Additive Uncorrelated Relaxed Clock Models for the Dating of Genomic Epidemiology Phylogenies

Author:

Didelot Xavier12ORCID,Siveroni Igor3,Volz Erik M3

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences, University of Warwick, Coventry, United Kingdom

2. Department of Statistics, University of Warwick, Coventry, United Kingdom

3. Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractPhylogenetic dating is one of the most powerful and commonly used methods of drawing epidemiological interpretations from pathogen genomic data. Building such trees requires considering a molecular clock model which represents the rate at which substitutions accumulate on genomes. When the molecular clock rate is constant throughout the tree then the clock is said to be strict, but this is often not an acceptable assumption. Alternatively, relaxed clock models consider variations in the clock rate, often based on a distribution of rates for each branch. However, we show here that the distributions of rates across branches in commonly used relaxed clock models are incompatible with the biological expectation that the sum of the numbers of substitutions on two neighboring branches should be distributed as the substitution number on a single branch of equivalent length. We call this expectation the additivity property. We further show how assumptions of commonly used relaxed clock models can lead to estimates of evolutionary rates and dates with low precision and biased confidence intervals. We therefore propose a new additive relaxed clock model where the additivity property is satisfied. We illustrate the use of our new additive relaxed clock model on a range of simulated and real data sets, and we show that using this new model leads to more accurate estimates of mean evolutionary rates and ancestral dates.

Funder

Medical Research Council

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Protection Research Unit in Genomics and Enabling Data

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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