Literature DB >> 18603620

Estimation of hominoid ancestral population sizes under bayesian coalescent models incorporating mutation rate variation and sequencing errors.

Ralph Burgess1, Ziheng Yang.   

Abstract

Estimation of population parameters for the common ancestors of humans and the great apes is important in understanding our evolutionary history. In particular, inference of population size for the human-chimpanzee common ancestor may shed light on the process by which the 2 species separated and on whether the human population experienced a severe size reduction in its early evolutionary history. In this study, the Bayesian method of ancestral inference of Rannala and Yang (2003. Bayes estimation of species divergence times and ancestral population sizes using DNA sequences from multiple loci. Genetics. 164:1645-1656) was extended to accommodate variable mutation rates among loci and random species-specific sequencing errors. The model was applied to analyze a genome-wide data set of approximately 15,000 neutral loci (7.4 Mb) aligned for human, chimpanzee, gorilla, orangutan, and macaque. We obtained robust and precise estimates for effective population sizes along the hominoid lineage extending back approximately 30 Myr to the cercopithecoid divergence. The results showed that ancestral populations were 5-10 times larger than modern humans along the entire hominoid lineage. The estimates were robust to the priors used and to model assumptions about recombination. The unusually low X chromosome divergence between human and chimpanzee could not be explained by variation in the male mutation bias or by current models of hybridization and introgression. Instead, our parameter estimates were consistent with a simple instantaneous process for human-chimpanzee speciation but showed a major reduction in X chromosome effective population size peculiar to the human-chimpanzee common ancestor, possibly due to selective sweeps on the X prior to separation of the 2 species.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18603620     DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msn148

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  75 in total

1.  Incomplete lineage sorting patterns among human, chimpanzee, and orangutan suggest recent orangutan speciation and widespread selection.

Authors:  Asger Hobolth; Julien Y Dutheil; John Hawks; Mikkel H Schierup; Thomas Mailund
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2011-01-26       Impact factor: 9.043

Review 2.  Molecular phylogenetics: principles and practice.

Authors:  Ziheng Yang; Bruce Rannala
Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2012-03-28       Impact factor: 53.242

3.  Single-locus species delimitation: a test of the mixed Yule-coalescent model, with an empirical application to Philippine round-leaf bats.

Authors:  Jacob A Esselstyn; Ben J Evans; Jodi L Sedlock; Faisal Ali Anwarali Khan; Lawrence R Heaney
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2012-07-04       Impact factor: 5.349

4.  Bayesian species delimitation using multilocus sequence data.

Authors:  Ziheng Yang; Bruce Rannala
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-05-03       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 5.  Population genetic studies in the genomic sequencing era.

Authors:  Hua Chen
Journal:  Dongwuxue Yanjiu       Date:  2015-07-18

Review 6.  Great ape genomics.

Authors:  Jeffrey D Wall
Journal:  ILAR J       Date:  2013

7.  Factors influencing ascertainment bias of microsatellite allele sizes: impact on estimates of mutation rates.

Authors:  Biao Li; Marek Kimmel
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2013-08-14       Impact factor: 4.562

8.  Robust estimates of divergence times and selection with a poisson random field model: a case study of comparative phylogeographic data.

Authors:  Amei Amei; Brian Tilston Smith
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2013-10-18       Impact factor: 4.562

9.  Ancestral population genomics: the coalescent hidden Markov model approach.

Authors:  Julien Y Dutheil; Ganesh Ganapathy; Asger Hobolth; Thomas Mailund; Marcy K Uyenoyama; Mikkel H Schierup
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2009-07-06       Impact factor: 4.562

10.  Phylogenomics of primates and their ancestral populations.

Authors:  Adam Siepel
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2009-10-03       Impact factor: 9.043

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