selection event
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2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (22) ◽  
pp. e2020803118
Author(s):  
Xinjun Zhang ◽  
Kelsey E. Witt ◽  
Mayra M. Bañuelos ◽  
Amy Ko ◽  
Kai Yuan ◽  
...  

Recent studies suggest that admixture with archaic hominins played an important role in facilitating biological adaptations to new environments. For example, interbreeding with Denisovans facilitated the adaptation to high-altitude environments on the Tibetan Plateau. Specifically, the EPAS1 gene, a transcription factor that regulates the response to hypoxia, exhibits strong signatures of both positive selection and introgression from Denisovans in Tibetan individuals. Interestingly, despite being geographically closer to the Denisova Cave, East Asian populations do not harbor as much Denisovan ancestry as populations from Melanesia. Recently, two studies have suggested two independent waves of Denisovan admixture into East Asians, one of which is shared with South Asians and Oceanians. Here, we leverage data from EPAS1 in 78 Tibetan individuals to interrogate which of these two introgression events introduced the EPAS1 beneficial sequence into the ancestral population of Tibetans, and we use the distribution of introgressed segment lengths at this locus to infer the timing of the introgression and selection event. We find that the introgression event unique to East Asians most likely introduced the beneficial haplotype into the ancestral population of Tibetans around 48,700 (16,000–59,500) y ago, and selection started around 9,000 (2,500–42,000) y ago. Our estimates suggest that one of the most convincing examples of adaptive introgression is in fact selection acting on standing archaic variation.



2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Uthicke ◽  
F. Patel ◽  
C. Petrik ◽  
S.‐A. Watson ◽  
S. Karelitz ◽  
...  


Biometrika ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haibing Zhao

Abstract Recently, post-selection inference on thousands of parameters has attracted considerable research interest. Specifically, Benjamini & Yekutieli (2005) considered constructing confidence intervals after selection. They proposed adjusting the confidence levels of marginal confidence intervals for the selected parameters to ensure control of the false coverage-statement rate. Although Benjamini-Yekutieli’s confidence intervals are widely used, they are uniformly inflated. In this article, two methods are proposed to narrow Benjamini-Yekutieli’s confidence intervals. The first method improves the confidence intervals by incorporating the selection event into the calculation. The second method further narrows confidence intervals in which some parameters are selected with very small probabilities, which results in underutilization of the target level for control of the false coverage-statement rate. A breast cancer dataset is analyzed to compare the methods.



2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinjun Zhang ◽  
Kelsey Witt ◽  
Amy Ko ◽  
Kai Yuan ◽  
Shuhua Xu ◽  
...  

AbstractRecent studies suggest that admixture with archaic hominins played an important role in facilitating biological adaptations to new environments. For example, interbreeding with Denisovans facilitated the adaptation to high altitude environments on the Tibetan Plateau. Specifically, the EPAS1 gene, a transcription factor that regulates the response to hypoxia, exhibits strong signatures of both positive selection and introgression from Denisovans in Tibetan individuals. Interestingly, despite being geographically closer to the Denisova cave, East Asian populations do not harbor as much Denisovan ancestry as populations from Melanesia. Recently, two studies have suggested two independent waves of Denisovan admixture into East Asians, one of which is shared with South Asians and Oceanians. Here we leverage data from EPAS1 in 78 Tibetan individuals to interrogate which of these two introgression events introduced the EPAS1 beneficial sequence into the ancestral population of Tibetans, and we use the distribution of introgressed segment lengths at this locus to infer the timing of the introgression and selection event. We find that the introgression event unique to East Asians most likely introduced the beneficial haplotype into the ancestral population of Tibetans around 43,000 (15,700–60,000) years ago, and selection started 12,000 (1,925-50,000) years ago. Our estimates suggest that one of the most convincing examples of adaptive introgression is in fact selection acting on standing archaic variation.



2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Secolin ◽  
Alex Mas-Sandoval ◽  
Lara R. Arauna ◽  
Fábio R. Torres ◽  
Tânia K. de Araujo ◽  
...  

Abstract Admixed American populations have different global proportions of European, Sub-Saharan African, and Native-American ancestry. However, individuals who display the same global ancestry could exhibit remarkable differences in the distribution of local ancestry blocks. We studied for the first time the distribution of local ancestry across the genome of 264 Brazilian admixed individuals, ascertained within the scope of the Brazilian Initiative on Precision Medicine. We found a decreased proportion of European ancestry together with an excess of Native-American ancestry on chromosome 8p23.1 and showed that this is due to haplotypes created by chromosomal inversion events. Furthermore, Brazilian non-inverted haplotypes were more similar to Native-American haplotypes than to European haplotypes, in contrast to what was found in other American admixed populations. We also identified signals of recent positive selection on chromosome 8p23.1, and one gene within this locus, PPP1R3B, is related to glycogenesis and has been associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes and obesity. These findings point to a selection event after admixture, which is still not entirely understood in recent admixture events.



