Estimation of Effective Population Size of HIV-1 Within a Host: A Pseudomaximum-Likelihood Approach
Author(s) -
TaeKun Seo,
Jeffrey L. Thorne,
Masami Hasegawa,
Hirohisa Kishino
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.792
H-Index - 246
eISSN - 1943-2631
pISSN - 0016-6731
DOI - 10.1093/genetics/160.4.1283
Subject(s) - coalescent theory , statistics , effective population size , mutation rate , estimator , biology , population , population size , generation time , sampling (signal processing) , inference , mathematics , variance (accounting) , maximum likelihood , phylogenetic tree , genetics , demography , gene , computer science , genetic variation , artificial intelligence , accounting , filter (signal processing) , sociology , business , computer vision
Using pseudomaximum-likelihood approaches to phylogenetic inference and coalescent theory, we develop a computationally tractable method of estimating effective population size from serially sampled viral data. We show that the variance of the maximum-likelihood estimator of effective population size depends on the serial sampling design only because internal node times on a coalescent genealogy can be better estimated with some designs than with others. Given the internal node times and the number of sequences sampled, the variance of the maximum-likelihood estimator is independent of the serial sampling design. We then estimate the effective size of the HIV-1 population within nine hosts. If we assume that the mutation rate is 2.5 × 10−5 substitutions/generation and is the same in all patients, estimated generation lengths vary from 0.73 to 2.43 days/generation and the mean (1.47) is similar to the generation lengths estimated by other researchers. If we assume that generation length is 1.47 days and is the same in all patients, mutation rate estimates vary from 1.52 × 10−5 to 5.02 × 10−5. Our results indicate that effective viral population size and evolutionary rate per year are negatively correlated among HIV-1 patients.
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