Review
Nature Reviews Genetics 9, 477-485 (June 2008) | doi:10.1038/nrg2361
Article series: Fundamental concepts in genetics
Linkage disequilibrium — understanding the evolutionary past and mapping the medical future
Montgomery Slatkin1 About the author
Abstract
Linkage disequilibrium — the nonrandom association of alleles at different loci — is a sensitive indicator of the population genetic forces that structure a genome. Because of the explosive growth of methods for assessing genetic variation at a fine scale, evolutionary biologists and human geneticists are increasingly exploiting linkage disequilibrium in order to understand past evolutionary and demographic events, to map genes that are associated with quantitative characters and inherited diseases, and to understand the joint evolution of linked sets of genes. This article introduces linkage disequilibrium, reviews the population genetic processes that affect it and describes some of its uses. At present, linkage disequilibrium is used much more extensively in the study of humans than in non-humans, but that is changing as technological advances make extensive genomic studies feasible in other species.
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Author affiliations
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Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-3140, USA.
Email: slatkin@berkeley.edu
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