Population History Across Timescales in an Urban Archipelago.

IF 2.8 2区 生物学 Q2 EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY Genome Biology and Evolution Pub Date : 2025-04-03 DOI:10.1093/gbe/evaf048
Emma K Howell, Lauren E Nolfo-Clements, Bret A Payseur
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Abstract

Contemporary patterns of genetic variation reflect the cumulative history of a population. Population splitting, migration, and changes in population size leave genomic signals that enable their characterization. Existing methods aimed at reconstructing these features of demographic history are often restricted in their temporal resolution, leaving gaps about how basic evolutionary parameters change over time. To illustrate the prospects for extracting insights about dynamic population histories, we turn to a system that has undergone dramatic changes on both geological and contemporary timescales-an urbanized, near-shore archipelago. Using whole genome sequences, we employed both common and novel summaries of variation to infer the demographic history of three populations of endemic white-footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus) in Massachusetts' Boston Harbor. We find informative contrasts among the inferences drawn from these distinct patterns of diversity. While demographic models that fit the joint site frequency spectrum (jSFS) coincide with the known geological history of the Boston Harbor, patterns of linkage disequilibrium reveal collapses in population size on contemporary timescales that are not recovered by our jSFS-derived models. Historical migration between populations is also absent from best-fitting models for the jSFS, but rare variants show unusual clustering along the genome within individual mice, a novel pattern that is reproduced by simulations of recent migration. Together, our findings indicate that these urban archipelago populations have been shaped by both ancient geological processes and recent human influence. More broadly, our study demonstrates that the temporal resolution of demographic history can be extended by examining multiple facets of genomic variation.

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城市群岛的人口历史跨越时间尺度。
遗传变异的当代模式反映了一个种群的累积历史。种群分裂、迁移和种群规模的变化留下了基因组信号,使其能够表征。现有的旨在重建这些人口历史特征的方法往往受到时间分辨率的限制,在基本进化参数如何随时间变化方面留下了空白。为了说明提取动态人口历史的前景,我们转向一个在地质和当代时间尺度上都经历了巨大变化的系统——一个城市化的近岸群岛。利用全基因组序列,我们采用了常见的和新颖的变异摘要来推断马萨诸塞州波士顿港三种特有白足鼠(Peromyscus leucopus)的人口统计学历史。我们发现从这些不同的多样性模式中得出的推论之间存在翔实的对比。虽然符合联合地点频谱(jSFS)的人口模型与波士顿港已知的地质历史相吻合,但联系不平衡模式揭示了当代时间尺度上人口规模的崩溃,而我们的jSFS衍生模型无法恢复这一点。种群之间的历史迁移也不存在于jSFS的最佳拟合模型中,但罕见的变异在单个小鼠的基因组中显示出不寻常的聚类,这是一种新的模式,可以通过模拟最近的迁移来再现。总之,我们的研究结果表明,这些城市群岛人口是由古代地质过程和最近的人类影响形成的。更广泛地说,我们的研究表明,人口历史的时间分辨率可以通过检查基因组变异的多个方面来扩展。
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来源期刊
Genome Biology and Evolution
Genome Biology and Evolution EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY-GENETICS & HEREDITY
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
6.10%
发文量
169
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: About the journal Genome Biology and Evolution (GBE) publishes leading original research at the interface between evolutionary biology and genomics. Papers considered for publication report novel evolutionary findings that concern natural genome diversity, population genomics, the structure, function, organisation and expression of genomes, comparative genomics, proteomics, and environmental genomic interactions. Major evolutionary insights from the fields of computational biology, structural biology, developmental biology, and cell biology are also considered, as are theoretical advances in the field of genome evolution. GBE’s scope embraces genome-wide evolutionary investigations at all taxonomic levels and for all forms of life — within populations or across domains. Its aims are to further the understanding of genomes in their evolutionary context and further the understanding of evolution from a genome-wide perspective.
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