Widespread divergence between incipient Anopheles gambiae species revealed by whole genome sequences

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Abstract

The Afrotropical mosquito Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto, a major vector of malaria, is currently undergoing speciation into the M and S molecular forms. These forms have diverged in larval ecology and reproductive behavior through unknown genetic mechanisms, despite considerable levels of hybridization. Previous genome-wide scans using gene-based microarrays uncovered divergence between M and S that was largely confined to gene-poor pericentromeric regions, prompting a speciation-with-ongoing-gene-flow model that implicated only about 3% of the genome near centromeres in the speciation process. Here, based on the complete M and S genome sequences, we report widespread and heterogeneous genomic divergence inconsistent with appreciable levels of interform gene flow, suggesting a more advanced speciation process and greater challenges to identify genes critical to initiating that process.

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Lawniczak, M. K. N., Emrich, S. J., Holloway, A. K., Regier, A. P., Olson, M., White, B., … Besansky, N. J. (2010). Widespread divergence between incipient Anopheles gambiae species revealed by whole genome sequences. Science, 330(6003), 512–514. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1195755

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