
AbstractIn many insects, X‐linked inversions fix at a higher rate and are much less polymorphic than autosomal inversions. Here, we report that in Drosophila, X‐linked inversions also capture 67% more genes. We estimated the number of genes captured through an approximate Bayesian computational analysis of gene orders in nine species of Drosophila. X‐linked inversions fixed with a significantly larger gene content. Further, X‐linked inversions of intermediate size enjoy highest fixation rate, while the fixation rate of autosomal inversions decreases with size. A less detailed analysis in Anopheles suggests a similar pattern holds in mosquitoes. We develop a population genetic model that assumes the fitness effects of inversions scale with the number of genes captured. We show that the same conditions that lead to a higher fixation rate also produce a larger size for inversions on the X.
Genetics; Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, Polymorphism, Genetic, X Chromosome, Chromosome Mapping, Evolution, Molecular, Genetics, Population, Anopheles, Chromosome Inversion, Animals, Drosophila, Phylogeny
Genetics; Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, Polymorphism, Genetic, X Chromosome, Chromosome Mapping, Evolution, Molecular, Genetics, Population, Anopheles, Chromosome Inversion, Animals, Drosophila, Phylogeny
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