What are the genomic signatures of adaptations in DNA? How often does natural selection dictate changes to DNA? How does the ebb and flow in the abundance of individuals over time get marked onto chromosomes to record genetic history? Molecular population genetics seeks to answer such questions by explaining genetic variation and molecular evolution from micro-evolutionary principles. It provides a way to learn about how evolution works and how it shapes species by incorporatingmolecular details of DNA as the heritable material. It enables us to understand the logic of how mutations originate, change in abundance in populations, and become fixed as DNA sequence divergence between species. With the revolutionary advances in genomic data acquisition, understanding molecularpopulation genetics is now a fundamental requirement for todays life scientists. These concepts apply in analysis of personal genomics, genome-wide association studies, landscape and conservation genetics, forensics, molecular anthropology, and selection scans. This book introduces, in an accessible way, the bare essentials of the theory and practice of molecular population genetics.
Introduction: what is molecular population genetics?; The origins of molecular diversity; Quantifying genetic variation at the molecular level; Neutral theories of molecular evolution; Genealogy in evolution; Recombination and linkage disequilibrium in evolutionary signatures; Natural selection and demography as causes of molecular non-randomness; Molecular deviants: sequence signatures of selection and demography; Case studies in molecular population genetics: genotype to phenotype to selection;
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