Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact

This thesis covers work on three basic concepts in population genetics: relatedness, admixture, and linkage disequilibrium, and contains both new statistical methods as well as application of recently published methods to better understand the recent human past in Greenland. The first manuscript inc...

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Main Author: Waples, Ryan
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/relatedness-admixture-and-the-genetic-history-of-greenlandeuropean-contact(af93ee6c-c934-4da1-b3c3-c4352600ade6).html
https://soeg.kb.dk/permalink/45KBDK_KGL/1pioq0f/alma99122448383605763
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spelling ftcopenhagenunip:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/af93ee6c-c934-4da1-b3c3-c4352600ade6 2023-05-15T16:26:33+02:00 Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact Waples, Ryan 2019 https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/relatedness-admixture-and-the-genetic-history-of-greenlandeuropean-contact(af93ee6c-c934-4da1-b3c3-c4352600ade6).html https://soeg.kb.dk/permalink/45KBDK_KGL/1pioq0f/alma99122448383605763 eng eng Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Waples , R 2019 , Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact . Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen . < https://soeg.kb.dk/permalink/45KBDK_KGL/1pioq0f/alma99122448383605763 > book 2019 ftcopenhagenunip 2021-09-23T18:22:29Z This thesis covers work on three basic concepts in population genetics: relatedness, admixture, and linkage disequilibrium, and contains both new statistical methods as well as application of recently published methods to better understand the recent human past in Greenland. The first manuscript included in this thesis addresses a gap in the availability of methods to infer relatedness with limited data. Relatedness matters for all aspects of population genetics, but most methods to infer relatedness rely on the availability of population allele frequencies and accurate genotype data. We present a method that can infer close familial relationships without relying on estimates of population allele frequencies, and directly from low-depth (4x) sequencing data without genotype calling. It requires genetic data from only two individuals and has the potential to expand the number of studies able to infer relatedness despite limited data. In the second manuscript we examine the history of contact between the Greenlandic Inuit and Europeans from a genetic perspective. The current population of Greenland has experienced substantial gene flow from Europe, but the European source countries of this ancestry was genetically unknown. There is a tight historical relationship between Greenland and Denmark, but there is also a history of Dano–Norwegian and German missionaries, Dutch whalers, as well as other European contact with Greenland. Using dense SNP array data from Greenlanders and Europeans we identify Denmark as the primary source of European ancestry in Greenland, and quantify the ancestry contribution from 14 different European countries. We discuss in detail how these results reflect the history of Greenland/ European contact.In the third and last manuscript we present a software tool for estimatin g linkage disequilibrium (LD) in admixed populations. The LD in a population is affected by many aspects of the population’s history, including effective population size and past admixture. LDadmix estimates the two-locus haplotype frequencies within the source ancestries of a recently admixed population. These two-locus haplotype frequencies reflect the LD within each ancestry source prior to the admixture event. Through simulations and application to real data, we show that LDadmix can recover LD patterns in different admixture scenarios and also infer an elevated LD decay curve for the ancestral American ancestry, a signal that was previously masked by recent African and European admixture. Together, these manuscripts highlight the continuing need for genetic methods that can be applied in the challenging and data-limited scenarios that will continue to be frequent in biology despite the recent expansion of available genetic data. They also highlight how new insights can be gained about different populations, like the Greenlandic, when such methods are developed and applied Book Greenland greenlander* greenlandic inuit University of Copenhagen: Research Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection University of Copenhagen: Research
op_collection_id ftcopenhagenunip
language English
description This thesis covers work on three basic concepts in population genetics: relatedness, admixture, and linkage disequilibrium, and contains both new statistical methods as well as application of recently published methods to better understand the recent human past in Greenland. The first manuscript included in this thesis addresses a gap in the availability of methods to infer relatedness with limited data. Relatedness matters for all aspects of population genetics, but most methods to infer relatedness rely on the availability of population allele frequencies and accurate genotype data. We present a method that can infer close familial relationships without relying on estimates of population allele frequencies, and directly from low-depth (4x) sequencing data without genotype calling. It requires genetic data from only two individuals and has the potential to expand the number of studies able to infer relatedness despite limited data. In the second manuscript we examine the history of contact between the Greenlandic Inuit and Europeans from a genetic perspective. The current population of Greenland has experienced substantial gene flow from Europe, but the European source countries of this ancestry was genetically unknown. There is a tight historical relationship between Greenland and Denmark, but there is also a history of Dano–Norwegian and German missionaries, Dutch whalers, as well as other European contact with Greenland. Using dense SNP array data from Greenlanders and Europeans we identify Denmark as the primary source of European ancestry in Greenland, and quantify the ancestry contribution from 14 different European countries. We discuss in detail how these results reflect the history of Greenland/ European contact.In the third and last manuscript we present a software tool for estimatin g linkage disequilibrium (LD) in admixed populations. The LD in a population is affected by many aspects of the population’s history, including effective population size and past admixture. LDadmix estimates the two-locus haplotype frequencies within the source ancestries of a recently admixed population. These two-locus haplotype frequencies reflect the LD within each ancestry source prior to the admixture event. Through simulations and application to real data, we show that LDadmix can recover LD patterns in different admixture scenarios and also infer an elevated LD decay curve for the ancestral American ancestry, a signal that was previously masked by recent African and European admixture. Together, these manuscripts highlight the continuing need for genetic methods that can be applied in the challenging and data-limited scenarios that will continue to be frequent in biology despite the recent expansion of available genetic data. They also highlight how new insights can be gained about different populations, like the Greenlandic, when such methods are developed and applied
format Book
author Waples, Ryan
spellingShingle Waples, Ryan
Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact
author_facet Waples, Ryan
author_sort Waples, Ryan
title Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact
title_short Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact
title_full Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact
title_fullStr Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact
title_full_unstemmed Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact
title_sort relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of greenland-european contact
publisher Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen
publishDate 2019
url https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/relatedness-admixture-and-the-genetic-history-of-greenlandeuropean-contact(af93ee6c-c934-4da1-b3c3-c4352600ade6).html
https://soeg.kb.dk/permalink/45KBDK_KGL/1pioq0f/alma99122448383605763
geographic Greenland
geographic_facet Greenland
genre Greenland
greenlander*
greenlandic
inuit
genre_facet Greenland
greenlander*
greenlandic
inuit
op_source Waples , R 2019 , Relatedness, admixture and the genetic history of Greenland-European contact . Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen . < https://soeg.kb.dk/permalink/45KBDK_KGL/1pioq0f/alma99122448383605763 >
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
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