Literature DB >> 15012769

Identifying adaptive genetic divergence among populations from genome scans.

Mark A Beaumont1, David J Balding.   

Abstract

The identification of signatures of natural selection in genomic surveys has become an area of intense research, stimulated by the increasing ease with which genetic markers can be typed. Loci identified as subject to selection may be functionally important, and hence (weak) candidates for involvement in disease causation. They can also be useful in determining the adaptive differentiation of populations, and exploring hypotheses about speciation. Adaptive differentiation has traditionally been identified from differences in allele frequencies among different populations, summarised by an estimate of FST. Low outliers relative to an appropriate neutral population-genetics model indicate loci subject to balancing selection, whereas high outliers suggest adaptive (directional) selection. However, the problem of identifying statistically significant departures from neutrality is complicated by confounding effects on the distribution of FST estimates, and current methods have not yet been tested in large-scale simulation experiments. Here, we simulate data from a structured population at many unlinked, diallelic loci that are predominantly neutral but with some loci subject to adaptive or balancing selection. We develop a hierarchical-Bayesian method, implemented via Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC), and assess its performance in distinguishing the loci simulated under selection from the neutral loci. We also compare this performance with that of a frequentist method, based on moment-based estimates of FST. We find that both methods can identify loci subject to adaptive selection when the selection coefficient is at least five times the migration rate. Neither method could reliably distinguish loci under balancing selection in our simulations, even when the selection coefficient is twenty times the migration rate.

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15012769     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294x.2004.02125.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  306 in total

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Authors:  P K Lehtonen; T Laaksonen; A V Artemyev; E Belskii; P R Berg; C Both; L Buggiotti; S Bureš; M D Burgess; A V Bushuev; I Krams; J Moreno; M Mägi; A Nord; J Potti; P-A Ravussin; P M Sirkiä; G-P Sætre; W Winkel; C R Primmer
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2011-10-26       Impact factor: 3.821

Review 4.  Divergence hitchhiking and the spread of genomic isolation during ecological speciation-with-gene-flow.

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Review 5.  Molecular spandrels: tests of adaptation at the genetic level.

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7.  Divergent evolution of molecular markers during laboratory adaptation in Drosophila subobscura.

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Review 8.  Genomics and the future of conservation genetics.

Authors:  Fred W Allendorf; Paul A Hohenlohe; Gordon Luikart
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9.  Detecting selection in population trees: the Lewontin and Krakauer test extended.

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Review 10.  On the origin of species: insights from the ecological genomics of lake whitefish.

Authors:  Louis Bernatchez; Sébastien Renaut; Andrew R Whiteley; Nicolas Derome; Julie Jeukens; Lysandre Landry; Guoqing Lu; Arne W Nolte; Kjartan Ostbye; Sean M Rogers; Jérôme St-Cyr
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2010-06-12       Impact factor: 6.237

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