What do we really know about adaptation at range edges?

AL Angert, MG Bontrager, J Ågren - Annual Review of Ecology …, 2020 - annualreviews.org
Recent theory and empirical evidence have provided new insights regarding how
evolutionary forces interact to shape adaptation at stable and transient range margins …

Revisiting the impact of inversions in evolution: from population genetic markers to drivers of adaptive shifts and speciation?

AA Hoffmann, LH Rieseberg - Annual review of ecology …, 2008 - annualreviews.org
There is a growing appreciation that chromosome inversions affect rates of adaptation,
speciation, and the evolution of sex chromosomes. Comparative genomic studies have …

Hybridization as a facilitator of species range expansion

KS Pfennig, AL Kelly, AA Pierce - Proceedings of the …, 2016 - royalsocietypublishing.org
Explaining the evolution of species geographical ranges is fundamental to understanding
how biodiversity is distributed and maintained. The solution to this classic problem in …

Inversion breakpoints and the evolution of supergenes

R Villoutreix, D Ayala, M Joron, Z Gompert… - Molecular …, 2021 - Wiley Online Library
The coexistence of discrete morphs that differ in multiple traits is common within natural
populations of many taxa. Such morphs are often associated with chromosomal inversions …

Comparative genomics of the fungal pathogens Candida dubliniensis and Candida albicans

AP Jackson, JA Gamble, T Yeomans… - Genome …, 2009 - genome.cshlp.org
Candida dubliniensis is the closest known relative of Candida albicans, the most pathogenic
yeast species in humans. However, despite both species sharing many phenotypic …

The adaptive significance of chromosomal inversion polymorphisms in Drosophila melanogaster

M Kapun, T Flatt - Molecular ecology, 2019 - Wiley Online Library
Chromosomal inversions, structural mutations that reverse a segment of a chromosome,
cause suppression of recombination in the heterozygous state. Several studies have shown …

[HTML][HTML] Principles of genome evolution in the Drosophila melanogaster species group

JM Ranz, D Maurin, YS Chan, M Von Grotthuss… - PLoS …, 2007 - journals.plos.org
That closely related species often differ by chromosomal inversions was discovered by
Sturtevant and Plunkett in 1926. Our knowledge of how these inversions originate is still very …

[HTML][HTML] Anopheles fibrinogen-related proteins provide expanded pattern recognition capacity against bacteria and malaria parasites

Y Dong, G Dimopoulos - Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2009 - ASBMB
The fibrinogen-related protein family (FREP, also known as FBN) is an evolutionarily
conserved immune gene family found in mammals and invertebrates. It is the largest pattern …

A Cryptic Subgroup of Anopheles gambiae Is Highly Susceptible to Human Malaria Parasites

MM Riehle, WM Guelbeogo, A Gneme, K Eiglmeier… - Science, 2011 - science.org
Population subgroups of the African malaria vector Anopheles gambiae have not been
comprehensively characterized owing to the lack of unbiased sampling methods. In the arid …

Coalescent Analysis of Phylogenomic Data Confidently Resolves the Species Relationships in the Anopheles gambiae Species Complex

Y Thawornwattana, D Dalquen… - Molecular biology and …, 2018 - academic.oup.com
Deep coalescence and introgression make it challenging to infer phylogenetic relationships
among closely related species that arose through radiative speciation events. Despite …