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Model-based genotype and ancestry estimation for potential hybrids with mixed-ploidy
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  • Vivaswat Shastry ,
  • Paula Adams,
  • Dorothea Lindtke,
  • Elizabeth Mandeville,
  • Thomas Parchman,
  • Zach Gompert,
  • C. Alex Buerkle
Vivaswat Shastry
University of Wyoming

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Paula Adams
The University of Alabama System
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Dorothea Lindtke
University of Bern
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Elizabeth Mandeville
University of Guelph
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Thomas Parchman
University of Nevada Reno
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Zach Gompert
Utah State University
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C. Alex Buerkle
University of Wyoming
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Abstract

Non-random mating among individuals can lead to spatial clustering of genetically similar individuals and population stratification. This deviation from panmixia is commonly observed in natural populations. Consequently, individuals can have parentage in single populations or involving hybridization between differentiated populations. Accounting for this mixture and structure is important when mapping the genetics of traits and learning about the formative evolutionary processes that shape genetic variation among individuals and populations. Stratified genetic relatedness among individuals is commonly quantified using estimates of ancestry that are derived from a statistical model. Development of these models for polyploid and mixed-ploidy individuals and populations has lagged behind those for diploids. Here, we extend and test a hierarchical Bayesian model, called entropy, which can utilize low-depth sequence data to estimate genotype and ancestry parameters in autopolyploid and mixed-ploidy individuals (including sex chromosomes and autosomes within individuals). Our analysis of simulated data illustrated the trade-off between sequencing depth and genome coverage and found lower error associated with low depth sequencing across a larger fraction of the genome than with high depth sequencing across a smaller fraction of the genome. The model has high accuracy and sensitivity as verified with simulated data and through analysis of admixture among populations of diploid and tetraploid Arabidopsis arenosa.
31 Jul 2020Submitted to Molecular Ecology Resources
03 Aug 2020Submission Checks Completed
03 Aug 2020Assigned to Editor
18 Aug 2020Reviewer(s) Assigned
10 Nov 2020Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
17 Nov 2020Editorial Decision: Revise Minor
11 Dec 2020Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
11 Dec 20201st Revision Received
11 Jan 2021Editorial Decision: Accept
Jul 2021Published in Molecular Ecology Resources volume 21 issue 5 on pages 1434-1451. 10.1111/1755-0998.13330