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International Journal of Legal Medicine | 1997

Evaluation of Y-chromosomal STRs: a multicenter study

Manfred Kayser; A. Caglià; Daniel Corach; Neale Fretwell; Christian Gehrig; G. Graziosi; F. Heidorn; S. Herrmann; B. Herzog; M. Hidding; Katsuya Honda; Mark A. Jobling; Michael Krawczak; K. Leim; S. Meuser; Eckhard Meyer; W. Oesterreich; Arpita Pandya; Walther Parson; G. Penacino; A. Perez-Lezaun; A. Piccinini; Mechthild Prinz; Cornelia Schmitt; Peter M. Schneider; Reinhard Szibor; J. Teifel-Greding; G. Weichhold; P. de Knijff; Lutz Roewer

Abstract A multicenter study has been carried out to characterize 13 polymorphic short tandem repeat (STR) systems located on the male specific part of the human Y chromosome (DYS19, DYS288, DYS385, DYS388, DYS389I/II, DYS390, DYS391, DYS392, DYS393, YCAI, YCAII, YCAIII, DXYS156Y). Amplification parameters and electrophoresis protocols including multiplex approaches were compiled. The typing of non-recombining Y loci with uniparental inheritance requires special attention to population substructuring due to prevalent male lineages. To assess the extent of these subheterogeneities up to 3825 unrelated males were typed in up to 48 population samples for the respective loci. A consistent repeat based nomenclature for most of the loci has been introduced. Moreover we have estimated the average mutation rate for DYS19 in 626 confirmed father-son pairs as 3.2 × 10–3 (95% confidence interval limits of 0.00041–0.00677), a value which can also be expected for other Y-STR loci with similar repeat structure. Recommendations are given for the forensic application of a basic set of 7 STRs (DYS19, DYS389I, DYS389II, DYS390, DYS391, DYS392, DYS393) for standard Y-haplotyping in forensic and paternity casework. We recommend further the inclusion of the highly polymorphic bilocal Y-STRs DYS385, YCAII, YCAIII for a nearly complete individualisation of almost any given unrelated male individual. Together, these results suggest that Y-STR loci are useful markers to identify males and male lineages in forensic practice.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

Y-Chromosomal Diversity in Europe Is Clinal and Influenced Primarily by Geography, Rather than by Language

Zoë H. Rosser; Tatiana Zerjal; Matthew E. Hurles; Maarja Adojaan; Dragan Alavantic; António Amorim; William Amos; Manuel Armenteros; Eduardo Arroyo; Guido Barbujani; G. Beckman; L. Beckman; Jaume Bertranpetit; Elena Bosch; Daniel G. Bradley; Gaute Brede; Gillian Cooper; Helena B.S.M. Côrte-Real; Peter de Knijff; Ronny Decorte; Yuri E. Dubrova; Oleg V. Evgrafov; Anja Gilissen; Sanja Glisic; Mukaddes Gölge; Emmeline W. Hill; Anna Jeziorowska; Luba Kalaydjieva; Manfred Kayser; Toomas Kivisild

Clinal patterns of autosomal genetic diversity within Europe have been interpreted in previous studies in terms of a Neolithic demic diffusion model for the spread of agriculture; in contrast, studies using mtDNA have traced many founding lineages to the Paleolithic and have not shown strongly clinal variation. We have used 11 human Y-chromosomal biallelic polymorphisms, defining 10 haplogroups, to analyze a sample of 3,616 Y chromosomes belonging to 47 European and circum-European populations. Patterns of geographic differentiation are highly nonrandom, and, when they are assessed using spatial autocorrelation analysis, they show significant clines for five of six haplogroups analyzed. Clines for two haplogroups, representing 45% of the chromosomes, are continentwide and consistent with the demic diffusion hypothesis. Clines for three other haplogroups each have different foci and are more regionally restricted and are likely to reflect distinct population movements, including one from north of the Black Sea. Principal-components analysis suggests that populations are related primarily on the basis of geography, rather than on the basis of linguistic affinity. This is confirmed in Mantel tests, which show a strong and highly significant partial correlation between genetics and geography but a low, nonsignificant partial correlation between genetics and language. Genetic-barrier analysis also indicates the primacy of geography in the shaping of patterns of variation. These patterns retain a strong signal of expansion from the Near East but also suggest that the demographic history of Europe has been complex and influenced by other major population movements, as well as by linguistic and geographic heterogeneities and the effects of drift.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 1997

