What we’re reading: Hyperlocal gene flow, SCOTUS decision on gene patents, and the mother of all microsatellite datasets

Reading at Mont des Arts

In the journals

Pemberton, T.J., Degiorgio, M. & Rosenberg, N. a. 2013. Population structure in a comprehensive genomic data set on human microsatellite variation. G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics 3: 891–907. doi: 10.1534/g3.113.005728.

Here, we combine eight human population-genetic data sets at the 645 microsatellite loci they share in common, accounting for procedural differences in the production of the different data sets, to assemble a single data set containing 5,795 individuals from 267 worldwide populations.

(Hat tip to Razib Khan, who calls this “the mother of all microsatellite papers.”)

Henss, J.M., Moeller, J.R., Theim, T.J. & Givnish, T.J. 2013. Spatial scales of genetic structure and gene flow in Calochortus albus (Liliaceae). Ecology and Evolution 3: 1461–1470. doi: 10.1002/ece3.566.

Our data on SGS imply that the root-mean-square distance of gene dispersal σ is between 5 and 43 m, and that neighborhood size is between 52 and 194 individuals. Limited gene flow provides a potential explanation for local differentiation seen within species of Calochortus (e.g., in C. albus from the northern Sierras vs. south Coast Ranges [Ownbey 1940]), the high level of local endemism seen across species, the geographic coherence of individual clades of Calochortus, and the parallel adaptive radiations the genus has undergone for several traits in different areas.

Stachowicz, J.J., Kamel, S.J., Hughes, a R. & Grosberg, R.K. 2013. Genetic relatedness influences plant biomass accumulation in eelgrass (Zostera marina). The American Naturalist 181: 715–24. doi: 10.1086/669969.

… contrary to the pattern observed in multispecies assemblages, maximum biomass occurred in assemblages of more closely related individuals.

In the news

The U.S. Supreme Court rules (as most folks seem to be interpreting it) that naturally occurring DNA sequences may not be patented. But the text of the decision [PDF] is drawing complaints from people who know actual biology, and one justice admitted in his concurrence that he doesn’t understand the science.

On the danger of false positives in high-throughput sequencing results.

Thinking about tenure as a safety net.

A good idea for a new blog: Nice R Code. (Get it?)

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What we’re reading: Caribbean admixture and the genetics of fruit fly pigmentation

Bookshelf

In the journals

Moreno-Estrada, A., Gravel, S., Zakharia, F., Mccauley, J.L., Jake, K., Gignoux, C.R., et al. n.d. Reconstructing the population genetic history of the Caribbean. arXive: 1306.0558.

Based on demographic models, we reconstruct the complex population history of the Caribbean since the onset of continental admixture. We find that insular populations are best modeled as mixtures absorbing two pulses of African migrants, coinciding with early and maximum activity stages of the transatlantic slave trade.

Bastide, H., Betancourt, A., Nolte, V., Tobler, R., Stöbe, P., Futschik, A., et al. 2013. A genome-wide, fine-scale map of natural pigmentation variation in Drosophila melanogaster. PLoS Genetics 9: e1003534. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1003534.

We conducted the first genome-wide scan for polymorphism associated with pigmentation variation in a large natural sample of D. melanogaster, and found SNPs near two genes, tan and bric-a`-brac 1, affecting the trait. The SNPs associated with pigmentation variation in these genes appear to act by affecting the regulation of the pigmenta- tion genes, rather than their protein coding sequence.
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What we’re reading: The origins of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, GWAS of “educational attainment”, and the trouble with impact metrics

Bookshelf

In the journals

Hardy, G.H. 1908. Mendelian proportions in a mixed population. Science 28: 49. doi: 10.1126/science.28.706.49.

Suppose that Aa is a pair of Mendelian characters, A being dominant, and that in any given generation the numbers of pure dominants (AA), heterozygotes (Aa), and pure recessives (aa) are as p:2q:r. … A little mathematics of the multiplication-table type is enough to show that in the next generation the numbers will be as (p + q)2 : 2(p + q)(q + r) : (q + r)2, or as p1:2q1:r1, say. The interesting question is – in what circumstances will this distribution be the same as that in the generation before?

Rietveld, C.A., Medland, S.E., Derringer, J., Yang, J., Esko, T., Martin, N.W., et al. 2013. GWAS of 126,559 individuals identifies genetic variants associated with educational attainment. Science, doi: 10.1126/science.1235488.

Estimated effects sizes are small (R2 ≈ 0.02%), approximately 1 month of schooling per allele. A linear polygenic score from all measured SNPs accounts for ≈ 2% of the variance in both educational attainment and cognitive function.

Johnston, M. 2009. We have met the enemy, and it is us. Genetics 1–2. doi: 10.1534/genetics.113.153486.

Those of us sitting on hiring and promotion and grant review committees must evaluate our colleagues’ work for its content rather than its cloak. We must judge it ourselves, and not cede our responsibility by automatically being impressed by the selectivity an article has realized. We—practicing scientists—must reclaim responsibility for setting the standards of our fields.
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Relentless Evolution: The vital relevance of the visible

Medium Ground-Finch (Geospiza fortis)

A medium ground-finch (Geospiza fortis), one of the flagship examples of “relentless evolution.”

One of Stephen Jay Gould’s sharpest conceptual coinages was a barb leveled, from his paleontological perspective, at the body of research focused on bouts of adaptive evolution occurring over “ecological” timespans on the order of a few generations. Reviewing such cases as replicated evolutionary experiments with E. coli, and the evolution of limb length in Anolis lizards relocated to tiny, lizard-free islands, Gould acknowledged that such cases are important for determining the scope and frequency of change driven by natural selection. But he objected strongly to the idea that such rapid changes were the “atoms” from which million-year evolutionary trends are built:

… if a case of evolution proceeds with sufficient speed to be discerned by our instruments in just a few years—that is, if the change becomes substantial enough to stand out as a genuine and directional effect above the random fluctuations of nature’s stable variation and our inevitable errors of measurement—then we have witnessed something far too substantial to serve as an atom of steady incrementation in a paleontological trend.

Gould’s “paradox of the visibly irrelevent” holds that, if we are to understand the river of evolutionary history, we must look below the spume and spray of year-to-year adaptative change to find the deeper currents that can, over time, carve canyons. In his new book Relentless Evolution (University of Chicago Press, $35.00 in paperback), John N. Thompson makes the opposing argument with gusto: To Thompson, studying the roiling eddies that Gould dimissed as transient and superficial is the only way to understand the deeper currents, and the river’s course ahead of us.

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What we’re reading: The trouble with novelty and the Norway spruce genome

Bookshelf

In the journals

Arnqvist, G. 2013. Editorial rejects? Novelty, schnovelty! Trends in Ecology & Evolution 5: 2012–2013. doi: 10.1016/j.tree.2013.05.007.

Firstly, because an assessment of novelty critically depends upon a reader’s knowledge and perspective, the degree of novelty is arguably more demanding than many other criteria that can be used in editorial assessments. Because single associate editors cannot be experts in every subdomain, which is required for an informed and fair assessment of novelty, this increases the rate of poorly informed and mistaken editorial decisions.

Nystedt, B., Street, N.R., Wetterbom, A., Zuccolo, A., Lin, Y.-C., Scofield, D.G., et al. 2013. The Norway spruce genome sequence and conifer genome evolution. Nature, doi: 10.1038/nature12211.

Here we present the draft assembly of the 20-gigabase genome of Norway spruce (Picea abies), the first available for any gymnosperm. The number of well-supported genes (28,354) is similar to the .100 times smaller genome of Arabidopsis thaliana, and there is no evidence of a recent whole-genome duplication in the gymnosperm lineage. Instead, the large genome size seems to result from the slow and steady accumulation of a diverse set of long-terminal repeat transposable elements, possibly owing to the lack of an efficient elimination mechanism.
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Increasing productivity in an increasingly productive world

Is it worth the time?

One of the things I have been thinking about lately is how to further increase my own productivity.  Regardless of your career goals, increasing your productivity is only going to help you accomplish more (by definition) and increase your esteem as a professional.  Productivity is an interesting concept to me because it is, to a large extent, quantifiable.  How many papers did you publish this year?  How much funding did you bring in?  What kinds of committees did you serve on and what did you accomplish exactly?  All of these variables represent some measure of a person’s productivity.  Naturally, a lot of effort is spent on determining what the best measures of an individual’s productivity are – and this is a very healthy and necessary practice.  For academics and researchers, these measures usually boil down to the quality and quantity of published papers (not always in that order).

