Alu evolution in human populations: Using the coalescent to estimate effective population size

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Abstract

There are estimated to be ~1000 members of the Ya5 Alu subfamily of retroposons in humans. This subfamily has a distribution restricted to humans, with a few copies in gorillas and chimpanzees. Fifty-seven Ya5 elements were previously cloned from a HeLa-derived randomly sheared total genomic library, sequenced, and screened for polymorphism in a panel of 120 unrelated humans. Forty-four of the 57 cloned Alu repeats were monomorphic in the sample and 13 Alu repeats were dimorphic for insertion presence/absence. The observed distribution of sample frequencies of the 13 dimorphic elements is consistent with the theoretical expectation for elements ascertained in a single diploid cell line. Coalescence theory is used to compute expected total pedigree branch lengths for monomorphic and dimorphic elements, leading to an estimate of human effective population size of ~18,000 during the last one to two million years.

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Sherry, S. T., Harpending, H. C., Batzer, M. A., & Stoneking, M. (1997). Alu evolution in human populations: Using the coalescent to estimate effective population size. Genetics, 147(4), 1977–1982. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/147.4.1977

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