Nonequilibrium neutral theory for hitchhikers

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Abstract

Selective sweep is a phenomenon of reduced variation at presumably neutrally evolving sites (hitchhikers) in the genome that is caused by the spread of a selected allele at a linked focal site, and is widely used to test for action of positive selection. Nonetheless, selective sweep may also provide an unprecedented opportunity for studying nonequilibrium properties of the neutral variation itself. We have demonstrated this possibility in relation to ancient selective sweep for modern human-specific changes and ongoing selective sweep for local population-specific changes.

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Satta, Y., Fujito, N. T., & Takahata, N. (2018). Nonequilibrium neutral theory for hitchhikers. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 35(6), 1362–1365. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msy093

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