Abstract
The African Anopheles gambiae complex of six sibling species has many polymorphic and fixed paracentric inversions detectable in polytene chromosomes. These have been used to infer phylogenetic relationships as classically done with Drosophila. Two species, A. gambiae and A. merus, were thought to be sister taxa based on a shared X inversion designated X(ag). Recent DNA data have conflicted with this phylogenetic inference as they have supported a sister taxa relationship of A. gambiae and A. arabiensis. A possible explanation is that the X(ag) is not monophyletic. Here we present data from a gene (soluble guanylate cyclase) within the X(ag) that strongly supports the monophyly of the X(ag). We conjecture that introgression may be occurring between the widely sympatric species A. gambiae and A. arabiensis and that the previous DNA phylogenies have been detecting the introgression. Evidently, introgression is not uniform across the genome, and species- specific regions, like the X-chromosome inversions, do not introgress probably due to selective elimination in hybrids and backcrosses.
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CITATION STYLE
Garcia, B. A., Caccone, A., Mathiopoulos, K. D., & Powell, J. R. (1996). Inversion monophyly in African anopheline malaria vectors. Genetics, 143(3), 1313–1320. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/143.3.1313
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