-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
references.bib
85 lines (83 loc) · 4.61 KB
/
references.bib
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
@ARTICLE{Ragsdale2020-hv,
title = "Unbiased Estimation of Linkage Disequilibrium from Unphased Data",
author = "Ragsdale, Aaron P and Gravel, Simon",
abstract = "Linkage disequilibrium (LD) is used to infer evolutionary
history, to identify genomic regions under selection, and to
dissect the relationship between genotype and phenotype. In each
case, we require accurate estimates of LD statistics from
sequencing data. Unphased data present a challenge because
multilocus haplotypes cannot be inferred exactly. Widely used
estimators for the common statistics r2 and D2 exhibit large and
variable upward biases that complicate interpretation and
comparison across cohorts. Here, we show how to find unbiased
estimators for a wide range of two-locus statistics, including
D2, for both single and multiple randomly mating populations.
These unbiased statistics are particularly well suited to
estimate effective population sizes from unlinked loci in small
populations. We develop a simple inference pipeline and use it to
refine estimates of recent effective population sizes of the
threatened Channel Island Fox populations.",
journal = "Mol. Biol. Evol.",
volume = 37,
number = 3,
pages = "923--932",
month = mar,
year = 2020,
keywords = " Ne estimation; demographic inference; linkage disequilibrium;
sample size",
language = "en",
issn = "0737-4038, 1537-1719",
pmid = "31697386",
doi = "10.1093/molbev/msz265",
pmc = "PMC7038669"
}
@ARTICLE{Thornton2019-nu,
title = "Polygenic Adaptation to an Environmental Shift: Temporal Dynamics
of Variation Under Gaussian Stabilizing Selection and Additive
Effects on a Single Trait",
author = "Thornton, Kevin R",
abstract = "Predictions about the effect of natural selection on patterns of
linked neutral variation are largely based on models involving
the rapid fixation of unconditionally beneficial mutations.
However, when phenotypes adapt to a new optimum trait value, the
strength of selection on individual mutations decreases as the
population adapts. Here, I use explicit forward simulations of a
single trait with additive-effect mutations adapting to an
``optimum shift.'' Detectable ``hitchhiking'' patterns are only
apparent if (i) the optimum shifts are large with respect to
equilibrium variation for the trait, (ii) mutation rates to
large-effect mutations are low, and (iii) large-effect mutations
rapidly increase in frequency and eventually reach fixation,
which typically occurs after the population reaches the new
optimum. For the parameters simulated here, partial sweeps do not
appreciably affect patterns of linked variation, even when the
mutations are strongly selected. The contribution of new
mutations vs. standing variation to fixation depends on the
mutation rate affecting trait values. Given the fixation of a
strongly selected variant, patterns of hitchhiking are similar on
average for the two classes of sweeps because sweeps from
standing variation involving large-effect mutations are rare when
the optimum shifts. The distribution of effect sizes of new
mutations has little effect on the time to reach the new optimum,
but reducing the mutational variance increases the magnitude of
hitchhiking patterns. In general, populations reach the new
optimum prior to the completion of any sweeps, and the times to
fixation are longer for this model than for standard models of
directional selection. The long fixation times are due to a
combination of declining selection pressures during adaptation
and the possibility of interference among weakly selected sites
for traits with high mutation rates.",
journal = "Genetics",
volume = 213,
number = 4,
pages = "1513--1530",
month = dec,
year = 2019,
keywords = "forward simulation; hitchhiking; linked selection; polygenic
adaptation",
language = "en",
issn = "0016-6731, 1943-2631",
pmid = "31653678",
doi = "10.1534/genetics.119.302662",
pmc = "PMC6893385"
}