4.5 Article

Populations, Traits, and Their Spatial Structure in Humans

期刊

GENOME BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 13, 期 12, 页码 -

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evab272

关键词

complex traits; populations; genetic structure; spatial variation

资金

  1. Chicago Fellows Award of the University of Chicago Biological Sciences Division
  2. PAPIIT-UNAM grant [IA200620]
  3. UC-MEXUS CONACYT collaborative grant [CN-19-29]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The spatial distribution of genetic variants is influenced by geography, demographic processes, natural selection, and environmental variation; causal alleles play a role in affecting complex traits, with their effects potentially being independent of or dependent on the environment; understanding the evolutionary processes that shape causal alleles' spatial structure is crucial for comprehending the spatial distribution of complex traits.
The spatial distribution of genetic variants is jointly determined by geography, past demographic processes, natural selection, and its interplay with environmental variation. A fraction of these genetic variants are causal alleles that affect the manifestation of a complex trait. The effect exerted by these causal alleles on complex traits can be independent or dependent on the environment. Understanding the evolutionary processes that shape the spatial structure of causal alleles is key to comprehend the spatial distribution of complex traits. Natural selection, past population size changes, range expansions, consanguinity, assortative mating, archaic introgression, admixture, and the environment can alter the frequencies, effect sizes, and heterozygosities of causal alleles. This provides a genetic axis along which complex traits can vary. However, complex traits also vary along biogeographical and sociocultural axes which are often correlated with genetic axes in complex ways. The purpose of this review is to consider these genetic and environmental axes in concert and examine the ways they can help us decipher the variation in complex traits that is visible in humans today. This initiative necessarily implies a discussion of populations, traits, the ability to infer and interpret genetic components of complex traits, and how these have been impacted by adaptive events. In this review, we provide a history-aware discussion on these topics using both the recent and more distant past of our academic discipline and its relevant contexts.

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