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Measuring the Efficiency of Purging by non-random Mating in Human Populations.

Romain LaurentLaure GineauJosé UtgeSophie LafosseChan Leakhena PhoeungTatyana HegayRobert OlasoAnne Boland-AugeJean-François DeleuzeBruno ToupanceEvelyne HeyerAnne-Louise LeuteneggerRaphaëlle Chaix
Published in: Molecular biology and evolution (2024)
Human populations harbor a high concentration of deleterious genetic variants. Here, we tested the hypothesis that non-random mating practices affect the distribution of these variants, through exposure in the homozygous state, leading to their purging from the population gene pool. To do so, we produced whole-genome sequencing data for two pairs of Asian populations exhibiting different alliance rules and rates of inbreeding, but with similar effective population sizes. The results show that populations with higher rates of inbred matings do not purge deleterious variants more efficiently. Purging therefore has a low efficiency in human populations, and different mating practices lead to a similar mutational load.
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