Foreshadowing haplotype-based methods of the genomics era, it is an old observation that the "junction" between two distinct haplotypes produced by recombination is inherited as a Mendelian marker. In a genealogical context, this recombination-mediated information reflects the persistence of ancestral haplotypes across local genealogical trees in which they do not represent coalescences. We show how these non-coalescing haplotypes ("locally-unary nodes") may be inserted into ancestral recombination graphs (ARGs), a compact but information-rich data structure describing the genealogical relationships among recombinant sequences. The resulting ARGs are smaller, faster to compute with, and the additional ancestral information that is inserted is nearly always correct where the initial ARG is correct. We provide efficient algorithms to infer locally-unary nodes within existing ARGs, and explore some consequences for ARGs inferred from real data. To do this, we introduce new metrics of agreement and disagreement between ARGs that, unlike previous methods, consider ARGs as describing relationships between haplotypes rather than just a collection of trees.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11888177PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.11.30.626138DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

ancestral recombination
8
recombination graphs
8
args
6
haplotypes
5
forest trees
4
trees haplotypes
4
ancestral
4
haplotypes ancestral
4
graphs foreshadowing
4
foreshadowing haplotype-based
4

Similar Publications

Foreshadowing haplotype-based methods of the genomics era, it is an old observation that the "junction" between two distinct haplotypes produced by recombination is inherited as a Mendelian marker. In a genealogical context, this recombination-mediated information reflects the persistence of ancestral haplotypes across local genealogical trees in which they do not represent coalescences. We show how these non-coalescing haplotypes ("locally-unary nodes") may be inserted into ancestral recombination graphs (ARGs), a compact but information-rich data structure describing the genealogical relationships among recombinant sequences.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ancestral recombination graphs (ARGs) are the focus of much ongoing research interest. Recent progress in inference has made ARG-based approaches feasible across of range of applications, and many new methods using inferred ARGs as input have appeared. This progress on the long-standing problem of ARG inference has proceeded in two distinct directions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Variant calling is hindered in segmental duplications by sequence homology. We developed Paraphase, a HiFi-based informatics method that resolves highly similar genes by phasing all haplotypes of paralogous genes together. We applied Paraphase to 160 long (>10 kb) segmental duplication regions across the human genome with high (>99%) sequence similarity, encoding 316 genes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The continued diversification of SARS-CoV-2 omicron lineage has given rise to the JN.1 variant and descendant strains (KP.2, KP.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Long-distance gene flow and recombination shape the evolutionary history of a maize pathogen.

IMA Fungus

February 2025

Department of Microbiology and Genetics, Institute for Agribiotechnology Research (CIALE), University of Salamanca, Villamayor, Salamanca, Spain.

The evolutionary history of crop pathogens is shaped by a complex interaction of natural and anthropogenic factors. The fungus causes maize anthracnose which results in significant yield losses worldwide. We conducted a comprehensive investigation into the evolutionary genomics of using a collection of 212 isolates from 17 countries across five continents.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!