21 results on '"Smith, Chris C. R."'
Search Results
2. Aberrant RNA splicing due to genetic incompatibilities in sunflower hybrids
- Author
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Smith, Chris C. R., Rieseberg, Loren H., Hulke, Brent S., and Kane, Nolan C.
- Published
- 2021
3. Machine learning speeds up genetic structure analysis
- Author
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Smith, Chris C. R.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Estimation of spatial demographic maps from polymorphism data using a neural network.
- Author
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Smith, Chris C. R., Patterson, Gilia, Ralph, Peter L., and Kern, Andrew D.
- Subjects
- *
ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms , *CONSERVATION genetics , *POPULATION genetics , *ECOLOGICAL genetics - Abstract
A fundamental goal in population genetics is to understand how variation is arrayed over natural landscapes. From first principles we know that common features such as heterogeneous population densities and barriers to dispersal should shape genetic variation over space, however there are few tools currently available that can deal with these ubiquitous complexities. Geographically referenced single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data are increasingly accessible, presenting an opportunity to study genetic variation across geographic space in myriad species. We present a new inference method that uses geo‐referenced SNPs and a deep neural network to estimate spatially heterogeneous maps of population density and dispersal rate. Our neural network trains on simulated input and output pairings, where the input consists of genotypes and sampling locations generated from a continuous space population genetic simulator, and the output is a map of the true demographic parameters. We benchmark our tool against existing methods and discuss qualitative differences between the different approaches; in particular, our program is unique because it infers the magnitude of both dispersal and density as well as their variation over the landscape, and it does so using SNP data. Similar methods are constrained to estimating relative migration rates, or require identity‐by‐descent blocks as input. We applied our tool to empirical data from North American grey wolves, for which it estimated mostly reasonable demographic parameters, but was affected by incomplete spatial sampling. Genetic based methods like ours complement other, direct methods for estimating past and present demography, and we believe will serve as valuable tools for applications in conservation, ecology and evolutionary biology. An open source software package implementing our method is available from https://github.com/kr‐colab/mapNN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Genetics of alternative splicing evolution during sunflower domestication
- Author
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Smith, Chris C. R., Tittes, Silas, Mendieta, J. Paul, Collier-zans, Erin, Rowe, Heather C., Rieseberg, Loren H., and Kane, Nolan C.
- Published
- 2018
6. Dispersal inference from population genetic variation using a convolutional neural network.
- Author
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Smith, Chris C. R., Tittes, Silas, Ralph, Peter L., and Kern, Andrew D.
- Subjects
- *
COMPUTER simulation , *DEEP learning , *POPULATION density , *GENETICS , *SINGLE nucleotide polymorphisms , *GENETIC variation , *GENOTYPES , *RESEARCH funding , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks - Abstract
The geographic nature of biological dispersal shapes patterns of genetic variation over landscapes, making it possible to infer properties of dispersal from genetic variation data. Here, we present an inference tool that uses geographically distributed genotype data in combination with a convolutional neural network to estimate a critical population parameter: the mean per-generation dispersal distance. Using extensive simulation, we show that our deep learning approach is competitive with or outperforms state-of-the-art methods, particularly at small sample sizes. In addition, we evaluate varying nuisance parameters during training--including population density, demographic history, habitat size, and sampling area--and show that this strategy is effective for estimating dispersal distance when other model parameters are unknown. Whereas competing methods depend on information about local population density or accurate inference of identity-by-descent tracts, our method uses only single-nucleotide-polymorphism data and the spatial scale of sampling as input. Strikingly, and unlike other methods, our method does not use the geographic coordinates of the genotyped individuals. These features make our method, which we call "disperseNN," a potentially valuable new tool for estimating dispersal distance in nonmodel systems with whole genome data or reduced representation data. We apply disperseNN to 12 different species with publicly available data, yielding reasonable estimates for most species. Importantly, our method estimated consistently larger dispersal distances than mark-recapture calculations in the same species, which may be due to the limited geographic sampling area covered by some mark-recapture studies. Thus genetic tools like ours complement direct methods for improving our understanding of dispersal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A migratory divide spanning two continents is associated with genomic and ecological divergence.
