Inference of recombination maps from a single pair of genomes and its application to ancient samples
Gustavo V. Barroso,
Nataša Puzović and
Julien Y Dutheil
PLOS Genetics, 2019, vol. 15, issue 11, 1-21
Abstract:
Understanding the causes and consequences of recombination landscape evolution is a fundamental goal in genetics that requires recombination maps from across the tree of life. Such maps can be obtained from population genomic datasets, but require large sample sizes. Alternative methods are therefore necessary to research organisms where such datasets cannot be generated easily, such as non-model or ancient species. Here we extend the sequentially Markovian coalescent model to jointly infer demography and the spatial variation in recombination rate. Using extensive simulations and sequence data from humans, fruit-flies and a fungal pathogen, we demonstrate that iSMC accurately infers recombination maps under a wide range of scenarios–remarkably, even from a single pair of unphased genomes. We exploit this possibility and reconstruct the recombination maps of ancient hominins. We report that the ancient and modern maps are correlated in a manner that reflects the established phylogeny of Neanderthals, Denisovans, and modern human populations.Author summary: In sexually-reproducing species, meiotic recombination causes the genome of each individual to be a mosaic of DNA sequences that existed in its ancestral population. As a result, genealogical ancestry changes along the genome and shapes genetic diversity. The importance of recombination in genome evolution has motivated a surge in the development of statistical tools to infer genome-wide variation in the recombination rate using polymorphism data. For the most part, however, these methods rely on relatively large sample sizes. Here, we introduce iSMC–a new tool that infers recombination maps while simultaneously modelling the demographic history. A critical improvement over existing methods is that iSMC has high accuracy using as little as a single diploid genome. Using experimentally derived recombination maps from fruit-flies and a fungal pathogen, we demonstrate that iSMC compares well to state-of-the-art methods that require larger sample sizes. We further analyse data from ancient hominins, showcasing that our method can extract information in intrinsically limited datasets. These results suggest that iSMC is a valuable tool that can foster studies in non-model organisms. Moreover, its joint-inference approach of demography and the recombination landscape represents a step towards more realistic models in population genomics.
Date: 2019
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pgen00:1008449
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008449
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