4.7 Article

Identifying loci under positive selection in complex population histories

期刊

GENOME RESEARCH
卷 29, 期 9, 页码 1506-1520

出版社

COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/gr.246777.118

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资金

  1. Natural History Museum of Denmark
  2. Villum Foundation [000253000]
  3. Svala Arnadottir's private funds
  4. University of Iceland Research Fund
  5. Icelandic Research Fund [185151-051]
  6. Danish National Research Foundation [DNRF96]

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Detailed modeling of a species' history is of prime importance for understanding how natural selection operates over time. Most methods designed to detect positive selection along sequenced genomes, however, use simplified representations of past histories as null models of genetic drift. Here, we present the first method that can detect signatures of strong local adaptation across the genome using arbitrarily complex admixture graphs, which are typically used to describe the history of past divergence and admixture events among any number of populations. The method-called graph-aware retrieval of selective sweeps (GRoSS)-has good power to detect loci in the genome with strong evidence for past selective sweeps and can also identify which branch of the graph was most affected by the sweep. As evidence of its utility, we apply the method to bovine, codfish, and human population genomic data containing panels of multiple populations related in complex ways. We find new candidate genes for important adaptive functions, including immunity and metabolism in understudied human populations, as well as muscle mass, milk production, and tameness in specific bovine breeds. We are also able to pinpoint the emergence of large regions of differentiation owing to inversions in the history of Atlantic codfish.

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