Litcius/Paper detail

On the genes, genealogies, and geographies of Quebec

Luke Anderson-Trocmé, Dominic Nelson, Shadi Zabad, Alex Diaz-Papkovich, Ivan Kryukov, Nikolas Baya, Mathilde Touvier, Ben Jeffery, Christian Dina, Hélène Vézina, Jerome Kelleher, Simon Gravel

2023Science49 citationsDOI

Abstract

Population genetic models only provide coarse representations of real-world ancestry. We used a pedigree compiled from 4 million parish records and genotype data from 2276 French and 20,451 French Canadian individuals to finely model and trace French Canadian ancestry through space and time. The loss of ancestral French population structure and the appearance of spatial and regional structure highlights a wide range of population expansion models. Geographic features shaped migrations, and we find enrichments for migration, genetic, and genealogical relatedness patterns within river networks across regions of Quebec. Finally, we provide a freely accessible simulated whole-genome sequence dataset with spatiotemporal metadata for 1,426,749 individuals reflecting intricate French Canadian population structure. Such realistic population-scale simulations provide opportunities to investigate population genetics at an unprecedented resolution.

Topics & Concepts

PopulationGenealogyMetadataGenetic genealogyGeographyRange (aeronautics)Evolutionary biologyPopulation geneticsGenetic dataTRACE (psycholinguistics)BiologyDemographyHistoryComputer scienceSociologyWorld Wide WebPhilosophyMaterials scienceLinguisticsComposite materialForensic and Genetic ResearchGenetic and phenotypic traits in livestockGenetic Associations and Epidemiology