- Author
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Turbek, Sheela P., Schield, Drew R., Scordato, Elizabeth S. C., Contina, Andrea, Da, Xin‐Wei, Liu, Yang, Liu, Yu, Pagani‐Núñez, Emilio, Ren, Qing‐Miao, Smith, Chris C. R., Stricker, Craig A., Wunder, Michael, Zonana, David M., and Safran, Rebecca J.
- Subjects
REPRODUCTIVE isolation ,HYBRID zones ,BARN swallow ,HYDROGEN isotopes ,ASSORTATIVE mating ,CARBON isotopes - Abstract
Migratory divides are contact zones between breeding populations with divergent migratory strategies during the nonbreeding season. These locations provide an opportunity to evaluate the role of seasonal migration in the maintenance of reproductive isolation, particularly the relationship between population structure and features associated with distinct migratory strategies. We combine light‐level geolocators, genomic sequencing, and stable isotopes to investigate the timing of migration and migratory routes of individuals breeding on either side of a migratory divide coinciding with genomic differentiation across a hybrid zone between barn swallow (Hirundo rustica) subspecies in China. Individuals west of the hybrid zone, with H. r. rustica ancestry, had comparatively enriched stable‐carbon and hydrogen isotope values and overwintered in eastern Africa, whereas birds east of the hybrid zone, with H. r. gutturalis ancestry, had depleted isotope values and migrated to southern India. The two subspecies took divergent migratory routes around the high‐altitude Karakoram Range and arrived on the breeding grounds over 3 weeks apart. These results indicate that assortative mating by timing of arrival and/or selection against hybrids with intermediate migratory traits may maintain reproductive isolation between the subspecies, and that inhospitable geographic features may have contributed to the diversification of Asian avifauna by influencing migratory patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Sex‐linked genetic diversity and differentiation in a globally distributed avian species complex.
- Author
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Schield, Drew R., Scordato, Elizabeth S. C., Smith, Chris C. R., Carter, Javan K., Cherkaoui, Sidi Imad, Gombobaatar, Sundev, Hajib, Said, Hanane, Saad, Hund, Amanda K., Koyama, Kazuo, Liang, Wei, Liu, Yang, Magri, Najib, Rubtsov, Alexander, Sheta, Basma, Turbek, Sheela P., Wilkins, Matthew R., Yu, Liu, and Safran, Rebecca J.
- Subjects
BIOLOGICAL evolution ,SEX chromosomes ,BARN swallow ,INTROGRESSION (Genetics) ,POPULATION differentiation ,GENETIC drift ,POPULATION genetics ,GENE flow - Abstract
Sex chromosomes often bear distinct patterns of genetic variation due to unique patterns of inheritance and demography. The processes of mutation, recombination, genetic drift and selection also influence rates of evolution on sex chromosomes differently than autosomes. Measuring such differences provides information about how these processes shape genomic variation and their roles in the origin of species. To test hypotheses and predictions about patterns of autosomal and sex‐linked genomic diversity and differentiation, we measured population genetic statistics within and between populations and subspecies of the barn swallow (Hirundo rustica) and performed explicit comparisons between autosomal and Z‐linked genomic regions. We first tested for evidence of low Z‐linked genetic diversity and high Z‐linked population differentiation relative to autosomes, then for evidence that the Z chromosome bears greater ancestry information due to faster lineage sorting. Finally, we investigated geographical clines across hybrid zones for evidence that the Z chromosome is resistant to introgression due to selection against hybrids. We found evidence that the barn swallow mating system, demographic history and linked selection each contribute to low Z‐linked diversity and high Z‐linked differentiation. While incomplete lineage sorting is rampant across the genome, our results indicate faster sorting of ancestral polymorphism on the Z. Finally, hybrid zone analyses indicate barriers to introgression on the Z chromosome, suggesting that sex‐linked traits are important in reproductive isolation, especially in migratory divide regions. Our study highlights how selection, gene flow and demography shape sex‐linked genetic diversity and underlines the relevance of the Z chromosome in speciation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Migratory divides coincide with reproductive barriers across replicated avian hybrid zones above the Tibetan Plateau.
