Code and resulting candidate gene datasets from Anopheles genome environment association testing

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Dataset:6685091



DOI10.5281/zenodo.5076248Zenodo5076248MaRDI QIDQ6685091FDOQ6685091

Dataset published at Zenodo repository.

Devon Deraad

Publication date: 6 July 2021



The concept of a fundamental ecological niche is central to questions of geographic distribution, population demography, species conservation, and evolutionary potential. But robust inference of genomic regions associated with evolutionary adaptation to particular environmental conditions remains difficult due to the myriad of potential confounding processes that can generate heterogeneous patterns of variation across the genome.  Here, we interrogate the potential role of genome environment association (GEA) testing as an initial step in building an understanding of the genetic basis of ecological niche. We leverage publicly available genomic data from the Anopheles gambiae 1000 Genomes (Ag1000g) Consortium to test the ability of multiple, unique analytical GEA methods to handle confounding genetic variation, control false positive rates, and discern associations with broadly relevant climate variables from randomly correlated allele frequency patterns throughout the genome. We find evidence supporting the ability of commonly implemented GEA methods to account for confounding patterns of spatial and genetic variation, and control false positive rates. But we subsequently fail to find evidence supporting the ability of GEA tests to reject signals of adaptation to randomly simulated environmental variables, indicating that discerning between true signals of genome environment adaptation and genome environment correlations resulting from alternative evolutionary processes remains challenging. Because signals of environmental adaptation are so diffuse and confounded throughout the genome, we argue that genomic adaptation to ecological niche is likely best understood under an omnigenic model wherein highly interconnected, genome-wide gene regulatory networks shape genomic adaptation to key environmental conditions.







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