Publication

The Impact of Linked Selection in Chimpanzees: A Comparative Study

Résumé

Levels of nucleotide diversity vary greatly across the genomes of most species owing to multiple factors. These include variation in the underlying mutation rates, as well as the effects of both direct and linked selection. Fundamental to interpreting the relative importance of these forces is the common observation of a strong positive correlation between nucleotide diversity and recombination rate. While indeed observed in humans, the interpretation of this pattern has been difficult in the absence of high-quality polymorphism data and recombination maps in closely related species. Here, we characterize genetic features driving nucleotide diversity in Western chimpanzees using a recently generated whole genome polymorphism data set. Our results suggest that recombination rate is the primary predictor of nucleotide variation with a strongly positive correlation. In addition, telomeric distance, regional GC-content, and regional CpG-island content are strongly negatively correlated with variation. These results are compared with humans, with both similarities and differences interpreted in the light of the estimated effective population sizes of the two species as well as their strongly differing recent demographic histories.

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Concepts associés (37)
Polymorphisme nucléotidique
vignette|La molécule d'ADN 1 diffère de la 2 par un seul nucléotide (polymorphisme C/T). Le polymorphisme nucléotidique (PN, ou polymorphisme d'un seul nucléotide, PSN ; single nucleotide polymorphism, SNP) est, en génétique, la variation (polymorphisme) d'une seule paire de bases du génome entre individus d'une même espèce, ou entre un individu et la séquence de référence de l'espèce. La variation doit être située à un endroit spécifique du génome et apparaître sur une proportion supérieure à 1 % de la population pour être caractérisée comme PSN.
Nucleotide diversity
Nucleotide diversity is a concept in molecular genetics which is used to measure the degree of polymorphism within a population. One commonly used measure of nucleotide diversity was first introduced by Nei and Li in 1979. This measure is defined as the average number of nucleotide differences per site between two DNA sequences in all possible pairs in the sample population, and is denoted by .
Genetic variation
Genetic variation is the difference in DNA among individuals or the differences between populations among the same species. The multiple sources of genetic variation include mutation and genetic recombination. Mutations are the ultimate sources of genetic variation, but other mechanisms, such as genetic drift, contribute to it, as well. Genetic variation can be identified at many levels. Identifying genetic variation is possible from observations of phenotypic variation in either quantitative traits (traits that vary continuously and are coded for by many genes (e.
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