- Author
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Scordato, Elizabeth S. C., Smith, Chris C. R., Semenov, Georgy A., Liu, Yu, Wilkins, Matthew R., Liang, Wei, Rubtsov, Alexander, Sundev, Gomboobaatar, Koyama, Kazuo, Turbek, Sheela P., Wunder, Michael B., Stricker, Craig A., Safran, Rebecca J., and Grether, Greg
- Subjects
- *
HYBRID zones , *BARN swallow , *ASSORTATIVE mating , *LATITUDE , *SUBSPECIES , *BIRD ecology - Abstract
Migratory divides are proposed to be catalysts for speciation across a diversity of taxa. However, it is difficult to test the relative contributions of migratory behaviour vs. other divergent traits to reproductive isolation. Comparing hybrid zones with and without migratory divides offers a rare opportunity to directly examine the contribution of divergent migratory behaviour to reproductive barriers. We show that across replicate sampling transects of two pairs of barn swallow (Hirundo rustica) subspecies, strong reproductive isolation coincided with a migratory divide spanning 20 degrees of latitude. A third subspecies pair exhibited no evidence for a migratory divide and hybridised extensively. Within migratory divides, overwintering habitats were associated with assortative mating, implicating a central contribution of divergent migratory behaviour to reproductive barriers. The remarkable geographic coincidence between migratory divides and genetic breaks supports a long‐standing hypothesis that the Tibetan Plateau is a substantial barrier contributing to the diversity of Siberian avifauna. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Leveraging whole genome sequencing data for demographic inference with approximate Bayesian computation.
- Author
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Smith, Chris C. R. and Flaxman, Samuel M.
- Subjects
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NUCLEOTIDE sequencing , *GENE flow , *PARAMETER estimation - Abstract
Accounting for historical demographic features, such as the strength and timing of gene flow and divergence times between closely related lineages, is vital for many inferences in evolutionary biology. Approximate Bayesian computation (ABC) is one method commonly used to estimate demographic parameters. However, the DNA sequences used as input for this method, often microsatellites or RADseq loci, usually represent a small fraction of the genome. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) data, on the other hand, have been used less often with ABC, and questions remain about the potential benefit of, and how to best implement, this type of data; we used pseudo‐observed data sets to explore such questions. Specifically, we addressed the potential improvements in parameter estimation accuracy that could be associated with WGS data in multiple contexts; namely, we quantified the effects of (a) more data, (b) haplotype‐based summary statistics, and (c) locus length. Compared with a hypothetical RADseq data set with 2.5 Mbp of data, using a 1 Gbp data set consisting of 100 Kbp sequences led to substantial gains in the accuracy of parameter estimates, which was mostly due to haplotype statistics and increased data. We also quantified the effects of including (a) locus‐specific recombination rates, and (b) background selection information in ABC analyses. Importantly, assuming uniform recombination or ignoring background selection had a negative effect on accuracy in many cases. Software and results from this method validation study should be useful for future demographic history analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Demographic inference in barn swallows using whole‐genome data shows signal for bottleneck and subspecies differentiation during the Holocene.
- Author
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Smith, Chris C. R., Flaxman, Samuel M., Scordato, Elizabeth S. C., Kane, Nolan C., Hund, Amanda K., Sheta, Basma M., and Safran, Rebecca J.
