AI Article Synopsis

  • Chromosomal inversions are key to genome evolution and local adaptation in Afrotropical malaria vectors, but mapping their breakpoints is often difficult due to large repetitive regions.
  • A new method using Hi-C sequencing data shows promise in accurately identifying these inversion breakpoints, which tend to occur in repetitive areas and often share breakpoints across different inversions.
  • The study indicates that certain satellite repeat sequences may influence evolutionary fitness, and highlights the method's potential for broad applications in identifying inversion breakpoints across various species.

Article Abstract

Chromosomal inversions are fundamental drivers of genome evolution. In the main Afrotropical malaria vector species, belonging to the species complex, inversions play an important role in local adaptation and have a rich history of cytological study. Despite the importance and ubiquity of some chromosomal inversions across the species complex, inversion breakpoints are often challenging to map molecularly due to the presence of large repetitive regions. Here, we develop an approach that uses Hi-C sequencing data to molecularly fine-map the breakpoints of inversions. We demonstrate that this approach is robust and likely to be widely applicable for both identification and fine-mapping inversion breakpoints in species whose inversions have heretofore been challenging to characterize. We apply our method to interrogate the previously unknown inversion breakpoints of 2Rbc and 2Rd in We found that inversion breakpoints occur in large repetitive regions, and, strikingly, among three inversions analyzed, two breakpoints appear to be reused in two separate inversions. These breakpoint-adjacent regions are strongly enriched for the presence of a 30 bp satellite repeat sequence. Because low frequency inversion breakpoints are not correlated with genomic regions containing this satellite, we suggest that interrupting this particular repeat may result in arrangements with higher relative fitness. Additionally, we use heterozygous individuals to quantitatively investigate the impacts of somatic pairing in the regions immediately surrounding inversion breakpoints. Finally, we discuss important considerations for possible applications of this approach for inversion breakpoint identification in a range of organisms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6893396PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/genetics.119.302385DOI Listing

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