Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats

Natural selection acts on variation that occurs by spontaneous mutation, and the fate of mutations depends on their selective value and drift. Moreover, mutations are distributed within and amongst populations due to demographic events, and often reflect historical biogeography and migration. The ev...

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Main Author: Biswas, Sreyasi
Other Authors: Kohn, Michael H
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1911/105864
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spelling ftriceuniv:oai:scholarship.rice.edu:1911/105864 2023-05-15T18:05:38+02:00 Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats Biswas, Sreyasi Kohn, Michael H 2018-08 application/pdf application/zip https://hdl.handle.net/1911/105864 eng eng Biswas, Sreyasi. "Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats." (2018) Diss., Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/105864 . https://hdl.handle.net/1911/105864 polygenic adaptive trait standing variants vitamin K cycle Norway rat Thesis Text Dataset 2018 ftriceuniv 2022-08-09T20:29:31Z Natural selection acts on variation that occurs by spontaneous mutation, and the fate of mutations depends on their selective value and drift. Moreover, mutations are distributed within and amongst populations due to demographic events, and often reflect historical biogeography and migration. The evolution of traits by natural selection in local populations depends on the rate of mutational input and draws upon standing variation. Quantifying the relative importance of both is of interest especially in complex traits encoded by interacting genes where major adaptive mutations may require allelic reconfiguration at interacting loci. Here I address the role of complex demographics and standing variations in assembly of a polygenic adaptive trait – warfarin resistance in natural populations of Norway rat (Rattus norvegicus). Warfarin is used both as a rodenticide and a prescribed blood thinning medicine in humans. It works by inhibiting the vitamin K cycle, specifically blocking Vkorc1 (vitamin K epoxide reductase complex subunit 1). Warfarin resistance mainly encoded by Y139C mutation in the Vkorc1 evolved quickly in wild Norway rats. In humans, warfarin has a narrow therapeutic window and depends upon variation in at least 2 additional genes suggesting a complex genetic architecture. In this dissertation, I show that association study and population genetics of any variant in the study area would need to consider the population structure at local and regional scales. A major contribution of this dissertation is a fully sequenced, mapped and annotated genome sequence of out-group species, the roof-rat (Rattus rattus) which enables the polarization of variants in the Norway rat as either ancestral or derived. This work also showed that the causative variation in Vkorc1 is a new mutation and such instances of new mutations are rare in the genome of Norway rats. Interestingly, I found that the majority of other genes participating in Vitamin K cycle carry common standing variants whose local occurrences may have been ... Thesis Rattus rattus Rice University: Digital Scholarship Archive Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Rice University: Digital Scholarship Archive
op_collection_id ftriceuniv
language English
topic polygenic adaptive trait
standing variants
vitamin K cycle
Norway rat
spellingShingle polygenic adaptive trait
standing variants
vitamin K cycle
Norway rat
Biswas, Sreyasi
Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats
topic_facet polygenic adaptive trait
standing variants
vitamin K cycle
Norway rat
description Natural selection acts on variation that occurs by spontaneous mutation, and the fate of mutations depends on their selective value and drift. Moreover, mutations are distributed within and amongst populations due to demographic events, and often reflect historical biogeography and migration. The evolution of traits by natural selection in local populations depends on the rate of mutational input and draws upon standing variation. Quantifying the relative importance of both is of interest especially in complex traits encoded by interacting genes where major adaptive mutations may require allelic reconfiguration at interacting loci. Here I address the role of complex demographics and standing variations in assembly of a polygenic adaptive trait – warfarin resistance in natural populations of Norway rat (Rattus norvegicus). Warfarin is used both as a rodenticide and a prescribed blood thinning medicine in humans. It works by inhibiting the vitamin K cycle, specifically blocking Vkorc1 (vitamin K epoxide reductase complex subunit 1). Warfarin resistance mainly encoded by Y139C mutation in the Vkorc1 evolved quickly in wild Norway rats. In humans, warfarin has a narrow therapeutic window and depends upon variation in at least 2 additional genes suggesting a complex genetic architecture. In this dissertation, I show that association study and population genetics of any variant in the study area would need to consider the population structure at local and regional scales. A major contribution of this dissertation is a fully sequenced, mapped and annotated genome sequence of out-group species, the roof-rat (Rattus rattus) which enables the polarization of variants in the Norway rat as either ancestral or derived. This work also showed that the causative variation in Vkorc1 is a new mutation and such instances of new mutations are rare in the genome of Norway rats. Interestingly, I found that the majority of other genes participating in Vitamin K cycle carry common standing variants whose local occurrences may have been ...
author2 Kohn, Michael H
format Thesis
author Biswas, Sreyasi
author_facet Biswas, Sreyasi
author_sort Biswas, Sreyasi
title Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats
title_short Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats
title_full Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats
title_fullStr Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats
title_sort exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant norway rats
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/1911/105864
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_relation Biswas, Sreyasi. "Exploring the distribution of genetic variants:neutral, ancestral and derived variants in natural populations of warfarin resistant Norway rats." (2018) Diss., Rice University. https://hdl.handle.net/1911/105864 .
https://hdl.handle.net/1911/105864
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