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. 2018 Feb 10;121(6):511–523. doi: 10.1038/s41437-018-0060-7

Table 2.

Summary of vic loci with allele frequencies significantly different from 0.5 or with the allele favored by asymmetric virus transmission at vic1, vic2, and vic7 significantly greater than 0.5

Populationa N Loci significantly different from any expectations Loci not significantly different from 0.5 Loci with allele favored by asymmetric virus transmission significantly greater than 0.5 (vic1, vic2, or vic7 only)
Ibaraki, Japan 44 vic1, vic3, vic4, vic6 vic2, vic7
Liang, China 30b vic3 vic2, vic4, vic6, vic7 vic1
Xiuning, China 26b vic4 vic1, vic2, vic3, vic6, vic7
Finzel, MD 57 vic3, vic4, vic6 vic1, vic2 vic7
Bartow, WV 59 vic4, vic6 vic2, vic3 vic1, vic7
Depot Hill, NY 61 vic3, vic4, vic6 vic7 vic1, vic2
Pendleton, WV 20 vic1, vic2, vic3, vic4, vic6, vic7
Smokey Mtn. NP, TN 35 vic6, vic7 vic1, vic3, vic4 vic2
Tucker Co., WV 22 vic4, vic7 vic1, vic2, vic3, vic6

a Samples from Japan and China were described in Milgroom et al. (1996); vic genotype data for Finzel, MD, Bartow, WV, and Depot Hill, NY, were taken from Milgroom and Cortesi (1999), plus additional genotyping (described in Materials and methods); vic genotype data for Pendleton, WV, Smokey Mtn. NP, TN, and Tucker Co., WV, were taken from Short et al. (2015). Statistics supporting these results are shown in Supplementary Table S5

b Sample sizes varied slightly among loci in Liang and Xiuning (Supplementary Table S5) because of missing data. Sample sizes shown here are for the maximum in each population