An allele-sharing, moment-based estimator of global, population specific and population pairs FST under a general model of population structure

PLOS Genetics(2023)

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Abstract
Being able to properly quantify genetic differentiation is key to understanding the evolutionary potential of a species. One central parameter in this context is FST, the mean coancestry within populations relative to the mean coancestry between populations. Researchers have been estimating FST globally or between pairs of populations for a long time. More recently, it has been proposed to estimate population specific FST values, and between population-pair mean relative coancestry. Here, we review the several definitions and estimation methods of FST, and stress that they provide values relative to a reference population. We show the good statistical properties of an allele sharing, method of moments based estimator of FST (global, population specific and population pairs) under a very general model of population structure. We point to the limitation of existing likelihood and Bayesian estimators when the populations are not independent.  Last, we show that recent attempts to estimate absolute, rather than relative, mean coancestry fail to do so. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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