Abstract
The African malaria vector, Anopheles gambiae, is characterized by multiple polymorphic chromosomal inversions and has become widely studied as a system for exploring models of speciation. Near complete reproductive isolation between different inversion types, known as chromosomal forms, has led to the suggestion that A. gambiae is in early stages of speciation, with divergence evolving in the face of considerable gene flow. We compared the standard chromosomal arrangement (Savanna form) with genomes homozygous for j, b, c, and u inversions (Bamako form) in order to identify regions of genomic divergence with respect to inversion polymorphism. We found levels of divergence between the two sub-taxa within some of these inversions (2Rj and 2Rb), but at a level lower than expected and confined near the inversion breakpoints, consistent with a gene flux model. Unexpectedly, we found that the majority of diverged regions were located on the X chromosome, which contained half of all significantly diverged regions, with much of this divergence located within exons. This is surprising given that the Bamako and Savanna chromosomal forms are both within the S molecular form that is defined by a locus near centromere of X chromosome. Two X-linked genes (a heat shock protein and P450 encoding genes) involved in reproductive isolation between the M and S molecular forms of A. gambiae were also significantly diverged between the two chromosomal forms. These results suggest that genes mediating reproductive isolation are likely located on the X chromosome, as is thought to be the case for the M and S molecular forms. We conclude that genes located on the sex chromosome may be the major force driving speciation between these chromosomal forms of A. gambiae.
Highlights
IntroductionThe evolution of reproductive isolation among populations within a species, can be mediated by several mechanisms
Species divergence, and the evolution of reproductive isolation among populations within a species, can be mediated by several mechanisms
Genomic divergence between and within the Bamako and Savanna chromosomal forms The goal of this study centers on a comparison of S molecular form genomes representing different gene arrangements imposed by paracentric inversions using whole genome tiling microarray (WGTM), with the aim of further understanding divergence in A. gambiae due to chromosomal inversions and genetic elements involved in reproductive isolation
Summary
The evolution of reproductive isolation among populations within a species, can be mediated by several mechanisms. A paracentric chromosome inversion is the result of chromosome breakage and repair where a chromosome fragment that does not include the centromere, is re-inserted in reverse orientation, resulting in an inverted gene orientation. Reduced recombination associated with paracentric inversion heterozygotes can result in an accumulation in local populations of alleles that confer a fitness advantages or that are deleterious [3]. This occurs because inversions protect gene regions in diverging groups from the homogenizing effects of gene flow [4,5]. Inversions may contain areas of relatively high nucleotide divergence in populations under divergent selection or in the early stages of speciation, even with some degree of gene flow between them [1,6]
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