Incorporating experimental design and error into coalescent/mutation models of population history

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Abstract

Coalescent theory provides a powerful framework for estimating the evolutionary, demographic, and genetic parameters of a population from a small sample of individuals. Current coalescent models have largely focused on population genetic factors (e.g., mutation, population growth, and migration) rather than on the effects of experimental design and error. This study develops a new coalescent/mutation model that accounts for unobserved polymorphisms due to missing data, sequence errors, and multiple reads for diploid individuals. The importance of accommodating these effects of experimental design and error is illustrated with evolutionary simulations and a real data set from a population of the California sea hare. In particular, a failure to account for sequence errors can lead to overestimated mutation rates, inflated coalescent times, and inappropriate conclusions about the population. This current model can now serve as a starting point for the development of newer models with additional experimental and population genetic factors. It is currently implemented as a maximum-likelihood method, but this model may also serve as the basis for the development of Bayesian approaches that incorporate experimental design and error. Copyright © 2007 by the Genetics Society of America.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Knudsen, B., & Miyamoto, M. M. (2007). Incorporating experimental design and error into coalescent/mutation models of population history. Genetics, 176(4), 2335–2342. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.106.063560

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