The Y chromosome in forensic analysis and paternity testing

Mark A. Jobling; Arpita Pandya; Chris Tyler-Smith

Abstract The male specificity of the human Y chromosome makes it potentially useful in forensic studies and paternity testing, and markers are now available which will allow its usefulness to be assessed in practice. However, while it can be used confidently for exclusions, the unusual properties of the Y mean that inclusions will be very difficult to make: haplotypes are confined within lineages, so population sub-structuring is a major problem, and many male relatives of a suspect will share his Y chromosome. Y haplotyping is most likely to find application in special instances, such as deficiency cases in paternity testing and in the analysis of mixtures of male and female DNA, or in combination with autosomal markers.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 1997

Chromosome Y microsatellites : population genetic and evolutionary aspects

P. de Knijff; Manfred Kayser; A. Caglià; Daniel Corach; Neale Fretwell; Christian Gehrig; G. Graziosi; F. Heidorn; S. Herrmann; B. Herzog; M. Hidding; Katsuya Honda; Mark A. Jobling; Michael Krawczak; K. Leim; S. Meuser; Eckhard Meyer; W. Oesterreich; Arpita Pandya; Walther Parson; G. Penacino; A. Perez-Lezaun; A. Piccinini; Mechthild Prinz; Cornelia Schmitt; Peter M. Schneider; Reinhard Szibor; J. Teifel-Greding; G. Weichhold; Lutz Roewer

Abstract By means of a multicenter study, a large number of males have been characterized for Y-chromosome specific short tandem repeats (STRs) or microsatellites. A complete summary of the allele frequency distributions for these Y-STRs is presented in the Appendix. This manuscript describes in more detail some of the population genetic and evolutionary aspects for a restricted set of seven chromosome Y STRs in a selected number of population samples. For all the chromosome Y STRs markedly different region-specific allele frequency distributions were observed, also when closely related populations were compared. Haplotype analyses using AMOVA showed that when four different European male groups (Germans, Dutch, Swiss, Italians) were compared, less than 10% of the total genetic variability was due to differences between these populations. Nevertheless, these pairwise comparisons revealed significant differences between most population pairs. Assuming a step-wise mutation model and a mutation frequency of 0.21%, it was estimated that chromosome Y STR-based evolutionary lines of descent can be reliably inferred over a time-span of only 1950 generations (or about 49000 years). This reduces the reliability of the inference of population affinities to a historical, rather than evolutionary time scale. This is best illustrated by the construction of a human evolutionary tree based on chromosome Y STRs in which most of the branches connect in a markedly different way compared with trees based on classical protein polymorphisms and/or mtDNA sequence variation. Thus, the chromosome Y STRs seem to be very useful in comparing closely related populations which cannot probably be separated by e.g. autosomal STRs. However, in order to be used in an evolutionary context they need to be combined with more stable Y-polymorphisms e.g. base-substitutions.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

The Central Siberian Origin for Native American Y Chromosomes

Fabrício R. Santos; Arpita Pandya; Chris Tyler-Smith; Sérgio D.J. Pena; Moses S. Schanfield; William R. Leonard; Ludmila P. Osipova; Michael H. Crawford; R. John Mitchell

Y chromosomal DNA polymorphisms were used to investigate Pleistocene male migrations to the American continent. In a worldwide sample of 306 men, we obtained 32 haplotypes constructed with the variation found in 30 distinct polymorphic sites. The major Y haplotype present in most Native Americans was traced back to recent ancestors common with Siberians, namely, the Kets and Altaians from the Yenissey River Basin and Altai Mountains, respectively. Going further back, the next common ancestor gave rise also to Caucasoid Y chromosomes, probably from the central Eurasian region. This study, therefore, suggests a predominantly central Siberian origin for Native American paternal lineages for those who could have migrated to the Americas during the Upper Pleistocene.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

Recent male-mediated gene flow over a linguistic barrier in Iberia, suggested by analysis of a Y-chromosomal DNA polymorphism.

Matthew E. Hurles; Reiner Veitia; Eduardo Arroyo; Manuel Armenteros; Jaume Bertranpetit; Anna Pérez-Lezaun; Elena Bosch; Maria Shlumukova; Anne Cambon-Thomsen; Ken McElreavey; Adolfo López de Munain; Arne Röhl; Ian J. Wilson; Lalji Singh; Arpita Pandya; Fabrício R. Santos; Chris Tyler-Smith; Mark A. Jobling