- Subjects
- *
BARN swallow , *GENOMES , *SPECIES distribution , *BIOGEOGRAPHY , *PARAMETERS (Statistics) - Abstract
Accounting for historical demographic features is vital for many types of evolutionary inferences, including the estimation of divergence times between closely related populations. In barn swallow, Hirundo rustica, inferring historical population sizes and subspecies divergence times can shed light on the recent co‐evolution of this species with humans. Pairwise sequentially Markovian coalescent uncovered population growth beginning on the order of one million years ago—which may reflect the radiation of the broader Hirundo genus—and a more recent population decline. Additionally, we used approximate Bayesian computation to evaluate hypotheses about recent timescale barn swallow demography, including population growth due to human commensalism, and a potential founder event associated with the onset of nesting on human structures. We found signal for a bottleneck event approximately 7,700 years ago, near the time that humans began building substantial structures, although there was considerable uncertainty associated with this estimate. Subspecies differentiation and subsequent growth occurred after the bottleneck in the best‐supported model, an order of magnitude more recently than previous estimates in this system. We also compared results obtained from whole‐genome sequencing versus reduced representation sequencing, finding many similar results despite substantial allelic dropout in the reduced representation data, which may have affected estimates of some parameters. This study presents the first genetic evidence of a potential barn swallow founder effect and subspecies divergence coinciding with the Holocene, which is an important step in analysing the biogeographical history of a well‐known human commensal species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Effects of assortative mate choice on the genomic and morphological structure of a hybrid zone between two bird subspecies.
- Author
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Semenov, Georgy A., Scordato, Elizabeth S. C., Khaydarov, David R., Smith, Chris C. R., Kane, Nolan C., and Safran, Rebecca J.
- Subjects
ASSORTATIVE mating ,MATE selection ,SPECIES hybridization ,INTROGRESSION (Genetics) ,REPRODUCTIVE isolation ,WAGTAILS - Abstract
Phenotypic differentiation plays an important role in the formation and maintenance of reproductive barriers. In some cases, variation in a few key aspects of phenotype can promote and maintain divergence; hence, the identification of these traits and their associations with patterns of genomic divergence is crucial for understanding the patterns and processes of population differentiation. We studied hybridization between the alba and personata subspecies of the white wagtail ( Motacilla alba), and quantified divergence and introgression of multiple morphological traits and 19,437 SNP loci on a 3,000 km transect. Our goal was to identify traits that may contribute to reproductive barriers and to assess how variation in these traits corresponds to patterns of genome-wide divergence. Variation in only one trait-head plumage patterning-was consistent with reproductive isolation. Transitions in head plumage were steep and occurred over otherwise morphologically and genetically homogeneous populations, whereas cline centres for other traits and genomic ancestry were displaced over 100 km from the head cline. Field observational data show that social pairs mated assortatively by head plumage, suggesting that these phenotypes are maintained by divergent mating preferences. In contrast, variation in all other traits and genetic markers could be explained by neutral diffusion, although weak ecological selection cannot be ruled out. Our results emphasize that assortative mating may maintain phenotypic differences independent of other processes shaping genome-wide variation, consistent with other recent findings that raise questions about the relative importance of mate choice, ecological selection and selectively neutral processes for divergent evolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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13. Wolbachia do not live by reproductive manipulation alone: infection polymorphism in Drosophila suzukii and D. subpulchrella.
- Author
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Hamm, Christopher A., Begun, David J., Vo, Alexandre, Smith, Chris C. R., Saelao, Perot, Shaver, Amanda O., Jaenike, John, and Turelli, Michael
- Subjects
DROSOPHILA suzukii ,DROSOPHILA simulans ,WOLBACHIA ,BACTERIAL diseases ,SYMBIOSIS - Abstract
Drosophila suzukii recently invaded North America and Europe. Populations in Hawaii, California, New York and Nova Scotia are polymorphic for Wolbachia, typically with <20% infection frequency. The Wolbachia in D. suzukii, denoted wSuz, is closely related to wRi, the variant prevalent in continental populations of D. simulans. wSuz is also nearly identical to Wolbachia found in D. subpulchrella, plausibly D. suzukii's sister species. This suggests vertical Wolbachia transmission through cladogenesis ('cladogenic transmission'). The widespread occurrence of 7-20% infection frequencies indicates a stable polymorphism. wSuz is imperfectly maternally transmitted, with wild infected females producing on average 5-10% uninfected progeny. As expected from its low frequency, wSuz produces no cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI), that is, no increased embryo mortality when infected males mate with uninfected females, and no appreciable sex-ratio distortion. The persistence of wSuz despite imperfect maternal transmission suggests positive fitness effects. Assuming a balance between selection and imperfect transmission, we expect a fitness advantage on the order of 20%. Unexpectedly, Wolbachia-infected females produce fewer progeny than do uninfected females. We do not yet understand the maintenance of wSuz in D. suzukii. The absence of detectable CI in D. suzukii and D. subpulchrella makes it unlikely that CI-based mechanisms could be used to control this species without transinfection using novel Wolbachia. Contrary to their reputation as horizontally transmitted reproductive parasites, many Wolbachia infections are acquired through introgression or cladogenesis and many cause no appreciable reproductive manipulation. Such infections, likely to be mutualistic, may be central to understanding the pervasiveness of Wolbachia among arthropods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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14. Book Review: Molecular population genetics. Matthew Hahn.
