Detecting loci under selection in a hierarchically structured population
Top Cited Papers
- 22 July 2009
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Heredity
- Vol. 103 (4) , 285-298
- https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.2009.74
Abstract
Patterns of genetic diversity between populations are often used to detect loci under selection in genome scans. Indeed, loci involved in local adaptations should show high FST values, whereas loci under balancing selection should rather show low FST values. Most tests of selection based on FST use a null distribution generated under a simple island model of population differentiation. Although this model has been shown to be robust, many species have a more complex genetic structure, with some populations sharing a recent ancestry or due to the presence of barriers to gene flow between different parts of a species range. In this paper, we propose the use of a hierarchical island model, in which demes exchange more migrants within groups than between groups, to generate the joint distribution of genetic diversity within and between populations. We show that tests not accounting for a hierarchical structure, when it exists, do generate a large excess of false positive loci, whereas the hierarchical island model is robust to uncertainties about the exact number of groups and demes per group in the system. Our approach also explicitly takes into account the mutational process, and does not just rely on allele frequencies, which is important for short tandem repeat (STR) data. An application to human and stickleback STR data sets reveals a much lower number of significant loci than previously obtained under a non-hierarchical model. The elimination of false positive loci from genome scans should allow us to better determine on which specific class of genes selection is operating.Keywords
This publication has 93 references indexed in Scilit:
- Signals of recent positive selection in a worldwide sample of human populationsGenome Research, 2009
- Scanning the genome for gene single nucleotide polymorphisms involved in adaptive population differentiation in white spruceMolecular Ecology, 2008
- Identifying footprints of directional and balancing selection in marine and freshwater three‐spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) populationsMolecular Ecology, 2008
- Genetic drift at expanding frontiers promotes gene segregationProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Recent and ongoing selection in the human genomeNature Reviews Genetics, 2007
- POPULATION SIZE CHANGES RESHAPE GENOMIC PATTERNS OF DIVERSITYEvolution, 2007
- Promoter regions of many neural- and nutrition-related genes have experienced positive selection during human evolutionNature Genetics, 2007
- How reliable are empirical genomic scans for selective sweeps?Genome Research, 2006
- Detecting recent positive selection in the human genome from haplotype structureNature, 2002
- Analysis of Gene Diversity in Subdivided PopulationsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1973