Revisiting the Impact of Inversions in Evolution: From Population Genetic Markers to Drivers of Adaptive Shifts and Speciation?
The University of Melbourne · University of British Columbia · +1 more institution
Abstract
There is a growing appreciation that chromosome inversions affect rates of adaptation, speciation, and the evolution of sex chromosomes. Comparative genomic studies have identified many new paracentric inversion polymorphisms. Population models suggest that inversions can spread by reducing recombination between alleles that independently increase fitness, without epistasis or coadaptation. Areas of linkage disequilibrium extend across large inversions but may be interspersed by areas with little disequilibrium. Genes located within inversions are associated with a variety of traits including those involved in climatic adaptation. Inversion polymorphisms may contribute to speciation by generating…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.78
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 152
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Linkage disequilibrium
- Epistasis
- Evolutionary biology
- Genetic algorithm
- Genetics
- Disequilibrium
- Chromosomal inversion
- Climate action