- Author
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Smith, Chris C. R., Taylor, Scott A., Tittes, Silas, Vergara, Daniela, and Scordato, Elizabeth S. C.
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MOLECULAR population biology , *NUCLEOTIDE sequencing , *NATURAL selection , *GENETICS - Abstract
Rapid progress in the field of population genetics, in particular advances in DNA sequencing technology, calls for an up‐to‐speed textbook that is appropriate for current researchers and students. Molecular Population Genetics, by Matthew Hahn (2018), is an informative and entertaining text that attempts to satisfy this demand. Although it has notable shortcomings and does not replace current texts for undergraduate courses, this book is a worthwhile resource for almost any researcher analysing population genetic data and is a must‐have for graduate student reading lists. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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15. Population genetics meets ecology: a guide to individual-based simulations in continuous landscapes.
- Author
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Chevy ET, Min J, Caudill V, Champer SE, Haller BC, Rehmann CT, Smith CCR, Tittes S, Messer PW, Kern AD, Ramachandran S, and Ralph PL
- Abstract
Individual-based simulation has become an increasingly crucial tool for many fields of population biology. However, implementing realistic and stable simulations in continuous space presents a variety of difficulties, from modeling choices to computational efficiency. This paper aims to be a practical guide to spatial simulation, helping researchers to implement realistic and efficient spatial, individual-based simulations and avoid common pitfalls. To do this, we delve into mechanisms of mating, reproduction, density-dependent feedback, and dispersal, all of which may vary across the landscape, discuss how these affect population dynamics, and describe how to parameterize simulations in convenient ways (for instance, to achieve a desired population density). We also demonstrate how to implement these models using the current version of the individual-based simulator, SLiM. Since SLiM has the capacity to simulate genomes, we also discuss natural selection - in particular, how genetic variation can affect demographic processes. Finally, we provide four short vignettes: simulations of pikas that shift their range up a mountain as temperatures rise; mosquitoes that live in rivers as juveniles and experience seasonally changing habitat; cane toads that expand across Australia, reaching 120 million individuals; and monarch butterflies whose populations are regulated by an explicitly modeled resource (milkweed).
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Estimation of spatial demographic maps from polymorphism data using a neural network.
- Author
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Smith CCR, Patterson G, Ralph PL, and Kern AD
- Abstract
A fundamental goal in population genetics is to understand how variation is arrayed over natural landscapes. From first principles we know that common features such as heterogeneous population densities and barriers to dispersal should shape genetic variation over space, however there are few tools currently available that can deal with these ubiquitous complexities. Geographically referenced single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data are increasingly accessible, presenting an opportunity to study genetic variation across geographic space in myriad species. We present a new inference method that uses geo-referenced SNPs and a deep neural network to estimate spatially heterogeneous maps of population density and dispersal rate. Our neural network trains on simulated input and output pairings, where the input consists of genotypes and sampling locations generated from a continuous space population genetic simulator, and the output is a map of the true demographic parameters. We benchmark our tool against existing methods and discuss qualitative differences between the different approaches; in particular, our program is unique because it infers the magnitude of both dispersal and density as well as their variation over the landscape, and it does so using SNP data. Similar methods are constrained to estimating relative migration rates, or require identity by descent blocks as input. We applied our tool to empirical data from North American grey wolves, for which it estimated mostly reasonable demographic parameters, but was affected by incomplete spatial sampling. Genetic based methods like ours complement other, direct methods for estimating past and present demography, and we believe will serve as valuable tools for applications in conservation, ecology, and evolutionary biology. An open source software package implementing our method is available from https://github.com/kr-colab/mapNN .
