Abstract
AbstractAs studies move into deeper characterization of the impact of selection through non-neutral mutations in whole genome population genetics, modeling for selection becomes crucial. Moreover, epistasis has long been recognized as a significant component in understanding evolution of complex genetic systems. We present a backward coalescent model EpiSimRA, that builds multiple loci selection, with multi-way (k-way) epistasis for any arbitrary k. Starting from arbitrary extant populations with epistatic sites, we trace the Ancestral Recombination Graph (ARG), sampling relevant recombination and coalescent events. Our framework allows for studying different complex evolutionary scenarios in the presence of selective sweeps, positive and negative selection with multiway epistasis. We also present a forward counterpart of the coalescent model based on a Wright-Fisher (WF) process which we use as a validation framework, comparing the hallmarks of the ARG between the two. We provide the first framework that allows a nose-to-nose comparison of multiway epistasis in a coalescent simulator with its forward counterpart with respect to the hallmarks of the ARG. We demonstrate through extensive experiments, that EpiSimRA is consistently superior in term of performance (seconds vs. hours) in comparison to the forward model without compromising on its accuracy. EpiSimRA (both backward and forward) source, executable, user manuals are available at: https://github.com/ComputationalGenomics/SimRA.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory