Graphics for relatedness research


Por: Galvan-Femenia, I, Graffelman, J and Barcelo-i-Vidal, C

Publicada: 1 nov 2017
Resumen:
Studies of relatedness have been crucial in molecular ecology over the last decades. Good evidence of this is the fact that studies of population structure, evolution of social behaviours, genetic diversity and quantitative genetics all involve relatedness research. The main aim of this article was to review the most common graphical methods used in allele sharing studies for detecting and identifying family relationships. Both IBS- and IBD-based allele sharing studies are considered. Furthermore, we propose two additional graphical methods from the field of compositional data analysis: the ternary diagram and scatterplots of isometric log-ratios of IBS and IBD probabilities. We illustrate all graphical tools with genetic data from the HGDP-CEPH diversity panel, using mainly 377 microsatellites genotyped for 25 individuals from the Maya population of this panel. We enhance all graphics with convex hulls obtained by simulation and use these to confirm the documented relationships. The proposed compositional graphics are shown to be useful in relatedness research, as they also single out the most prominent related pairs. The ternary diagram is advocated for its ability to display all three allele sharing probabilities simultaneously. The log-ratio plots are advocated as an attempt to overcome the problems with the Euclidean distance interpretation in the classical graphics.

Filiaciones:
:
 Univ Girona, Dept Comp Sci Appl Math & Stat, Girona, Spain

 Germans Trias Hlth Res Inst IGTP, Dis Genom GCAT Grp, PMPPC, Can Ruti Campus, Barcelona, Spain

Graffelman, J:
 Univ Politecn Cataluna, Dept Stat & Operat Res, Barcelona, Spain

 Univ Washington, Dept Biostat, Seattle, WA 98195 USA

Barcelo-i-Vidal, C:
 Univ Girona, Dept Comp Sci Appl Math & Stat, Girona, Spain
ISSN: 17550998





Molecular Ecology Resources
Editorial
Blackwell Publishing Inc., 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA, Reino Unido
Tipo de documento: Article
Volumen: 17 Número: 6
Páginas: 1271-1282
WOS Id: 000415921900039
ID de PubMed: 28374569
imagen Green Published, Green Accepted, hybrid

MÉTRICAS