A sequential coalescent algorithm for chromosomal inversions

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Abstract

Chromosomal inversions are common in natural populations and are believed to be involved in many important evolutionary phenomena, including speciation, the evolution of sex chromosomes and local adaptation. While recent advances in sequencing and genotyping methods are leading to rapidly increasing amounts of genome-wide sequence data that reveal interesting patterns of genetic variation within inverted regions, efficient simulation methods to study these patterns are largely missing. In this work, we extend the sequential Markovian coalescent, an approximation to the coalescent with recombination, to include the effects of polymorphic inversions on patterns of recombination. Results show that our algorithm is fast, memory-efficient and accurate, making it feasible to simulate large inversions in large populations for the first time. The SMC algorithm enables studies of patterns of genetic variation (for example, linkage disequilibria) and tests of hypotheses (using simulation-based approaches) that were previously intractable. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited All rights reserved.

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Peischl, S., Koch, E., Guerrero, R. F., & Kirkpatrick, M. (2013). A sequential coalescent algorithm for chromosomal inversions. Heredity, 111(3), 200–209. https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.2013.38

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