Coupling of twelve putative chromosomal inversions maintains a strong barrier to gene flow between snail ecotypes
Le Moan A, Stankowski S, Rafajlović M, Ortega-Martinez O, Faria R, Butlin RK, Johannesson K. 2024. Coupling of twelve putative chromosomal inversions maintains a strong barrier to gene flow between snail ecotypes. Evolution Letters. 8(4), 575–586.
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Author
Le Moan, Alan;
Stankowski, SeanISTA;
Rafajlović, Marina;
Ortega-Martinez, Olga;
Faria, Rui;
Butlin, Roger K;
Johannesson, Kerstin
Department
Abstract
Chromosomal rearrangements can lead to the coupling of reproductive barriers, but whether and how they contribute to the completion of speciation remains unclear. Marine snails of the genus Littorina repeatedly form hybrid zones between populations segregating for multiple inversion arrangements, providing opportunities to study their barrier effects. Here, we analyzed 2 adjacent transects across hybrid zones between 2 ecotypes of Littorina fabalis (“large” and “dwarf”) adapted to different wave exposure conditions on a Swedish island. Applying whole-genome sequencing, we found 12 putative inversions on 9 of 17 chromosomes. Nine of the putative inversions reached near differential fixation between the 2 ecotypes, and all were in strong linkage disequilibrium. These inversions cover 20% of the genome and carry 93% of divergent single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Bimodal hybrid zones in both transects indicated that the 2 ecotypes of Littorina fabalis maintain their genetic and phenotypic integrity following contact. The bimodality reflects the strong coupling between inversion clines and the extension of the barrier effect across the whole genome. Demographic inference suggests that coupling arose during a period of allopatry and has been maintained for > 1,000 generations after secondary contact. Overall, this study shows that the coupling of multiple chromosomal inversions contributes to strong reproductive isolation. Notably, 2 of the putative inversions overlap with inverted genomic regions associated with ecotype differences in a closely related species (Littorina saxatilis), suggesting the same regions, with similar structural variants, repeatedly contribute to ecotype evolution in distinct species.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2024-04-23
Journal Title
Evolution Letters
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Acknowledgement
The computations and data handling were enabled by resources provided by the Swedish National Infrastructure for Computing at UPPMAX partially funded by the Swedish Research Council through grant agreement no. 2018-05973. We thank all the member of the Littorina team for the stimulating discussions about the manuscripts, James Reeves for his help the implementation of Hsplit, and Thomas Broquet for his useful comments in the latter stage of manuscript revisions.
Volume
8
Issue
4
Page
575-586
ISSN
IST-REx-ID
Cite this
Le Moan A, Stankowski S, Rafajlović M, et al. Coupling of twelve putative chromosomal inversions maintains a strong barrier to gene flow between snail ecotypes. Evolution Letters. 2024;8(4):575-586. doi:10.1093/evlett/qrae014
Le Moan, A., Stankowski, S., Rafajlović, M., Ortega-Martinez, O., Faria, R., Butlin, R. K., & Johannesson, K. (2024). Coupling of twelve putative chromosomal inversions maintains a strong barrier to gene flow between snail ecotypes. Evolution Letters. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/evlett/qrae014
Le Moan, Alan, Sean Stankowski, Marina Rafajlović, Olga Ortega-Martinez, Rui Faria, Roger K Butlin, and Kerstin Johannesson. “Coupling of Twelve Putative Chromosomal Inversions Maintains a Strong Barrier to Gene Flow between Snail Ecotypes.” Evolution Letters. Oxford University Press, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1093/evlett/qrae014.
A. Le Moan et al., “Coupling of twelve putative chromosomal inversions maintains a strong barrier to gene flow between snail ecotypes,” Evolution Letters, vol. 8, no. 4. Oxford University Press, pp. 575–586, 2024.
Le Moan A, Stankowski S, Rafajlović M, Ortega-Martinez O, Faria R, Butlin RK, Johannesson K. 2024. Coupling of twelve putative chromosomal inversions maintains a strong barrier to gene flow between snail ecotypes. Evolution Letters. 8(4), 575–586.
Le Moan, Alan, et al. “Coupling of Twelve Putative Chromosomal Inversions Maintains a Strong Barrier to Gene Flow between Snail Ecotypes.” Evolution Letters, vol. 8, no. 4, Oxford University Press, 2024, pp. 575–86, doi:10.1093/evlett/qrae014.
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