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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A composite-likelihood approach for detecting directional selection from DNA sequence data.

Lan Zhu, +1 more
- 01 Jul 2005 - 
- Vol. 170, Iss: 3, pp 1411-1421
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TLDR
The test has excellent power to detects weak negative selection and moderate power to detect positive selection and is quite robust to bias in the estimate of local recombination rate, but not to certain demographic scenarios such as population growth or a recent bottleneck.
Abstract
We present a novel composite-likelihood-ratio test (CLRT) for detecting genes and genomic regions that are subject to recurrent natural selection (either positive or negative). The method uses the likelihood functions of Hartl et al. (1994) for inference in a Wright-Fisher genic selection model and corrects for nonindependence among sites by application of coalescent simulations with recombination. Here, we (1) characterize the distribution of the CLRT statistic (Λ) as a function of the population recombination rate (R = 4Ner); (2) explore the effects of bias in estimation of R on the size (type I error) of the CLRT; (3) explore the robustness of the model to population growth, bottlenecks, and migration; (4) explore the power of the CLRT under varying levels of mutation, selection, and recombination; (5) explore the discriminatory power of the test in distinguishing negative selection from population growth; and (6) evaluate the performance of maximum composite-likelihood estimation (MCLE) of the selection coefficient. We find that the test has excellent power to detect weak negative selection and moderate power to detect positive selection. Moreover, the test is quite robust to bias in the estimate of local recombination rate, but not to certain demographic scenarios such as population growth or a recent bottleneck. Last, we demonstrate that the MCLE of the selection parameter has little bias for weak negative selection and has downward bias for positively selected mutations.

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Citations
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Statistical method for testing the neutral mutation hypothesis by DNA polymorphism.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the natural selection against large insertion/deletion is so weak that a large amount of variation is maintained in a population.
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Inferring the joint demographic history of multiple populations from multidimensional SNP frequency data.

TL;DR: Combining the demographic model with a previously estimated distribution of selective effects among newly arising amino acid mutations accurately predicts the frequency spectrum of nonsynonymous variants across three continental populations (YRI, CHB, CEU).
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Robust demographic inference from genomic and SNP data.

TL;DR: A flexible and robust simulation-based framework to infer demographic parameters from the site frequency spectrum (SFS) computed on large genomic datasets and shows that it allows one to study evolutionary models of arbitrary complexity, which cannot be tackled by other current likelihood-based methods.
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Constructing genomic maps of positive selection in humans: Where do we go from here?

TL;DR: The recent history of the burgeoning field of human population genomics is chronicle, genome-wide scans for positive selection in humans are critically assessed, important gaps in knowledge are identified, and both short- and long-term strategies for traversing the path from the low-resolution, incomplete, and error-prone maps of selection today to the ultimate goal of a detailed molecular, mechanistic, phenotypic, and population genetics characterization of adaptive alleles are discussed.
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Interrogating multiple aspects of variation in a full resequencing data set to infer human population size changes

TL;DR: An expanded data set of 50 unlinked autosomal noncoding regions, resequenced in samples of Hausa from Cameroon, Italians, and Chinese, finds that the HausA data are compatible with demographic equilibrium as well as a set of recent population expansion models.
References
More filters
Journal Article

Statistical method for testing the neutral mutation hypothesis by DNA polymorphism.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the natural selection against large insertion/deletion is so weak that a large amount of variation is maintained in a population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical method for testing the neutral mutation hypothesis by DNA polymorphism.

TL;DR: The relationship between the two estimates of genetic variation at the DNA level, namely the number of segregating sites and the average number of nucleotide differences estimated from pairwise comparison, is investigated in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical tests of neutrality of mutations

TL;DR: From these properties, several new statistical tests based on a random sample of DNA sequences from the population are developed for testing the hypothesis that all mutations at a locus are neutral.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the number of segregating sites in genetical models without recombination.

TL;DR: The distribution is obtained for the number of segregating sites observed in a sample from a population which is subject to recurring, new, mutations but not subject to recombination, and applies approximately to three population models.
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