Literature DB >> 8748019

Genealogies and geography.

N H Barton1, I Wilson.   

Abstract

Any sample of genes traces back to a single common ancestor. Each gene also has other properties: its sequence, its geographic location and the phenotype and fitness of the organism that carries it. With sexual reproduction, different genes have different genealogies, which gives us much more information, but also greatly complicates population genetic analysis. We review the close relation between the distribution of genealogies and the classic theory of identity by descent in spatially structured populations, and develop a simple diffusion approximation to the distribution of coalescence times in a homogeneous two-dimensional habitat. This shows that when neighbourhood size is large (as in most populations) only a small fraction of pairs of genes are closely related, and only this fraction gives information about current rates of gene flow. The increase of spatial dispersion with lineage age is thus a poor estimator of gene flow. The bulk of the genealogy depends on the long-term history of the population; we discuss ways of inferring this history from the concordance between genealogies across loci.

Mesh:

Year:  1995        PMID: 8748019     DOI: 10.1098/rstb.1995.0090

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8436            Impact factor:   6.237


  18 in total

Review 1.  Effects of metapopulation processes on measures of genetic diversity.

Authors:  J R Pannell; B Charlesworth
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2000-12-29       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  Gustave Malécot, 1911-1998. Population genetics founding father.

Authors:  B K Epperson
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1999-06       Impact factor: 4.562

3.  The coalescent in a continuous, finite, linear population.

Authors:  Jon F Wilkins; John Wakeley
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 4.562

4.  A separation-of-timescales approach to the coalescent in a continuous population.

Authors:  Jon F Wilkins
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2004-12       Impact factor: 4.562

5.  Bayesian estimation of recent migration rates after a spatial expansion.

Authors:  Grant Hamilton; Mathias Currat; Nicolas Ray; Gerald Heckel; Mark Beaumont; Laurent Excoffier
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2005-02-16       Impact factor: 4.562

6.  Estimating the total genetic diversity of a spatial field population from a sample and implications of its dependence on habitat area.

Authors:  Erik M Rauch; Yaneer Bar-Yam
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-07-05       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  On the choice of genetic distance in spatial-genetic studies.

Authors:  Paul Fearnhead
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2007-07-29       Impact factor: 4.562

8.  A continuous-state coalescent and the impact of weak selection on the structure of gene genealogies.

Authors:  Brendan D O'Fallon; Jon Seger; Frederick R Adler
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2010-01-22       Impact factor: 16.240

9.  Estimation of effective population size in continuously distributed populations: there goes the neighborhood.

Authors:  M C Neel; K McKelvey; N Ryman; M W Lloyd; R Short Bull; F W Allendorf; M K Schwartz; R S Waples
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2013-05-08       Impact factor: 3.821

10.  The scale of population structure in Arabidopsis thaliana.

Authors:  Alexander Platt; Matthew Horton; Yu S Huang; Yan Li; Alison E Anastasio; Ni Wayan Mulyati; Jon Agren; Oliver Bossdorf; Diane Byers; Kathleen Donohue; Megan Dunning; Eric B Holub; Andrew Hudson; Valérie Le Corre; Olivier Loudet; Fabrice Roux; Norman Warthmann; Detlef Weigel; Luz Rivero; Randy Scholl; Magnus Nordborg; Joy Bergelson; Justin O Borevitz
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2010-02-12       Impact factor: 5.917

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