“…There is growing evidence for a role for imprinted genes in hybrid inviability in both mammals and seed plants (e.g., Brekke & Good, 2014;Brekke, Henry, & Good, 2016;Burkart-Waco, Ngo, Lieberman, & Comai, 2015;Florez-Rueda et al, 2016;Garner, Kenney, Fishman, & Sweigart, 2016;Josefsson, Dilkes, & Comai, 2006;Loschiavo, Nguyen, Duselis, & Vrana, 2007;Vrana et al, 2000), and dysregulation of imprinted genes caused by trans effects has been suggested as a possible source of this incompatibility (Wolf, Oakey, & Feil, 2014). Intriguingly for the X-autosome conflict hypothesis, Vrana et al (2000), Zechner et al (2004) and Loschiavo et al (2007) find a large role for the X chromosome in, respectively, imprinted gene dysregulation, overgrowth phenotypes in hybrids, and abnormalities in the development of the placenta, a site of strong parentally antagonistic selection, as suggested by the abundance of imprinted gene expression there.…”