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Haplotype Sharing Provides Insights into Fine-Scale Population History and Disease in Finland

机译:单倍型共享提供对芬兰小规模人口史和疾病的见解

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摘要

Finland provides unique opportunities to investigate population and medical genomics because of its adoption of unified national electronic health records, detailed historical and birth records, and serial population bottlenecks. We assembled a comprehensive view of recent population history (≤100 generations), the timespan during which most rare-disease-causing alleles arose, by comparing pairwise haplotype sharing from 43,254 Finns to that of 16,060 Swedes, Estonians, Russians, and Hungarians from geographically and linguistically adjacent countries with different population histories. We find much more extensive sharing in Finns, with at least one ≥ 5 cM tract on average between pairs of unrelated individuals. By coupling haplotype sharing with fine-scale birth records from more than 25,000 individuals, we find that although haplotype sharing broadly decays with geographical distance, there are pockets of excess haplotype sharing; individuals from northeast Finland typically share several-fold more of their genome in identity-by-descent segments than individuals from southwest regions. We estimate recent effective population-size changes through time across regions of Finland, and we find that there was more continuous gene flow as Finns migrated from southwest to northeast between the early- and late-settlement regions than was dichotomously described previously. Lastly, we show that haplotype sharing is locally enriched by an order of magnitude among pairs of individuals sharing rare alleles and especially among pairs sharing rare disease-causing variants. Our work provides a general framework for using haplotype sharing to reconstruct an integrative view of recent population history and gain insight into the evolutionary origins of rare variants contributing to disease.
机译:芬兰由于采用了统一的国家电子健康记录,详细的历史和出生记录以及一系列人口瓶颈,因此为调查人口和医学基因组学提供了独特的机会。通过比较43254芬兰人的成对单倍型共享与来自地理上的16060瑞典人,爱沙尼亚人,俄罗斯人和匈牙利人的成对单倍型共享,我们汇总了最近的人口历史(≤100代)的最全面的观点以及具有不同人口历史的语言相邻国家/地区。我们发现芬兰人的分享更为广泛,成对的无亲属之间平均至少有一个≥5 cM的区域。通过将单倍型共享与来自超过25,000个个体的精细出生记录结合起来,我们发现,尽管单倍型共享随着地理距离的变化而广泛衰减,但仍有多余的单倍型共享的口袋;与西南地区的个体相比,芬兰东北部的个体在按血统身份识别的区段中通常共享其基因组的几倍。我们估计了芬兰各地区近期有效人口规模随时间的变化,并且我们发现,随着芬兰人在早沉降区和后沉降区之间从西南向东北迁移,基因流比以前的二分法更加连续。最后,我们显示在共享罕见等位基因的个体对中,尤其是在共享罕见致病变体的对中,单体型共享在局部富集了一个数量级。我们的工作为使用单倍型共享提供了一个总体框架,以重建最近种群历史的综合视图,并深入了解导致疾病的罕见变异的进化起源。

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