---+ Mutation Rates from Genome Resequencing Motivation: You have re-sequenced several genomes after a mutation accumulation or adaptive evolution experiment. How do you infer the rates of different types of mutation rates from these data? What are the 95% confidence intervals on these values? ---++ Case 1: Single-base substitutions Assumptions: The number of mutations is small compared to the number of sites. If you restrict your data to one genome per experimental population, then you can calculate the 95% confidence limits by assuming this is a Poisson process (poisson.test in R). If you take multiple genomes from one experimental population, this is a type of pseudo-replication (they may have a shared evolutionary history). This makes calculating the 95% confidence intervals more complicated. ---++ Case 2: One-time mutations Assumptions: A mutation can only happen once per genome. Example: Deletion of a chromosomal region. Once deleted, it can never be deleted again. This is a type of "survival analysis". You can calculate the fraction of genomes that have and do not have your mutation. Then consider this a binomial process, to calculate a 95% confidence interval Then, convert this to a per-generation rate by dividing by the number of mutations.
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Topic revision: r1 - 2012-03-12 - JeffreyBarrick