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What we’re reading: Grouper spawning, pollinator-mediated isolation, and ambivalent advice about grad school

Librarian

In the journals

Almany, G.R., Hamilton, R.J., Bode, M., Matawai, M., Potuku, T., Saenz-Agudelo, P., et al. 2013. Dispersal of grouper larvae drives local resource sharing in a coral reef fishery. Current Biology 23: 626–630. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2013.03.006.

Using genetic parentage analysis, we measured larval dispersal from a single, managed spawning aggregation of squaretail coral grouper (Plectropomus areolatus) and determined its contribution to fisheries replenishment within five community tenure areas up to 33 km from the aggregation at Manus Island, Papua New Guinea.

Moe, A.M. & Weiblen, G.D. 2012. Pollinator-mediated reproductive isolation among dioecious fig species (Ficus, Moraceae). Evolution 66: 3710–21. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2012.01727.x.

Selection on pollinators maintaining host specificity appears to be an important mechanism of contemporary reproductive isolation among these taxa that could potentially influence their diversification.

In the news

On the mounting costs of the U.S. “sequester” for science funding.

NSF pushes back on Congressional prying into peer review.

“I’m very glad that I went to graduate school—my life would be different, and definitely worse, without it. But when I’m asked to give students advice about what they should do, I’m stumped.”

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CSEE Kelowna

For those of you who find yourselves in Kelowna, British Columbia this week, you are hopefully enjoying yourself at the annual Canadian Society for Ecology and Evolution (CSEE) meeting!

CSEE 2013

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What we’re reading: Evolutionary context for disease markers and why everyone has at least one famous ancestor

Library

In the journals

Dudley, J.T., Chen, R., Sanderford, M., Butte, A.J. & Kumar, S. 2012. Evolutionary meta-analysis of association studies reveals ancient constraints affecting disease marker discovery. Molecular Biology and Evolution 29: 2087–94. doi: 10.1093/molbev/mss079.

We find that the current approaches show a propensity for discovering disease-associated SNPs (dSNPs) at conserved genomic positions because the effect size (odds ratio) and allelic P value of genetic association of an SNP relates strongly to the evolutionary conservation of their genomic position.

Ralph, P. & Coop, G. 2013. The geography of recent genetic ancestry across Europe. PLoS Biology 11: e1001555. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1001555.

 We find that a pair of modern Europeans living in neighboring populations share around 2–12 genetic common ancestors from the last 1,500 years, and upwards of 100 genetic ancestors from the previous 1,000 years.

See also: the authors’ FAQ on the article and very nice discussion by Carl Zimmer.

In the news

More (not particularly optimistic) thoughts on political interference with peer review.

What do you do to help make your lab a nice place to work?

Jeremy’s launching a new side project: surveying LGBTQ folks working in science. If that describes you or any of your friends or colleagues, take the survey and pass along the link!

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What we’re reading: GWA with low coverage and rare variants, cardenolide resistance, and felony experimentation

Bookshelf

As we head into the weekend, here’s a few things we’ve noticed that are worth your screen-time.

In the journals

Navon, O., Sul, J.H., Han, B., Conde, L., Bracci, P., Riby, J., et al. 2013. Rare variant association testing under low-coverage sequencing. Genetics, doi: 10.1534/genetics.113.150169.

In this paper, we propose two novel methods for detecting association of rare SNPs with disease risk, using low coverage, error-prone sequencing. We show by simulation that our methods outperform previous methods under both low and high coverage sequencing, and under different disease architectures.

Petschenka, G., Fandrich, S., Sander, N., Wagschal, V., Boppré, M. & Dobler, S. n.d. Stepwise evolution of resistance to toxic cardenolides via genetic substitutions in the Na+/K+-ATPase of milkweed butterflies (Lepidoptera: Danaini). Evolution, doi: 10.1111/evo.12152.

Despite the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) being famous for its adaptations to the defensive traits of its milkweed host plants, little is known about the macroevolution of these traits.

In the news

Infuriating: Sixteen-year-old conducts a DIY chemistry experiment that probably all of us have seen done, ends up charged with a felony.

Still more on the increasingly worrying politics around U.S. government funding for science by Phil Plait.

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