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Human demographic history has amplified the effects of background selection across the genome

Raul Torres, View ORCID ProfileZachary A. Szpiech, View ORCID ProfileRyan D. Hernandez
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/181859
Raul Torres
UCSF
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Zachary A. Szpiech
UCSF
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Ryan D. Hernandez
UCSF
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  • For correspondence: ryan.hernandez@ucsf.edu
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Abstract

Natural populations often grow, shrink, and migrate over time. Demographic processes such as these can impact genome-wide levels of genetic diversity. In addition, genetic variation in functional regions of the genome can be altered by natural selection, which drives adaptive mutations to higher frequencies or purges deleterious ones. Such selective processes impact not only the sites directly under selection but also nearby neutral variation through genetic linkage through processes referred to as genetic hitchhiking in the context of positive selection and background selection (BGS) in the context of purifying selection. While there is extensive literature examining the impact of selection at linked sites at demographic equilibrium, less is known about how non-equilibrium demographic processes impact the effects of hitchhiking and BGS. Utilizing a global sample of human whole-genome sequences from the Thousand Genomes Project and extensive simulations, we investigate how non-equilibrium demographic processes magnify and dampen the consequences of selection at linked sites across the human genome. When binning the genome by inferred strength of BGS, we observe that, compared to Africans, non-African populations have experienced larger proportional decreases in neutral genetic diversity in such regions. We replicate these findings in admixed populations by showing that non-African ancestral components of the genome have also been impacted more severely in these regions. We attribute these differences to the strong, sustained/recurrent population bottlenecks that non-Africans experienced as they migrated out of Africa and throughout the globe. Furthermore, we observe a strong correlation between FST and inferred strength of BGS, suggesting a stronger rate of genetic drift. Forward simulations of human demographic history with a model of BGS support these observations. Our results show that non-equilibrium demography significantly alters the consequences selection at linked sites and support the need for more work investigating the dynamic process of multiple evolutionary forces operating in concert.

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The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
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  • Posted January 9, 2018.

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Human demographic history has amplified the effects of background selection across the genome
Raul Torres, Zachary A. Szpiech, Ryan D. Hernandez
bioRxiv 181859; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/181859
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Human demographic history has amplified the effects of background selection across the genome
Raul Torres, Zachary A. Szpiech, Ryan D. Hernandez
bioRxiv 181859; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/181859

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