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(Referência obtida automaticamente do Web of Science, por meio da informação sobre o financiamento pela FAPESP e o número do processo correspondente, incluída na publicação pelos autores.)

The aggregate site frequency spectrum for comparative population genomic inference

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Autor(es):
Xue, Alexander T. [1, 2] ; Hickerson, Michael J. [3]
Número total de Autores: 2
Afiliação do(s) autor(es):
[1] CUNY, Grad Ctr, New York, NY 10031 - USA
[2] CUNY City Coll, Dept Biol Subprogram Ecol Evolutionary Biol & Beh, New York, NY 10031 - USA
[3] Amer Museum Nat Hist, Div Invertebrate Zool, New York, NY 10024 - USA
Número total de Afiliações: 3
Tipo de documento: Artigo Científico
Fonte: Molecular Ecology; v. 24, n. 24, p. 6223-6240, DEC 2015.
Citações Web of Science: 23
Resumo

Understanding how assemblages of species responded to past climate change is a central goal of comparative phylogeography and comparative population genomics, an endeavour that has increasing potential to integrate with community ecology. New sequencing technology now provides the potential to perform complex demographic inference at unprecedented resolution across assemblages of nonmodel species. To this end, we introduce the aggregate site frequency spectrum (aSFS), an expansion of the site frequency spectrum to use single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data sets collected from multiple, co-distributed species for assemblage-level demographic inference. We describe how the aSFS is constructed over an arbitrary number of independent population samples and then demonstrate how the aSFS can differentiate various multispecies demographic histories under a wide range of sampling configurations while allowing effective population sizes and expansion magnitudes to vary independently. We subsequently couple the aSFS with a hierarchical approximate Bayesian computation (hABC) framework to estimate degree of temporal synchronicity in expansion times across taxa, including an empirical demonstration with a data set consisting of five populations of the threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus). Corroborating what is generally understood about the recent postglacial origins of these populations, the joint aSFS/hABC analysis strongly suggests that the stickleback data are most consistent with synchronous expansion after the Last Glacial Maximum (posterior probability = 0.99). The aSFS will have general application for multilevel statistical frameworks to test models involving assemblages and/or communities, and as large-scale SNP data from nonmodel species become routine, the aSFS expands the potential for powerful next-generation comparative population genomic inference. (AU)

Processo FAPESP: 13/50297-0 - Dimensions US-BIOTA São Paulo: integrando disciplinas para a predição da biodiversidade da Floresta Atlântica no Brasil
Beneficiário:Cristina Yumi Miyaki
Modalidade de apoio: Auxílio à Pesquisa - Programa BIOTA - Temático