2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelsey Elizabeth Johnson ◽  
Benjamin F. Voight

ABSTRACTScans for positive selection in human populations have identified hundreds of sites across the genome with evidence of recent adaptation. These signatures often overlap across populations, but the question of how often these overlaps represent a single ancestral event remains unresolved. If a single positive selection event spread across many populations, the same sweeping haplotype should appear in each population and the selective pressure could be common across diverse populations and environments. Identifying such shared selective events would be of fundamental interest, pointing to genomic loci and human traits important in recent history across the globe. Additionally, genomic annotations that recently became available could help attach these signatures to a potential gene and molecular phenotype that may have been selected across multiple populations. We performed a scan for positive selection using the integrated haplotype score on 20 populations, and compared sweeping haplotypes using the haplotype-clustering capability of fastPHASE to create a catalog of shared and unshared overlapping selective sweeps in these populations. Using additional genomic annotations, we connect these multi-population sweep overlaps with potential biological mechanisms at several loci, including potential new sites of adaptive introgression, the glycophorin locus associated with malarial resistance, and the alcohol dehydrogenase cluster associated with alcohol dependency.



2016 ◽  
Vol 60 (10) ◽  
pp. 5806-5816 ◽  
Author(s):  
James M. Regeimbal ◽  
Anna C. Jacobs ◽  
Brendan W. Corey ◽  
Matthew S. Henry ◽  
Mitchell G. Thompson ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTMultidrug-resistant bacterial pathogens are an increasing threat to public health, and lytic bacteriophages have reemerged as a potential therapeutic option. In this work, we isolated and assembled a five-member cocktail of wild phages againstAcinetobacter baumanniiand demonstrated therapeutic efficacy in a mouse full-thickness dorsal infected wound model. The cocktail lowers the bioburden in the wound, prevents the spread of infection and necrosis to surrounding tissue, and decreases infection-associated morbidity. Interestingly, this effective cocktail is composed of four phages that do not kill the parent strain of the infection and one phage that simply delays bacterial growthin vitrovia a strong but incomplete selection event. The cocktail here appears to function in a combinatorial manner, as one constituent phage targets capsulatedA. baumanniibacteria and selects for loss of receptor, shifting the population to an uncapsulated state that is then sensitized to the remaining four phages in the cocktail. Additionally, capsule is a known virulence factor forA. baumannii, and we demonstrated that the emergent uncapsulated bacteria are avirulent in aGalleria mellonellamodel. These results highlight the importance of anticipating population changes during phage therapy and designing intelligent cocktails to control emergent strains, as well as the benefits of using phages that target virulence factors. Because of the efficacy of this cocktail isolated from a limited environmental pool, we have established a pipeline for developing new phage therapeutics against additional clinically relevant multidrug-resistant pathogens by using environmental phages sourced from around the globe.



Oecologia ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 173 (4) ◽  
pp. 1321-1331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer L. Gosselin ◽  
James J. Anderson


2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 748-750 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tobias Pamminger ◽  
Andreas P. Modlmeier ◽  
Stefan Suette ◽  
Pleuni S. Pennings ◽  
Susanne Foitzik

Reciprocal selection pressures in host–parasite systems drive coevolutionary arms races that lead to advanced adaptations in both opponents. In the interactions between social parasites and their hosts, aggression is one of the major behavioural traits under selection. In a field manipulation, we aimed to disentangle the impact of slavemaking ants and nest density on aggression of Temnothorax longispinosus ants. An early slavemaker mating flight provided us with the unique opportunity to study the influence of host aggression and demography on founding decisions and success. We discovered that parasite queens avoided colony foundation in parasitized areas and were able to capture more brood from less aggressive host colonies. Host colony aggression remained consistent over the two-month experiment, but did not respond to our manipulation. However, as one-fifth of all host colonies were successfully invaded by parasite queens, slavemaker nest foundation acts as a strong selection event selecting for high aggression in host colonies.



2011 ◽  
Vol 201-203 ◽  
pp. 2049-2052
Author(s):  
Jie Yin ◽  
Qian Mu Li ◽  
Jun Hou

With the development of the Satellite-Networks, information globalization becomes the tendency of human development. But the Satellite-Networks have some characteristics, such as the diversity of coupling form, the asymmetry of terminal distributing and Satellite-Networks’ opening and so on. Leading the Satellite-Networks faced with faults emerged one after another, so orientating the fault node in time is very important to guarantee the integrality and usability of Satellite-Networks system. According to the layer-driven principles, a new type of trouble hunting system is presented. In it, event detection sequences are viewed as positive selection event database, and a trouble hunting matrix will be built up and analyzed. The experiment shows good trouble location ability.



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