AI Article Synopsis

  • Supergenes are tightly linked genetic loci that behave like a single unit, often associated with complex traits preserved through balancing selection.
  • The formation of these supergenes, specifically in the butterfly Heliconius numata, is linked to chromosomal changes that suppress recombination and lead to distinct adaptive strategies.
  • This study highlights how introgression of chromosomal segments from divergent lineages contributes to the evolution of supergenes, emphasizing the role of gene flow in creating genetic diversity and adaptive traits.

Article Abstract

Supergenes are groups of tightly linked loci whose variation is inherited as a single Mendelian locus and are a common genetic architecture for complex traits under balancing selection [1-8]. Supergene alleles are long-range haplotypes with numerous mutations underlying distinct adaptive strategies, often maintained in linkage disequilibrium through the suppression of recombination by chromosomal rearrangements [1, 5, 7-9]. However, the mechanism governing the formation of supergenes is not well understood and poses the paradox of establishing divergent functional haplotypes in the face of recombination. Here, we show that the formation of the supergene alleles encoding mimicry polymorphism in the butterfly Heliconius numata is associated with the introgression of a divergent, inverted chromosomal segment. Haplotype divergence and linkage disequilibrium indicate that supergene alleles, each allowing precise wing-pattern resemblance to distinct butterfly models, originate from over a million years of independent chromosomal evolution in separate lineages. These "superalleles" have evolved from a chromosomal inversion captured by introgression and maintained in balanced polymorphism, triggering supergene inheritance. This mode of evolution involving the introgression of a chromosomal rearrangement is likely to be a common feature of complex structural polymorphisms associated with the coexistence of distinct adaptive syndromes. This shows that the reticulation of genealogies may have a powerful influence on the evolution of genetic architectures in nature.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2018.04.072DOI Listing

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