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Showing papers on "Isolation by distance published in 1989"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The majority of patterns are patchy, consistent with hypotheses of isolation by distance or of settlement of genetically differing, subsequently expanding ethnic groups, but some clinal patterns reported here support the Neolithic demic-expansion hypothesis, others suggest latitudinal selection.
Abstract: The aims of this study of spatial patterns of human gene frequencies in Europe are twofold. One is to present new methodology developed for the analysis of such data. The other is to report on the diversity of spatial patterns observed in Europe and their interpretation as evidence of population processes. Spatial variation in 59 allele and haplotype frequencies (26 genetic systems) for polymorphisms in blood antigens, enzymes, and proteins is analyzed for an aggregate of 3,384 localities, using homogeneity tests, one-dimensional and directional spatial correlograms, and SYMAP interpolated surfaces. The data matrices are reduced to reveal the principal patterns by clustering techniques. The findings of this study can be summarized as follows: 1) There is significant heterogeneity in allele frequencies among the localities for all but one genetic system. 2) There are significant spatial patterns for most allele frequencies. 3) There is a substantial minority of clinal patterns in these populations. Clinal trends are found more frequently in HLA alleles than for other variables. North-south and northwest-southwest gradients predominate. 4) There is a strong decline in overall genetic similarity with geographic distance for most variables. 5) There are few, if any, appreciable correlations in pairs of allele frequencies over the continent, and there is little interesting correlation structure in the resulting correlation matrix. 6) Few spatial correlograms are markedly similar to each other, yet they form well-defined clusters. Spatial variation patterns, therefore, differ among allele frequencies. Patterns of human gene frequencies in modern Europe are diverse and complex. No single model suffices for interpretation of the observed genetic structure. Some clinal patterns reported here support the Neolithic demicexpansion hypothesis, others suggest latitudinal selection. Most of the clinal patterns are in HLA alleles, but there is also evidence from ABO for east-west migration diffusion. The majority of patterns are patchy, consistent with hypotheses of isolation by distance or of settlement of genetically differing, subsequently expanding ethnic groups. While undoubtedly there has been an ongoing stochastic process of differentiation consistent with the isolationby-distance model, this has not obscured the directional patterns caused by migration (demic diffusion), and has perhaps only reinforced the contribution from settlement of ethnic units to patterns of genetic variation. However, the impact of the latter is most difficult to discern and requires further methodological developments.

154 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 1989-Heredity
TL;DR: The genetic population structure of Anopheles gambiae in western Kenya was investigated by hybridizing a rapidly evolving rDNA intergenic spacer sequence to restriction endonuclease digests of genomic DNA extracted from single mosquitoes from seven localities, suggesting restricted gene flow and a subdivided population structure.
Abstract: The genetic population structure of Anopheles gambiae (Diptera: Culicidae) in western Kenya was investigated by hybridizing a rapidly evolving rDNA intergenic spacer sequence to restriction endonuclease digests of genomic DNA extracted from single mosquitoes from seven localities. Significantly different distributions of restriction fragment arrays were obtained from field sites less than 10 km apart, which suggests restricted gene flow and a subdivided population structure. Eight of twenty-one possible comparisons between pairs of populations yielded significant differences. An eastern Kenya coastal population did not share its restriction fragment arrays with any of the western populations, suggesting that isolation by distance can be complete on a relatively small geographic scale (700 km).

43 citations


Book
01 Jan 1989
TL;DR: This work considers variation in gene frequencies across populations and demonstrates how FST increases with the degree of subdivision among populations, and derives formulas for variances of blocks of populations of different sizes in one- and two-dimensional space.
Abstract: Measures of variation in space are strongly affected by correlations between subdivisions used for sampling. Here we consider variation in gene frequencies across populations. Usually the variance of gene frequencies is standardized by dividing it by the mean gene frequency times one minus the mean ( F ST ). Under the model of isolation by distance (usually called the “stepping stone” model), at the stationary state the correlation between the gene frequencies of two populations falls exponentially with the geographic distance between them. Using this model, we derive formulas for variances of blocks of populations of different sizes in one- and two-dimensional space and suggest that the theoretical results may be useful for understanding real observations, some examples of which are presented. We demonstrate how F ST increases with the degree of subdivision among populations. We also show the effect of gaps between the sampled populations. Our results are valid, however, for traits other than gene frequencies, as long as their correlation with geographic distance falls exponentially. In the extension to 2-dimensional spaces, we present in closed form the distributions of distances between nodes of a lattice or of two lattices. These distributions might have applications in ecology.

20 citations