66 research outputs found
The history of the Y chromosome in man
Studies of the Y chromosome over the past few decades have opened a window into the history of our species, through the reconstruction and exploitation of a patrilineal (Y-genealogical) tree based on several hundred single-nucleotide variants (SNVs). A new study validates, refines and extends this tree by incorporating >65,000 Y-linked variants identified in 1,244 men representing worldwide diversity
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Q&A: What is human language, when did it evolve and why should we care?
Human language is unique among all forms of animal communication. It is unlikely that any other species, including our close genetic cousins the Neanderthals, ever had language, and so-called sign 'language' in Great Apes is nothing like human language. Language evolution shares many features with biological evolution, and this has made it useful for tracing recent human history and for studying how culture evolves among groups of people with related languages. A case can be made that language has played a more important role in our species' recent (circa last 200,000 years) evolution than have our genes
Importance of incomplete lineage sorting and introgression in the origin of shared genetic variation between two closely related pines with overlapping distributions
Genetic variation shared between closely related species may be due to retention of ancestral polymorphisms because of incomplete lineage sorting (ILS) and/or introgression following secondary contact. It is challenging to distinguish ILS and introgression because they generate similar patterns of shared genetic diversity, but this is nonetheless essential for inferring accurately the history of species with overlapping distributions. To address this issue, we sequenced 33 independent intron loci across the genome of two closely related pine species (Pinus massoniana Lamb. and Pinus hwangshanensis Hisa) from Southeast China. Population structure analyses revealed that the species showed slightly more admixture in parapatric populations than in allopatric populations. Levels of interspecific differentiation were lower in parapatry than in allopatry. Approximate Bayesian computation suggested that the most likely speciation scenario explaining this pattern was a long period of isolation followed by a secondary contact. Ecological niche modeling suggested that a gradual range expansion of P. hwangshanensis during the Pleistocene climatic oscillations could have been the cause of the overlap. Our study therefore suggests that secondary introgression, rather than ILS, explains most of the shared nuclear genomic variation between these two species and demonstrates the complementarity of population genetics and ecological niche modeling in understanding gene flow history. Finally, we discuss the importance of contrasting results from markers with different dynamics of migration, namely nuclear, chloroplast and mitochondrial DNA
Sequencing and de novo assembly of 150 genomes from Denmark as a population reference
Hundreds of thousands of human genomes are now being sequenced to characterize genetic variation and use this information to augment association mapping studies of complex disorders and other phenotypic traits. Genetic variation is identified mainly by mapping short reads to the reference genome or by performing local assembly. However, these approaches are biased against discovery of structural variants and variation in the more complex parts of the genome. Hence, large-scale de novo assembly is needed. Here we show that it is possible to construct excellent de novo assemblies from high-coverage sequencing with mate-pair libraries extending up to 20 kilobases. We report de novo assemblies of 150 individuals (50 trios) from the GenomeDenmark project. The quality of these assemblies is similar to those obtained using the more expensive long-read technology. We use the assemblies to identify a rich set of structural variants including many novel insertions and demonstrate how this variant catalogue enables further deciphering of known association mapping signals. We leverage the assemblies to provide 100 completely resolved major histocompatibility complex haplotypes and to resolve major parts of the Y chromosome. Our study provides a regional reference genome that we expect will improve the power of future association mapping studies and hence pave the way for precision medicine initiatives, which now are being launched in many countries including Denmark
Interpreting short tandem repeat variations in humans using mutational constraint
Identifying regions of the genome that are depleted of mutations can reveal potentially deleterious variants. Short tandem repeats (STRs), also known as microsatellites, are among the largest contributors of de novo mutations in humans. However, per-locus studies of STR mutations have been limited to highly ascertained panels of several dozen loci. Here, we harnessed bioinformatics tools and a novel analytical framework to estimate mutation parameters for each STR in the human genome by correlating STR genotypes with local sequence heterozygosity. We applied our method to obtain robust estimates of the impact of local sequence features on mutation parameters and used this to create a framework for measuring constraint at STRs by comparing observed vs. expected mutation rates. Constraint scores identified known pathogenic variants with early onset effects. Our metric will provide a valuable tool for prioritizing pathogenic STRs in medical genetics studies
The Parkinson’s Disease Mendelian Randomization Research Portal
Mendelian randomization is
a method for exploring observational associations to find
evidence of causality. To apply Mendelian randomization between
risk factors/phenotypic traits (exposures) and PD in a
large, unbiased manner, and to create a public resource
for research. We observed evidence for causal associations
between 12 exposures and risk of PD. Of these, nine
were effects related to increasing adiposity and
decreasing risk of PD. The remaining top three exposures
that affected PD risk were tea drinking, time spent
watching television, and forced vital capacity, but these
may have been biased and were less convincing. Other
exposures at nominal statistical significance included
inverse effects of smoking and alcohol. We present a new platform which offers
Mendelian randomization analyses for a total of 5,839
genome-wide association studies versus the largest
PD genome-wide association studies available
(https://pdgenetics.shinyapps.io/MRportal/). Alongside,
we report further evidence to support a causal
role for adiposity on lowering the risk of PD. © 2019
The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley
Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Parkinson
and Movement Disorder Society.AJN reports grants from Parkinson’s UK, Barts Charity, Leonard Wolfson Experimental Neurology Centre, UCL
Movement Disorders Centre and the Virginia Kieley Benefaction; honoraria or consultancy fees from Britannia,
Global Kinetics Corporation, Profile Pharmaceuticals, Guide point, Biogen and Roche. KH and DAH are employees
of 23andMe and hold stock or stock options in 23andMe. DAL reports grants from the Medical Research Council,
numerous charitable funders,Medtronic and Roche. ZG-O reports consultancy fees from Inceptions Sciences,Idorsia,
Denali, Lysosomal Therapeutics inc. HM reports reports consultancy from Biogen, UCB, Abbvie, Denali, Biohaven;
lecture fees/honoraria from Biogen, UCB,C4X Discovery, GE-Healthcare, Welcome Trust, Movement Disorders Society;
Research Grants from Parkinson’s UK, Cure Parkinson’s Trust, PSP Association, CBD Solutions, Drake Foundation,
Medical Research Council. Dr Morris is a co-applicanton a patent application related to C9ORF72
(PCT/GB2012/052140)
Detection of phylogenetically informative polymorphisms in the entire euchromatic portion of human Y chromosome from a Sardinian sample
Multi-ancestry genome-wide association meta-analysis of Parkinson’s disease
\ua9 2023, This is a U.S. Government work and not under copyright protection in the US; foreign copyright protection may apply. Although over 90 independent risk variants have been identified for Parkinson’s disease using genome-wide association studies, most studies have been performed in just one population at a time. Here we performed a large-scale multi-ancestry meta-analysis of Parkinson’s disease with 49,049 cases, 18,785 proxy cases and 2,458,063 controls including individuals of European, East Asian, Latin American and African ancestry. In a meta-analysis, we identified 78 independent genome-wide significant loci, including 12 potentially novel loci (MTF2, PIK3CA, ADD1, SYBU, IRS2, USP8, PIGL, FASN, MYLK2, USP25, EP300 and PPP6R2) and fine-mapped 6 putative causal variants at 6 known PD loci. By combining our results with publicly available eQTL data, we identified 25 putative risk genes in these novel loci whose expression is associated with PD risk. This work lays the groundwork for future efforts aimed at identifying PD loci in non-European populations
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