Y chromosomal polymorphisms reveal founding lineages in the Finns and the Saami

被引:45
作者
Lahermo, P
Savontaus, ML
Sistonen, P
Béres, J
de Knijff, P
Aula, P
Sajantila, A
机构
[1] Univ Turku, Dept Med Genet, Turku, Finland
[2] Univ Turku, Dept Genet, Turku, Finland
[3] Finnish Red Cross & Blood Transfus Serv, SF-00310 Helsinki, Finland
[4] Bela Johan Natl Inst Hlth, Budapest, Hungary
[5] Leiden Univ, Dept Human Genet, MGC, NL-2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands
[6] Univ Helsinki, Dept Forens Med, SF-00300 Helsinki, Finland
基金
芬兰科学院;
关键词
Y chromosome; polymorphisms; microsatellites; Yap; Tat; Finno-Ugric;
D O I
10.1038/sj.ejhg.5200316
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Y chromosomal polymorphisms were studied in 502 males from 16 Eurasian ethnic groups including the Finns, Saami (Inari Lake area and Skolt Saami), Karelians, Mari, Mokshas, Erzas, Hungarians (Budapest area and Csangos), Khanty, Mansi, Yakuts, Koryaks, Nivkhs, Mongolians, and Latvians. The samples were analysed for polymorphisms in the Y chromosome specific Alu insertion (YAP) and six microsatellites (DYS19, DYS389-I and II, DYS390, DYS392, DYS393). The populations were also screened for the recently described Tat polymorphism. The incidence of YAP(+) type was highest in the Csangos and in other Hungarians (37.5% and 17.5%, respectively). In the Karelians and the Latvians it was present at approximately the same level as commonly found in other European populations, whilst absent in our further samples of Eurasian populations, including the Finns and the Saami. Aside from the Hungarians, the C allele of the Tat polymorphism was common in all the Finno-Ugric speaking populations (from 8.2% to 63.2%), with highest incidence in the Ob-Ugrian Khanty. The C allele was also found in the Latvians (29.4%). The haplotypes found associated with the Tat C allele showed consistently lower density than those associated with the T allele, indicating that the T allele is the original form. The computation of the age of the Tat C suggested that the mutation might be a relatively recent event giving a maximum likelihood estimate of 4440years (95% confidence interval about 3140-6200years). The distribution patterns of the 222 haplotypes found varied considerably among the populations. In the Finns a majority of the haplotypes could be assigned to two distinct groups, one of which harboured the C allele of the Tat polymorphism indicating dichotomous primary source of genetic variation among Finnish males. The presence of a bottleneck or founding effect in the male lineages of some of the populations, namely in the Finns and the Saami, would appear to be one likely interpretation for these findings.
引用
收藏
页码:447 / 458
页数:12
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