RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Towards an evolutionarily appropriate null model: jointly inferring demography and purifying selection JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 2019.12.18.881516 DO 10.1101/2019.12.18.881516 A1 Parul Johri A1 Brian Charlesworth A1 Jeffrey D. Jensen YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/12/19/2019.12.18.881516.abstract AB The question of the relative evolutionary roles of adaptive and non-adaptive processes has been a central debate in population genetics for nearly a century. While advances have been made in the theoretical development of the underlying models, and statistical methods for estimating their parameters from large-scale genomic data, a framework for an appropriate null model remains elusive. A model incorporating evolutionary processes known to be in constant operation - genetic drift (as modulated by the demographic history of the population) and purifying selection – is lacking. Without such a null model, the role of adaptive processes in shaping within- and between-population variation may not be accurately assessed. Here, we investigate how population size changes and the strength of purifying selection affect patterns of variation at neutral sites near functional genomic components. We propose a novel statistical framework for jointly inferring the contribution of the relevant selective and demographic parameters. By means of extensive performance analyses, we quantify the utility of the approach, identify the most important statistics for parameter estimation, and compare the results with existing methods. Finally, we re-analyze genome-wide population-level data from a Zambian population of Drosophila melanogaster, and find that it has experienced a much slower rate of population growth than was inferred when the effects of purifying selection were neglected. Our approach represents an appropriate null model, against which the effects of positive selection can be assessed.