“Imputation of Ancient Genomes”, 2022-07-20 ():
Due to postmortem DNA degradation, most ancient genomes sequenced to date have low depth of coverage, preventing the true underlying genotypes from being recovered. Genotype imputation has been put forward to improve genotyping accuracy for low-coverage genomes. However, it is unknown to what extent imputation of ancient genomes produces accurate genotypes and whether imputation introduces bias to downstream analyses.
To address these questions, we downsampled 43 ancient genomes, 42 of which are high-coverage (above 10×) and 3 constitute a trio (mother, father and son), from different times and continents to simulate data with coverage in the range of 0.1×-2.0× and imputed these using state-of-the-art methods and reference panels. We assessed imputation accuracy across ancestries and depths of coverage.
We found that ancient and modern DNA imputation accuracies were comparable. We imputed most of the 42 high-coverage genomes downsampled to 1× with low error rates (below 5%) and estimated higher error rates for African genomes, which are underrepresented in the reference panel. We used the ancient trio data to validate imputation and phasing results using an orthogonal approach based on Mendels rules of inheritance. This resulted in imputation and switch error rates of 1.9% and 2.0%, respectively, for 1× genomes.
We further compared the results of downstream analyses between imputed and high-coverage genomes, notably principal component analysis (PCA), genetic clustering, and runs of homozygosity (ROH). For these 3 approaches, we observed similar results between imputed and high-coverage genomes using depths of coverage of at least 0.5×, except for African genomes, for which the decreased imputation accuracy impacted ROH estimates.
Altogether, these results suggest that, for most populations and depths of coverage as low as 0.5×, imputation is a reliable method with potential to expand and improve ancient DNA studies.