TY - JOUR T1 - Muller’s Ratchet and the Long-Term Fate of Chromosomal Inversions JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/606012 SP - 606012 AU - Emma L. Berdan AU - Alexandre Blanckaert AU - Roger K. Butlin AU - Claudia Bank Y1 - 2019/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/04/13/606012.abstract N2 - Chromosomal inversions contribute widely to adaptation and speciation, yet they present a unique evolutionary puzzle as both their allelic content and frequency evolve in a feedback loop. In this simulation study, we quantified the role of the allelic content in determining the long-term fate of the inversion. Recessive deleterious mutations accumulated rapidly on both arrangements with most of them being private to a given arrangement. The emerging overdominance led to maintenance of the inversion polymorphism and strong non-adaptive divergence between arrangements. The accumulation of mutations was mitigated by gene conversion but nevertheless led to the fitness decline of at least one homokaryotype. Surprisingly, this fitness degradation could be permanently halted by the branching of an arrangement into multiple highly divergent haplotypes. Our results highlight the dynamic features of inversions by showing how the non-adaptive evolution of allelic content can play a major role in the fate of the inversion. ER -