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Gene expression and alternative splicing contribute to adaptive divergence of ecotypes.
- Author
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Innes PA, Goebl AM, Smith CCR, Rosenberger K, and Kane NC
- Subjects
- Protein Isoforms genetics, Protein Isoforms metabolism, Gene Expression Profiling, Transcriptome, Alternative Splicing, Ecotype
- Abstract
Regulation of gene expression is a critical link between genotype and phenotype explaining substantial heritable variation within species. However, we are only beginning to understand the ways that specific gene regulatory mechanisms contribute to adaptive divergence of populations. In plants, the post-transcriptional regulatory mechanism of alternative splicing (AS) plays an important role in both development and abiotic stress response, making it a compelling potential target of natural selection. AS allows organisms to generate multiple different transcripts/proteins from a single gene and thus may provide a source of evolutionary novelty. Here, we examine whether variation in alternative splicing and gene expression levels might contribute to adaptation and incipient speciation of dune-adapted prairie sunflowers in Great Sand Dunes National Park, Colorado, USA. We conducted a common garden experiment to assess transcriptomic variation among ecotypes and analyzed differential expression, differential splicing, and gene coexpression. We show that individual genes are strongly differentiated for both transcript level and alternative isoform proportions, even when grown in a common environment, and that gene coexpression networks are disrupted between ecotypes. Furthermore, we examined how genome-wide patterns of sequence divergence correspond to divergence in transcript levels and isoform proportions and find evidence for both cis and trans-regulation. Together, our results emphasize that alternative splicing has been an underappreciated mechanism providing source material for natural selection at short evolutionary time scales., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Genetics Society.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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18. disperseNN2: a neural network for estimating dispersal distance from georeferenced polymorphism data.
- Author
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Smith CCR and Kern AD
- Abstract
Spatial genetic variation is shaped in part by an organism's dispersal ability. We present a deep learning tool, disperseNN2, for estimating the mean per-generation dispersal distance from georeferenced polymorphism data. Our neural network performs feature extraction on pairs of genotypes, and uses the geographic information that comes with each sample. These attributes led disperseNN2 to outperform a state-of-the-art deep learning method that does not use explicit spatial information: the mean relative absolute error was reduced by 33% and 48% using sample sizes of 10 and 100 individuals, respectively. disperseNN2 is particularly useful for non-model organisms or systems with sparse genomic resources, as it uses unphased, single nucleotide polymorphisms as its input. The software is open source and available from https://github.com/kr-colab/disperseNN2, with documentation located at https://dispersenn2.readthedocs.io/en/latest/., Competing Interests: Competing interests The authors declare no competing interests.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Expanding the stdpopsim species catalog, and lessons learned for realistic genome simulations.
