Current Developments in Detection of Identity-by-Descent Methods and Applications

Evan L. Sticca, Gillian M. Belbin, Christopher R. Gignoux

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

Identity-by-descent (IBD), the detection of shared segments inherited from a common ancestor, is a fundamental concept in genomics with broad applications in the characterization and analysis of genomes. While historically the concept of IBD was extensively utilized through linkage analyses and in studies of founder populations, applications of IBD-based methods subsided during the genome-wide association study era. This was primarily due to the computational expense of IBD detection, which becomes increasingly relevant as the field moves toward the analysis of biobank-scale datasets that encompass individuals from highly diverse backgrounds. To address these computational barriers, the past several years have seen new methodological advances enabling IBD detection for datasets in the hundreds of thousands to millions of individuals, enabling novel analyses at an unprecedented scale. Here, we describe the latest innovations in IBD detection and describe opportunities for the application of IBD-based methods across a broad range of questions in the field of genomics.

Original languageEnglish
Article number722602
JournalFrontiers in Genetics
Volume12
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Sep 2021

Keywords

  • biobank
  • genetics
  • identity-by-descent
  • pedigree
  • relatedness inference

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