Assessing when chromosomal rearrangements affect the dynamics of speciation: implications from computer simulations

Many hypotheses have been put forth to explain the origin and spread of inversions, and their significance for speciation. Several recent genic models have proposed that inversions promote speciation with gene flow due to the adaptive significance of the genes contained within them and because of th...

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Main Authors: Jeffrey L Feder, Patrik eNosil, Samuel M Flaxman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Genetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2014.00295/full
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spelling doaj-d026966d33f044deaeabff91dfbcfe692020-11-24T22:32:27ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Genetics1664-80212014-08-01510.3389/fgene.2014.0029589179Assessing when chromosomal rearrangements affect the dynamics of speciation: implications from computer simulationsJeffrey L Feder0Patrik eNosil1Samuel M Flaxman2University of Notre DameUniversity of SheffieldUniversity of Colorado BoulderMany hypotheses have been put forth to explain the origin and spread of inversions, and their significance for speciation. Several recent genic models have proposed that inversions promote speciation with gene flow due to the adaptive significance of the genes contained within them and because of the effects inversions have on suppressing recombination. However, the consequences of inversions for the dynamics of genome wide divergence across the speciation continuum remain unclear, an issue we examine here. We review a framework for the genomics of speciation involving the congealing of the genome into alternate adaptive states representing species (‘genome wide congealing’). We then place inversions in this context as examples of how genetic hitchhiking can potentially hasten genome wide congealing. Specifically, we use simulation models to (i) examine the conditions under which inversions may speed genome congealing and (ii) quantify predicted magnitudes of these effects. Effects of inversions on promoting speciation were most common and pronounced when inversions were initially fixed between populations before secondary contact and adaptation involved many genes with small fitness effects. Further work is required on the role of underdominance and epistasis between a few loci of major effect within inversions. The results highlight five important aspects of the roles of inversions in speciation: (i) the geographic context of the origins and spread of inversions, (ii) the conditions under which inversions can facilitate divergence, (iii) the magnitude of that facilitation, (iv) the extent to which the buildup of divergence is likely to be biased within vs. outside of inversions, and (v) the dynamics of the appearance and disappearance of exceptional divergence within inversions. We conclude by discussing the empirical challenges in showing that inversions play a central role in facilitating speciation with gene flow.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2014.00295/fullLinkage Disequilibriummodelsecological speciationinversionsgenomic architecturegenetic hitchhiking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeffrey L Feder
Patrik eNosil
Samuel M Flaxman
spellingShingle Jeffrey L Feder
Patrik eNosil
Samuel M Flaxman
Assessing when chromosomal rearrangements affect the dynamics of speciation: implications from computer simulations
Frontiers in Genetics
Linkage Disequilibrium
models
ecological speciation
inversions
genomic architecture
genetic hitchhiking
author_facet Jeffrey L Feder
Patrik eNosil
Samuel M Flaxman
author_sort Jeffrey L Feder
title Assessing when chromosomal rearrangements affect the dynamics of speciation: implications from computer simulations
title_short Assessing when chromosomal rearrangements affect the dynamics of speciation: implications from computer simulations
title_full Assessing when chromosomal rearrangements affect the dynamics of speciation: implications from computer simulations
title_fullStr Assessing when chromosomal rearrangements affect the dynamics of speciation: implications from computer simulations
title_full_unstemmed Assessing when chromosomal rearrangements affect the dynamics of speciation: implications from computer simulations
title_sort assessing when chromosomal rearrangements affect the dynamics of speciation: implications from computer simulations
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Genetics
issn 1664-8021
publishDate 2014-08-01
description Many hypotheses have been put forth to explain the origin and spread of inversions, and their significance for speciation. Several recent genic models have proposed that inversions promote speciation with gene flow due to the adaptive significance of the genes contained within them and because of the effects inversions have on suppressing recombination. However, the consequences of inversions for the dynamics of genome wide divergence across the speciation continuum remain unclear, an issue we examine here. We review a framework for the genomics of speciation involving the congealing of the genome into alternate adaptive states representing species (‘genome wide congealing’). We then place inversions in this context as examples of how genetic hitchhiking can potentially hasten genome wide congealing. Specifically, we use simulation models to (i) examine the conditions under which inversions may speed genome congealing and (ii) quantify predicted magnitudes of these effects. Effects of inversions on promoting speciation were most common and pronounced when inversions were initially fixed between populations before secondary contact and adaptation involved many genes with small fitness effects. Further work is required on the role of underdominance and epistasis between a few loci of major effect within inversions. The results highlight five important aspects of the roles of inversions in speciation: (i) the geographic context of the origins and spread of inversions, (ii) the conditions under which inversions can facilitate divergence, (iii) the magnitude of that facilitation, (iv) the extent to which the buildup of divergence is likely to be biased within vs. outside of inversions, and (v) the dynamics of the appearance and disappearance of exceptional divergence within inversions. We conclude by discussing the empirical challenges in showing that inversions play a central role in facilitating speciation with gene flow.
topic Linkage Disequilibrium
models
ecological speciation
inversions
genomic architecture
genetic hitchhiking
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2014.00295/full
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AT samuelmflaxman assessingwhenchromosomalrearrangementsaffectthedynamicsofspeciationimplicationsfromcomputersimulations
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