June 17, 2011

Parallel adaptive divergence in human populations

PLoS Genet 7(6): e1002127. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1002127

Parallel Adaptive Divergence among Geographically Diverse Human Populations

Jacob A. Tennessen, Joshua M. Akey

Few genetic differences between human populations conform to the classic model of positive selection, in which a newly arisen mutation rapidly approaches fixation in one lineage, suggesting that adaptation more commonly occurs via moderate changes in standing variation at many loci. Detecting and characterizing this type of complex selection requires integrating individually ambiguous signatures across genomically and geographically extensive data. Here, we develop a novel approach to test the hypothesis that selection has favored modest divergence at particular loci multiple times in independent human populations. We find an excess of SNPs showing non-neutral parallel divergence, enriched for genic and nonsynonymous polymorphisms in genes encompassing diverse and often disease related functions. Repeated parallel evolution in the same direction suggests common selective pressures in disparate habitats. We test our method with extensive coalescent simulations and show that it is robust to a wide range of demographic events. Our results demonstrate phylogenetically orthogonal patterns of local adaptation caused by subtle shifts at many widespread polymorphisms that likely underlie substantial phenotypic diversity.

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1 comment:

terryt said...

"Few genetic differences between human populations conform to the classic model of positive selection, in which a newly arisen mutation rapidly approaches fixation in one lineage"

Researchers seem very reluctant to actually research the differences between regional populations that we can actually see. Such as skin colour, hair colour, hair type etc. Surely we have to assume that such differences had some ecological advantages originally. In spite of what many people like to claim such differences are not randomly distributed therough the human species, although presumably with extensive human movement since the Neolithic they are more widely spread than in more ancient times.