I read in a paper something on allele frequency that says:
We identified differences between human genomes and the inferred human-chimpanzee ancestral genome where humans carry a derived allele with a frequency of at least 95% (14.9 million SNVs and 1.7 million indels). Nearly all of these events are fully fixed in the human lineage, with fewer than 5% appearing as nearly fixed poly- morphisms in the 1000 Genomes Project variant catalog (derived allele frequency (DAF) ≥ 95%).
I don''t have much background on allele frequency and evolution theory. I'm curious what does a high DAF mean? Does it mean that between human and chimps, most derived alleles are now fixed (as they are over 95% meaning 95% of the human population have a particular derived allele)? And DAF of 95% doesn't suggest anything on whether there is positive or negative selections on derived alleles? Is my understanding correct?
Thank you!
Thanks for your answer!
I'm a bit confused by "No it does mean that just because some humans as a derived variant that all of them are fixed."
Can you clarify on it?
Why do chimps have a greater effective population size than human?
Sorry that should read "some humans have a derived" I didn't write this, the pre-caffeine version of me did :-)
I mean by this that if you find a variant in the 1000G files and assume an infinite sites model (no back mutations or tri-allelic sites), either the reference or the alternative is ancestral and the other one is derived. Most mutations in there are only shared by a small number of individuals. It's not because a variant appeared in humans that it is automatically fixed.
For the chimps, it's a broad statement to say that all chimps have a higher effective pop. size, read this article for discussion about the effective pop. size between great apes:
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v499/n7459/full/nature12228.html
So a human allele with high DAF does not always mean it's fixed in human?
Thanks for the paper link.
High DAF just means high frequency. Depends how you define "fixed" versus "almost fixed".