Demographic history and rare allele sharing among human populations

Simon Gravel , Brenna M. Henn , Ryan N. Gutenkunst , Simon Gravel , Brenna M. Henn , Ryan N. Gutenkunst , Amit Indap , Gábor Marth , Andrew G. Clark , Fuli Yu , Richard A. Gibbs , Carlos D. Bustamante , David L. Altshuler , Richard Durbin , Gonçalo R. Abecasis , David Bentley , Aravinda Chakravarti , Andrew G. Clark , Francis S. Collins , Francisco M. De La Vega , Peter Donnelly , Michael D. Miller , Paul Flicek , Stacey Gabriel , Richard A. Gibbs , Bartha Maria Knoppers , Eric S. Lander , Hans Lehrach , Elaine R. Mardis , Gil McVean , Debbie A. Nickerson , Leena Peltonen , Alan J. Schafer , Stephen T. Sherry , Jun Wang , Richard K. Wilson , Richard A. Gibbs , David Rio Deiros , Mike Metzker , Donna M. Muzny , Jeff Reid , David A. Wheeler , Jun Wang , Jingxiang Li , Min Jian , Guoqing Li , Ruiqiang Li , Huiqing Liang , Geng Tian , Bó Wáng , Jian Wang , Wei Wang , Huanming Yang , Xiuqing Zhang , Huisong Zheng , Eric S. Lander , David L. Altshuler , Lauren Ambrogio , Toby Bloom , Kristian Cibulskis , Tim Fennell , Stacey Gabriel , David B. Jaffe , Erica Shefler , Carrie Sougnez , David Bentley , Niall Gormley , Sean Humphray , Zoya Kingsbury , Paula Koko-Gonzales , Jennifer Stone , Kevin McKernan , Gina L. Costa , Jeffry K. Ichikawa , Clarence Lee , Ralf Sudbrak , Hans Lehrach , Tatiana Borodina , Andreas Dahl , Alexey N. Davydov , P Marquardt , Florian Mertes , Wilfiried Nietfeld , Philip Rosenstiel , Stefan Schreiber , Aleksey V. Soldatov , Bernd Timmermann , Marius Tolzmann , Michael D. Miller , Jason P. Affourtit , Dana Ashworth , Said Attiya , Melissa Bachorski , Eli Buglione , Adam Burke , Amanda Caprio , Christopher Celone , Andrew G. Clark , David Conners , Brian Desany , Lisa Gu , Lorri Guccione , Kalvin Kao
2011 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 713 citations

Abstract

High-throughput sequencing technology enables population-level surveys of human genomic variation. Here, we examine the joint allele frequency distributions across continental human populations and present an approach for combining complementary aspects of whole-genome, low-coverage data and targeted high-coverage data. We apply this approach to data generated by the pilot phase of the Thousand Genomes Project, including whole-genome 2–4× coverage data for 179 samples from HapMap European, Asian, and African panels as well as high-coverage target sequencing of the exons of 800 genes from 697 individuals in seven populations. We use the site frequency spectra obtained from these data to infer demographic parameters for an Out-of-Africa model for populations of African, European, and Asian descent and to predict, by a jackknife-based approach, the amount of genetic diversity that will be discovered as sample sizes are increased. We predict that the number of discovered nonsynonymous coding variants will reach 100,000 in each population after ∼1,000 sequenced chromosomes per population, whereas ∼2,500 chromosomes will be needed for the same number of synonymous variants. Beyond this point, the number of segregating sites in the European and Asian panel populations is expected to overcome that of the African panel because of faster recent population growth. Overall, we find that the majority of human genomic variable sites are rare and exhibit little sharing among diverged populations. Our results emphasize that replication of disease association for specific rare genetic variants across diverged populations must overcome both reduced statistical power because of rarity and higher population divergence.

Keywords

International HapMap ProjectBiologyNonsynonymous substitutionGenetics1000 Genomes ProjectPopulationAllele frequencyEvolutionary biologyDemographic historyHuman genomeEffective population sizeAlleleGenetic variationGenomeGeneSingle-nucleotide polymorphismGenotypeDemography

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Year
2011
Type
article
Volume
108
Issue
29
Pages
11983-11988
Citations
713
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Simon Gravel, Brenna M. Henn, Ryan N. Gutenkunst et al. (2011). Demographic history and rare allele sharing among human populations. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , 108 (29) , 11983-11988. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1019276108

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DOI
10.1073/pnas.1019276108