| Literature DB >> 21324875 |
Chad D Huff1, David J Witherspoon, Tatum S Simonson, Jinchuan Xing, W Scott Watkins, Yuhua Zhang, Therese M Tuohy, Deborah W Neklason, Randall W Burt, Stephen L Guthery, Scott R Woodward, Lynn B Jorde.
Abstract
Accurate estimation of recent shared ancestry is important for genetics, evolution, medicine, conservation biology, and forensics. Established methods estimate kinship accurately for first-degree through third-degree relatives. We demonstrate that chromosomal segments shared by two individuals due to identity by descent (IBD) provide much additional information about shared ancestry. We developed a maximum-likelihood method for the estimation of recent shared ancestry (ERSA) from the number and lengths of IBD segments derived from high-density SNP or whole-genome sequence data. We used ERSA to estimate relationships from SNP genotypes in 169 individuals from three large, well-defined human pedigrees. ERSA is accurate to within one degree of relationship for 97% of first-degree through fifth-degree relatives and 80% of sixth-degree and seventh-degree relatives. We demonstrate that ERSA's statistical power approaches the maximum theoretical limit imposed by the fact that distant relatives frequently share no DNA through a common ancestor. ERSA greatly expands the range of relationships that can be estimated from genetic data and is implemented in a freely available software package.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21324875 PMCID: PMC3083094 DOI: 10.1101/gr.115972.110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Res ISSN: 1088-9051 Impact factor: 9.043