Schema for HGDP XP-EHH - Human Genome Diversity Proj Cross-Pop Ext Haplo Homzgty (XP-EHH) on 7 Continents
  Database: hg18    Primary Table: hgdpXpehhSAsia    Row Count: 636,773   Data last updated: 2009-02-12
Format description: bed-like graphing data
On download server: MariaDB table dump directory
fieldexampleSQL type description
bin 593smallint(5) unsigned Indexing field to speed chromosome range queries.
chrom chr1varchar(255) Reference sequence chromosome or scaffold
chromStart 1096335int(10) unsigned Start position in chromosome
chromEnd 1096336int(10) unsigned End position in chromosome
dataValue 0float data value for this range

Sample Rows
 
binchromchromStartchromEnddataValue
593chr1109633510963360
593chr1109633611097210
593chr1110972111116570
593chr1111165711251050
593chr1112510511424940.0709894
593chr1114249411459940.22686
593chr1114599411481400.356366
593chr1114814011522980.356349
593chr1115229811536670.343548
593chr1115366711627700.0533467

Note: all start coordinates in our database are 0-based, not 1-based. See explanation here.

HGDP XP-EHH (hgdpXpehh) Track Description
 

Description

This track shows per-continent Cross Population Extended Haplotype Homozygosity (XP-EHH) score (Sabeti et al.), an estimate of positive selection that highlights SNPs that have approached or achieved fixation in a population but remain polymorphic in the human population as a whole. Scores were calculated using SNPs genotyped in 53 populations worldwide by the Human Genome Diversity Project in collaboration with the Centre d'Etude du Polymorphisme Humain (HGDP-CEPH). This track and several others are available from the HGDP Selection Browser.

Methods

Samples collected by the HGDP-CEPH from 1,043 individuals from around the world were genotyped for 657,000 SNPs at Stanford. The 53 populations were divided into seven continental groups: Africa (Bantu populations only), Middle East, Europe, South Asia, East Asia, Oceania and the Americas. Bantu populations in Africa were chosen instead of all African populations because a more closely related group was desired for comparison with other continental groups. XP-EHH was then calculated for each population group using the program xpehh (source code available) as described in Sabeti et al.

Credits

Thanks to the HGDP-CEPH and Joe Pickrell in the Pritchard lab at the University of Chicago for providing these data.

References

Sabeti PC, Varilly P, Fry B, Lohmueller J, Hostetter E, Cotsapas C, Xie X, Byrne EH, McCarroll SA, Gaudet R et al. Genome-wide detection and characterization of positive selection in human populations. Nature. 2007 Oct 18;449(7164):913-8.

Pickrell JK, Coop G, Novembre J, Kudaravalli S, Li J, Absher D, Srinivasan BS, Barsh GS, Myers RM, Feldman MW, Pritchard JK. Signals of recent positive selection in a worldwide sample of human populations. Genome Res. 2009 May;19(5):826-37.

Li JZ, Absher DM, Tang H, Southwick AM, Casto AM, Ramachandran S, Cann HM, Barsh GS, Feldman M, Cavalli-Sforza LL, Myers RM. Worldwide human relationships inferred from genome-wide patterns of variation. Science. 2008 Feb 22;319(5866):1100-4.

Cann HM, de Toma C, Cazes L, Legrand MF, Morel V, Piouffre L, Bodmer J, Bodmer WF, Bonne-Tamir B, Cambon-Thomsen A et al. A human genome diversity cell line panel. Science. 2002 Apr 12;296(5566):261-2.