Archive for the ‘coalescent theory’ Category

Coalescent theory Wiki

by on Sunday, February 6th, 2011

In genetics, coalescent theory is a retrospective model of population genetics. It employs a sample of individuals from a population to trace all alleles of a geneshared by all members of the population to a single ancestral copy, known as the most recent common ancestor (MRCA; sometimes also termed the coancestor to emphasize the coalescent relationship[1]). The inheritance relationships between alleles are typically represented as a gene genealogy, similar in form to aphylogenetic tree. This gene genealogy is also known as the coalescent; understanding the statistical properties of the coalescent under different assumptions forms the basis of coalescent theory. The coalescent runs models of genetic drift backward in time to investigate the genealogy of antecedents.[2] In the most simple case, coalescent theory assumes no recombination, no natural selection, and no gene flow or population structure. Advances in coalescent theory, however, allow extension to the basic coalescent, and can include recombination, selection, and virtually any arbitrarily complex evolutionary or demographic model in population genetic analysis. The mathematical theory of the coalescent was originally developed in the early 1980s by John Kingman

Coalescent theory

by on Sunday, February 6th, 2011

oalescent theory provides the foundation for molecular population genetics and genomics. It is the conceptual framework for studies of DNA sequence variation within species, and is the source of essential tools for making inferences about mutation, recombination, population structure and natural selection from DNA sequence data.

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