2012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0051625
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The Genetic Content of Chromosomal Inversions across a Wide Latitudinal Gradient

Abstract: There is increasing evidence regarding the role of chromosomal inversions in relevant biological processes such as local adaptation and speciation. A classic example of the adaptive role of chromosomal polymorphisms is given by the clines of inversion frequencies in Drosophila subobscura, repeatable across continents. Nevertheless, not much is known about the molecular variation associated with these polymorphisms. We characterized the genetic content of ca. 600 individuals from nine European populations follo… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
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“…Our populations presented clear initial differentiation in chromosomal inversion frequencies for all 5 chromosomes, according to expectations from the European cline (Krimbas & Loukas, ; Prevosti et al ., ; Balanyà et al ., ; Simões et al ., ). Throughout adaptation to laboratory environment, historical differentiation remained high, despite a significant role of selection in some inversions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Our populations presented clear initial differentiation in chromosomal inversion frequencies for all 5 chromosomes, according to expectations from the European cline (Krimbas & Loukas, ; Prevosti et al ., ; Balanyà et al ., ; Simões et al ., ). Throughout adaptation to laboratory environment, historical differentiation remained high, despite a significant role of selection in some inversions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The situation in D. subobscura is more complicated given the presence of extensive variation in chromosomal inversion polymorphisms that prevent recombination in inversion heterozygotes. Although there is gene flow within the same inversion arrangement (Simões et al ., ; Pegueroles et al ., ; Pratdesaba et al ., ), there is substantial evidence that inversion polymorphisms themselves are under selection (Balanyá et al ., ; Santos et al ., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, regions of high linkage among loci within inversions interspersed with regions of low linkage (Kennington et al ., ) and linkage levels between loci not decreasing away from breakpoints (Munté et al ., ) have been interpreted as indicating selection acting against recombinants to maintain sets of co‐adapted genes. Nevertheless, several studies analysing the genetic differentiation of the same chromosomal arrangement between populations reported very low differentiation values, not expected under the co‐adaptation hypothesis (Rozas et al ., ; Schaeffer et al ., ; Simões et al ., ; Pegueroles et al ., ; but see Kennington & Hoffmann, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In Drosophila , high linkage disequilibrium patterns have been detected among genes within inversions, particularly near their breakpoints (Laayouni et al ., ; Schaeffer et al ., ; Nóbrega et al ., ; but see Munté et al ., ). This result is in agreement with the expectation that inverted segments reduce recombination, particularly near breakpoints in heterokaryotypes (Navarro et al ., ; Simões et al ., ). However, as both hypotheses lead to the expectation that selection favours certain combinations of genes within inverted regions, such finding does not allow discrimination between the two models.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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