses include piRNA pathways and other forms of epigenetic silencing that suppress transposon activity and mitigate their mutagenic impact. This co-evolutionary arms race between transposable elements and host genomes creates cyclical patterns of mutation rate fluctuations, revealing a previously hidden layer of evolutionary dynamics.
Senior author Mohamed Noor, a professor of biology at Duke University, emphasized the paradigm shift embodied in these findings. He noted that while lethal mutation frequencies remained consistent with historical observations from over half a century ago, the genetic bases underlying these mutations are strikingly different, dominated by recent transposon invasions rather than the classical small-scale mutations traditionally emphasized in evolutionary theory.
The implications of this research extend well beyond fruit flies. Small, isolated, or endangered populations may be especially vulnerable to rapid fitness declines driven by bursts of transposon-induced lethality. Such “genomic shocks” can exacerbate the effects of inbreeding and genetic drift, accelerating population declines and complicating conservation efforts. Understanding how transposable elements contribute to genetic load and population health offers a promising avenue for monitoring and potentially mitigating genetic risks in threatened species.
Moreover, the research invites a re-evaluation of the mutational landscape in human genetics. Transposable elements are increasingly recognized as contributors to genetic disorders and disease through insertional mutagenesis. Advances in long-read sequencing and genome assembly techniques are revealing that large structural variants—including transposon insertions—are far more prevalent than previously appreciated, suggesting that similar mutational mechanisms may be widespread across diverse taxa.
Building upon these findings, the Duke research team is now broadening their scope to examine differential rates and patterns of transposable element activity across related species of fruit flies. By deciphering the molecular determinants and evolutionary pressures that govern the mobility of specific transposon families, they hope to uncover fundamental principles guiding genome evolution and stability.
This transformative study was made possible through substantial funding and support from the U.S. National Science Foundation, which enabled the extensive experimental infrastructure, long-term population maintenance, and comprehensive genomic sequencing integral to the work. The authors anticipate that this research will catalyze broader investigations into the evolutionary significance of mobile genetic elements and their role shaping genetic diversity in natural populations.
In summary, this pioneering work reframes our understanding of genetic lethality by highlighting transposable elements as major drivers of mutational burden, challenging classical views centered on small-scale mutations. It enriches the conceptual framework of evolutionary genetics and opens new frontiers for studying genome dynamics, health, and conservation across taxa.
Subject of Research: Animals
Article Title: Transposable elements contribute substantially to naturally occurring genetic lethality in Drosophila melanogaster
News Publication Date: 10-Mar-2026
Web References:
https://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.3003467
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003467
References:
Transposable elements contribute substantially to naturally occurring genetic lethality in Drosophila melanogaster, Sarah B. Marion et al., PLOS Biology, 2026. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3003467
Image Credits: Katrina Focht
Keywords: Genetics, Evolutionary genetics, Transposable elements, Mobile genetic elements, DNA, Drosophila melanogaster, Lethal mutations, Genome evolution, Population genetics
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