Literature DB >> 35143667

A numerical framework for genetic hitchhiking in populations of variable size.

Eric Friedlander1,2, Matthias Steinrücken1,3.   

Abstract

Natural selection on beneficial or deleterious alleles results in an increase or decrease, respectively, of their frequency within the population. Due to chromosomal linkage, the dynamics of the selected site affect the genetic variation at nearby neutral loci in a process commonly referred to as genetic hitchhiking. Changes in population size, however, can yield patterns in genomic data that mimic the effects of selection. Accurately modeling these dynamics is thus crucial to understanding how selection and past population size changes impact observed patterns of genetic variation. Here, we model the evolution of haplotype frequencies with the Wright-Fisher diffusion to study the impact of selection on linked neutral variation. Explicit solutions are not known for the dynamics of this diffusion when selection and recombination act simultaneously. Thus, we present a method for numerically evaluating the Wright-Fisher diffusion dynamics of 2 linked loci separated by a certain recombination distance when selection is acting. We can account for arbitrary population size histories explicitly using this approach. A key step in the method is to express the moments of the associated transition density, or sampling probabilities, as solutions to ordinary differential equations. Numerically solving these differential equations relies on a novel accurate and numerically efficient technique to estimate higher order moments from lower order moments. We demonstrate how this numerical framework can be used to quantify the reduction and recovery of genetic diversity around a selected locus over time and elucidate distortions in the site-frequency-spectra of neutral variation linked to loci under selection in various demographic settings. The method can be readily extended to more general modes of selection and applied in likelihood frameworks to detect loci under selection and infer the strength of the selective pressure.
© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Genetics Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  diffusion approximation; genetic hitchhiking; variable population size

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35143667      PMCID: PMC8893261          DOI: 10.1093/genetics/iyac012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genetics        ISSN: 0016-6731            Impact factor:   4.562


  51 in total

1.  Hitchhiking under positive Darwinian selection.

Authors:  J C Fay; C I Wu
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2000-07       Impact factor: 4.562

2.  Detecting a local signature of genetic hitchhiking along a recombining chromosome.

Authors:  Yuseob Kim; Wolfgang Stephan
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 4.562

3.  Non-equilibrium theory of the allele frequency spectrum.

Authors:  Steven N Evans; Yelena Shvets; Montgomery Slatkin
Journal:  Theor Popul Biol       Date:  2006-06-23       Impact factor: 1.570

4.  The effect of recombination on background selection.

Authors:  M Nordborg; B Charlesworth; D Charlesworth
Journal:  Genet Res       Date:  1996-04       Impact factor: 1.588

5.  Inferring the Joint Demographic History of Multiple Populations: Beyond the Diffusion Approximation.

Authors:  Julien Jouganous; Will Long; Aaron P Ragsdale; Simon Gravel
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2017-05-11       Impact factor: 4.562

6.  Two-Locus Likelihoods Under Variable Population Size and Fine-Scale Recombination Rate Estimation.

Authors:  John A Kamm; Jeffrey P Spence; Jeffrey Chan; Yun S Song
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2016-05-10       Impact factor: 4.562

7.  Efficiently inferring the demographic history of many populations with allele count data.

Authors:  Jack Kamm; Jonathan Terhorst; Richard Durbin; Yun S Song
Journal:  J Am Stat Assoc       Date:  2019-07-22       Impact factor: 5.033

8.  Inference in population genetics using forward and backward, discrete and continuous time processes.

Authors:  Juraj Bergman; Dominik Schrempf; Carolin Kosiol; Claus Vogl
Journal:  J Theor Biol       Date:  2017-12-09       Impact factor: 2.405

9.  Inference and analysis of population-specific fine-scale recombination maps across 26 diverse human populations.

Authors:  Jeffrey P Spence; Yun S Song
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2019-10-23       Impact factor: 14.136

10.  The genetics of human adaptation: hard sweeps, soft sweeps, and polygenic adaptation.

Authors:  Jonathan K Pritchard; Joseph K Pickrell; Graham Coop
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2010-02-23       Impact factor: 10.834

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  3 in total

1.  Local fitness and epistatic effects lead to distinct patterns of linkage disequilibrium in protein-coding genes.

Authors:  Aaron P Ragsdale
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2022-07-30       Impact factor: 4.402

2.  On the prospect of achieving accurate joint estimation of selection with population history.

Authors:  Parul Johri; Adam Eyre-Walker; Ryan N Gutenkunst; Kirk E Lohmueller; Jeffrey D Jensen
Journal:  Genome Biol Evol       Date:  2022-07-02       Impact factor: 4.065

3.  Linkage disequilibrium between rare mutations.

Authors:  Benjamin H Good
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2022-04-04       Impact factor: 4.562

  3 in total

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