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The rate of chromosomal inversion fixation in plant genomes is highly variable

Kaede Hirabayashi, Gregory L. Owens

2023Evolution14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chromosomal inversions are theorized to play an important role in adaptation by preventing recombination, but testing this hypothesis requires an understanding of the rate of inversion fixation. Here, we use chromosome-level whole-genome assemblies for 32 genera of plants to ask how fast inversions accumulate and what factors affect this rate. We find that on average species accumulate 4-25 inversions per million generations, but this rate is highly variable, and we find no correlation between sequence divergence or repeat content and the number of inversions or the proportion of genome that was inverted and only a small correlation with chromosome size. We also find that inversion regions are depleted for genes and enriched for TEs compared to the genomic background. This suggests that idiosyncratic forces, like natural selection and demography, are controlling how fast inversions fix.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyChromosomal inversionGenomeEvolutionary biologyFixation (population genetics)Natural selectionGeneticsInversion (geology)ChromosomeDivergence (linguistics)RecombinationGeneSelection (genetic algorithm)KaryotypePaleontologyPhilosophyComputer scienceStructural basinLinguisticsArtificial intelligenceGenomics and Phylogenetic StudiesChromosomal and Genetic VariationsGenetic diversity and population structure
The rate of chromosomal inversion fixation in plant genomes is highly variable | Litcius