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Complex evolutionary processes maintain an ancient chromosomal inversion.


ABSTRACT: Genome re-arrangements such as chromosomal inversions are often involved in adaptation. As such, they experience natural selection, which can erode genetic variation. Thus, whether and how inversions can remain polymorphic for extended periods of time remains debated. Here we combine genomics, experiments, and evolutionary modeling to elucidate the processes maintaining an inversion polymorphism associated with the use of a challenging host plant (Redwood trees) in Timema stick insects. We show that the inversion is maintained by a combination of processes, finding roles for life-history trade-offs, heterozygote advantage, local adaptation to different hosts, and gene flow. We use models to show how such multi-layered regimes of balancing selection and gene flow provide resilience to help buffer populations against the loss of genetic variation, maintaining the potential for future evolution. We further show that the inversion polymorphism has persisted for millions of years and is not a result of recent introgression. We thus find that rather than being a nuisance, the complex interplay of evolutionary processes provides a mechanism for the long-term maintenance of genetic variation.

SUBMITTER: Nosil P 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10288594 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Complex evolutionary processes maintain an ancient chromosomal inversion.

Nosil Patrik P   Soria-Carrasco Victor V   Villoutreix Romain R   De-la-Mora Marisol M   de Carvalho Clarissa F CF   Parchman Thomas T   Feder Jeffrey L JL   Gompert Zachariah Z  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20230613 25


Genome re-arrangements such as chromosomal inversions are often involved in adaptation. As such, they experience natural selection, which can erode genetic variation. Thus, whether and how inversions can remain polymorphic for extended periods of time remains debated. Here we combine genomics, experiments, and evolutionary modeling to elucidate the processes maintaining an inversion polymorphism associated with the use of a challenging host plant (Redwood trees) in <i>Timema</i> stick insects. W  ...[more]

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