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A large chromosomal inversion shapes gene expression in seaweed flies (Coelopa frigida)

TLDR
In this paper, the effects of the Cf-Inv(1) inversion in the seaweed fly Coelopa frigida on gene expression variation across sexes and life stages were examined.
Abstract
Inversions often underlie complex adaptive traits, but the genic targets inside them are largely unknown. Gene expression profiling provides a powerful way to link inversions with their phenotypic consequences. We examined the effects of the Cf-Inv(1) inversion in the seaweed fly Coelopa frigida on gene expression variation across sexes and life stages. Our analyses revealed that Cf-Inv(1) shapes global expression patterns but the extent of this effect is variable with much stronger effects in adults than larvae. Furthermore, within adults, both common as well as sex specific patterns were found. The vast majority of these differentially expressed genes mapped to Cf-Inv(1). However, genes that were differentially expressed in a single context (i.e. in males, females or larvae) were more likely to be located outside of Cf-Inv(1). By combining our findings with genomic scans for environmentally associated SNPs, we were able to pinpoint candidate variants in the inversion that may underlie mechanistic pathways that determine phenotypes. Together the results in this study, combined with previous findings, support the notion that the polymorphic Cf-Inv(1) inversion in this species is a major factor shaping both coding and regulatory variation resulting in highly complex adaptive effects.

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Inversions and parallel evolution

TL;DR: It is predicted that by generating stronger effective selection, inversions can sometimes speed up the parallel adaptive process or enable parallel adaptation where it would be impossible otherwise, but this is highly dependent on the spatial setting.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The detrital food chain based on seaweeds. I. Bacteria associated with the surface of Laminaria fronds

TL;DR: Increase in the numbers and proportions of bacteria utilizing plant substrates were found to accompany macroscopic evidence of frond decomposition and a comparison of the bacterial floras of L. longicruris fronds showed them to be quantitatively and qualitatively comparable.
Journal ArticleDOI

SNP signatures of selection on standing genetic variation and their association with adaptive phenotypes along gradients of ecological speciation in lake whitefish species pairs (Coregonus spp.)

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of natural selection maintaining differentiation in five lakes harboring sympatric pairs of normal and dwarf lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enhancer-adoption as a mechanism of human developmental disease.

TL;DR: A novel type of long‐range cis‐regulatory mutation is reported, in which ectopic expression of a gene is driven by an enhancer that is not its own, which may explain a proportion of the novel or unexplained phenotypes associated with balanced chromosome rearrangements.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Drosophila melanogaster Gut Microbiota Provisions Thiamine to Its Host

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that the D. melanogaster microbiota functions to provision thiamine to its host in a low-thiamine environment, enough to allow the development of flies on aThiamine-free diet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Footprints of Inversions at Present and Past Pseudoautosomal Boundaries in Human Sex Chromosomes

TL;DR: The results strongly support the view that the most recent human strata have arisen by Y inversions and suggest that inversions have played a major role in the differentiation of the authors' sex chromosomes.
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