4.7 Article

Natural selection and the distribution of chromosomal inversion lengths

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 13, Pages 3627-3641

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mec.16091

Keywords

adaptation; chromosomal rearrangements; inversions; structural variation

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council
  2. School of Biological Sciences at Monash University
  3. Wenner-Gren foundation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Chromosomal inversions play a substantial role in genome evolution, with the length of inversions affecting their evolutionary fates across different types. Small rearrangements contribute the most to genome evolution under neutral and underdominant scenarios, while directly beneficial inversions prefer small rearrangements for fixation and maintain intermediate-to-large inversions as balanced polymorphisms.
Chromosomal inversions contribute substantially to genome evolution, yet the processes governing their evolutionary dynamics remain poorly understood. Theory suggests that a readily measurable property of inversions-their length-can potentially affect their evolutionary fates. Emerging data on the lengths of polymorphic and fixed inversions may therefore provide clues to the evolutionary processes promoting inversion establishment. However, formal predictions for the distribution of inversion lengths remain incomplete, making empirical patterns difficult to interpret. We model the relation between inversion length and establishment probability for four inversion types: (1) neutral, (2) underdominant, (3) directly beneficial, and (4) indirectly beneficial, with selection favouring the latter because they capture locally adapted alleles at migration-selection balance and suppress recombination between them. We also consider how deleterious mutations affect the lengths of established inversions. We show that length distributions of common polymorphic and fixed inversions systematically differ among inversion types. Small rearrangements contribute the most to genome evolution under neutral and underdominant scenarios of selection, with the lengths of neutral inversion substitutions increasing, and those of underdominant substitutions decreasing, with effective population size. Among directly beneficial inversions, small rearrangements are preferentially fixed, whereas intermediate-to-large inversions are maintained as balanced polymorphisms via associative overdominance. Finally, inversions established under the local adaptation scenario are predominantly intermediate-to-large. Such inversions remain polymorphic or approach fixation within the local populations where they are favoured. Our models clarify how inversion length distributions relate to processes of inversion establishment, providing a platform for testing how natural selection shapes the evolution of genome structure.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available