Similarity-based analysis of allele frequency distribution among multiple populations identifies adaptive genomic structural variants

Author:

Saitou Marie123,Masuda Naoki45,Gokcumen Omer1

Affiliation:

1. Dept. of Biological Sciences, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, NY 14260-2900, USA

2. Currently at the Faculty of Biosciences, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Universitetstunet 3, 1430 Ås, Norway

3. Dept. of Medicine, The University of Chicago. Section of Genetic Medicine, 5841 S. Maryland Ave., Chicago, IL, 60637-1447, USA

4. Department of Mathematics, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, NY 14260-2900, USA

5. Computational and Data-Enabled Science and Engineering Program, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, NY 14260-5030, USA

Abstract

Abstract Structural variants have a considerable impact on human genomic diversity. However, their evolutionary history remains mostly unexplored. Here, we developed a new method to identify potentially adaptive structural variants based on a similarity-based analysis that incorporates genotype frequency data from 26 populations simultaneously. Using this method, we analyzed 57,629 structural variants and identified 576 structural variants that show unusual population differentiation. Of these putatively adaptive structural variants, we further showed that 24 variants are multiallelic and overlap with coding sequences, and 20 variants are significantly associated with GWAS traits. Closer inspection of the haplotypic variation associated with these putatively adaptive and functional structural variants reveals deviations from neutral expectations due to (i) population differentiation of rapidly evolving multi-allelic variants, (ii) incomplete sweeps, and (iii) recent population-specific negative selection. Overall, our study provides new methodological insights, documents hundreds of putatively adaptive variants, and introduces evolutionary models that may better explain the complex evolution of structural variants.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

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

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