- Author
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Lauterbur ME, Cavassim MIA, Gladstein AL, Gower G, Pope NS, Tsambos G, Adrion J, Belsare S, Biddanda A, Caudill V, Cury J, Echevarria I, Haller BC, Hasan AR, Huang X, Iasi LNM, Noskova E, Obsteter J, Pavinato VAC, Pearson A, Peede D, Perez MF, Rodrigues MF, Smith CCR, Spence JP, Teterina A, Tittes S, Unneberg P, Vazquez JM, Waples RK, Wohns AW, Wong Y, Baumdicker F, Cartwright RA, Gorjanc G, Gutenkunst RN, Kelleher J, Kern AD, Ragsdale AP, Ralph PL, Schrider DR, and Gronau I
- Subjects
- Computer Simulation, Genetics, Population, Genomics, Software, Genome
- Abstract
Simulation is a key tool in population genetics for both methods development and empirical research, but producing simulations that recapitulate the main features of genomic datasets remains a major obstacle. Today, more realistic simulations are possible thanks to large increases in the quantity and quality of available genetic data, and the sophistication of inference and simulation software. However, implementing these simulations still requires substantial time and specialized knowledge. These challenges are especially pronounced for simulating genomes for species that are not well-studied, since it is not always clear what information is required to produce simulations with a level of realism sufficient to confidently answer a given question. The community-developed framework stdpopsim seeks to lower this barrier by facilitating the simulation of complex population genetic models using up-to-date information. The initial version of stdpopsim focused on establishing this framework using six well-characterized model species (Adrion et al., 2020). Here, we report on major improvements made in the new release of stdpopsim (version 0.2), which includes a significant expansion of the species catalog and substantial additions to simulation capabilities. Features added to improve the realism of the simulated genomes include non-crossover recombination and provision of species-specific genomic annotations. Through community-driven efforts, we expanded the number of species in the catalog more than threefold and broadened coverage across the tree of life. During the process of expanding the catalog, we have identified common sticking points and developed the best practices for setting up genome-scale simulations. We describe the input data required for generating a realistic simulation, suggest good practices for obtaining the relevant information from the literature, and discuss common pitfalls and major considerations. These improvements to stdpopsim aim to further promote the use of realistic whole-genome population genetic simulations, especially in non-model organisms, making them available, transparent, and accessible to everyone., Competing Interests: ML, MC, GG, NP, GT, SB, VC, JC, IE, BH, AH, XH, LI, EN, JO, VP, AP, DP, MP, MR, CS, JS, AT, ST, PU, JV, RW, AW, YW, FB, RC, GG, RG, JK, AK, AR, PR, DS, IG No competing interests declared, AG is an employee of Embark Veterinary, Inc. The author declares that no other competing interests exist, JA is an employee of Ancestry DNA. The author declares that no other competing interests exist, AB is an employee of 54Gene, Inc. The author declares that no other competing interests exist, (© 2023, Lauterbur et al.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Unifying Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives on Genomic Differentiation.
- Author
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Semenov GA, Safran RJ, Smith CCR, Turbek SP, Mullen SP, and Flaxman SM
- Subjects
- Biological Evolution, Genetics, Population, Genome, Genetic Speciation, Genomics
- Abstract
Differentiation is often heterogeneous across the genomes of diverging populations. Despite substantial recent progress, much work remains to improve our abilities to connect genomic patterns to underlying evolutionary processes. Crosstalk between theoretical and empirical research has shaped the field of evolutionary genetics since its foundation and needs to be greatly enhanced for modern datasets. We leverage recent insights from theoretical and empirical studies to identify existing gaps and suggest pathways across them. We stress the importance of reporting empirical data in standardized ways to enable meta-analyses and to facilitate parameterization of analyses and models. Additionally, a more comprehensive view of potential mechanisms - especially considering variable recombination rates and ubiquitous background selection - and their interactions should replace common, oversimplified assumptions., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Dietary input of microbes and host genetic variation shape among-population differences in stickleback gut microbiota.
- Author
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Smith CC, Snowberg LK, Gregory Caporaso J, Knight R, and Bolnick DI
- Subjects
- Animals, British Columbia, Estuaries, Genetic Variation, Genetics, Population, Genotype, Geography, Lakes, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Rivers, Water Microbiology, Diet, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Intestines microbiology, Smegmamorpha genetics, Smegmamorpha microbiology
- Abstract
To explain differences in gut microbial communities we must determine how processes regulating microbial community assembly (colonization, persistence) differ among hosts and affect microbiota composition. We surveyed the gut microbiota of threespine stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) from 10 geographically clustered populations and sequenced environmental samples to track potential colonizing microbes and quantify the effects of host environment and genotype. Gut microbiota composition and diversity varied among populations. These among-population differences were associated with multiple covarying ecological variables: habitat type (lake, stream, estuary), lake geomorphology and food- (but not water-) associated microbiota. Fish genotype also covaried with gut microbiota composition; more genetically divergent populations exhibited more divergent gut microbiota. Our results suggest that population level differences in stickleback gut microbiota may depend more on internal sorting processes (host genotype) than on colonization processes (transient environmental effects).
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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