We have examined the worldwide distribution of a Y-chromosomal base-substitution polymorphism, the T/C transition at SRY-2627, where the T allele defines haplogroup 22; sequencing of primate homologues shows that the ancestral state cannot be determined unambiguously but is probably the C allele. Of 1,191 human Y chromosomes analyzed, 33 belong to haplogroup 22. Twenty-nine come from Iberia, and the highest frequencies are in Basques (11%; n=117) and Catalans (22%; n=32). Microsatellite and minisatellite (MSY1) diversity analysis shows that non-Iberian haplogroup-22 chromosomes are not significantly different from Iberian ones. The simplest interpretation of these data is that haplogroup 22 arose in Iberia and that non-Iberian cases reflect Iberian emigrants. Several different methods were used to date the origin of the polymorphism: microsatellite data gave ages of 1,650, 2,700, 3,100, or 3,450 years, and MSY1 gave ages of 1,000, 2,300, or 2,650 years, although 95% confidence intervals on all of these figures are wide. The age of the split between Basque and Catalan haplogroup-22 chromosomes was calculated as only 20% of the age of the lineage as a whole. This study thus provides evidence for direct or indirect gene flow over the substantial linguistic barrier between the Indo-European and non-Indo-European-speaking populations of the Catalans and the Basques, during the past few thousand years.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

Transmission of a fully functional human neocentromere through three generations.

Chris Tyler-Smith; Giorgio Gimelli; Sabrina Giglio; Giovanna Floridia; Arpita Pandya; Gianluigi Terzoli; Peter E. Warburton; William C. Earnshaw; Orsetta Zuffardi

An unusual Y chromosome with a primary constriction inside the long-arm heterochromatin was found in the amniocytes of a 38-year-old woman. The same Y chromosome was found in her husband and brother-in-law, thus proving that it was already present in the father. FISH with alphoid DNA showed hybridization signals at the usual position of the Y centromere but not at the primary constriction. Centromere proteins (CENP)-A, CENP-C, and CENP-E could not be detected at the site of the canonic centromere but were present at the new constriction, whereas CENP-B was not detected on this Y chromosome. Experiments with 82 Y-specific loci distributed throughout the chromosome confirmed that no gross deletion or rearrangement had taken place, and that the Y chromosome belonged to a haplogroup whose members have a mean alphoid array of 770 kb (range 430-1,600 kb), whereas that of this case was approximately 250 kb. Thus, this Y chromosome appeared to be deleted for part of the alphoid DNA. It seems likely that this deletion was responsible for the silencing of the normal centromere and that the activation of the neocentromere prevented the loss of this chromosome. Alternatively, neocentromere activation could have occurred first and stimulated inactivation of the normal centromere by partial deletion. Whatever the mechanism, the presence of this chromosome in three generations demonstrates that it functions sufficiently well in mitosis for male sex determination and fertility and that neocentromeres can be transmitted normally at meiosis.


web science | 1998

A selective difference between human Y-chromosomal DNA haplotypes

Mark A. Jobling; G. Williams; K. Schiebel; Arpita Pandya; Ken McElreavey; L. Salas; G.A. Rappold; Nabeel A. Affara; Chris Tyler-Smith

DNA analysis is making a valuable contribution to the understanding of human evolution [1]. Much attention has focused on mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) [2] and the Y chromosome [3] [4], both of which escape recombination and so provide information on maternal and paternal lineages, respectively. It is often assumed that the polymorphisms observed at loci on mtDNA and the Y chromosome are selectively neutral and, therefore, that existing patterns of molecular variation can be used to deduce the histories of populations in terms of drift, population movements, and cultural practices. The coalescence of the molecular phylogenies of mtDNA and the Y chromosome to recent common ancestors in Africa [5] [6], for example, has been taken to reflect a recent origin of modern human populations in Africa. An alternative explanation, though, could be the recent selective spread of mtDNA and Y chromosome haplotypes from Africa in a population with a more complex history [7]. It is therefore important to establish whether there are selective differences between classes (haplotypes) of mtDNA and Y chromosomes and, if so, whether these differences could have been sufficient to influence the distributions of haplotypes in existing populations. A precedent for this hypothesis has been established for mtDNA in that one mtDNA background increases susceptibility to Leber hereditary optic neuropathy [8]. Although studies of nucleotide diversity in global samples of Y chromosomes have suggested an absence of recent selective sweeps or bottlenecks [9], selection may, in principle, be very important for the Y chromosome because it carries several loci affecting male fertility [10] [11] and as many as 5% of males are infertile [11] [12]. Here, we show that one class of infertile males, PRKX/PRKY translocation XX males, arises predominantly on a particular Y haplotypic background. Selection is, therefore, acting on Y haplotype distributions in the population.


Gene | 2000

MSY2: a slowly evolving minisatellite on the human Y chromosome which provides a useful polymorphic marker in Chinese populations.

Weidong Bao; Suling Zhu; Arpita Pandya; Tatiana Zerjal; Jiujin Xu; Qunfang Shu; Ruofu Du; Huanming Yang; Chris Tyler-Smith

We present the second human Y-specific minisatellite, MSY2 (DYS440). It consists of three or four copies of a 99-110bp repeat unit and is located about 1kb upstream of the DBY gene. The most common allele contains four units, but a three-unit allele has arisen on at least four occasions; in chimpanzees and orangutans, MSY2 contains only two units. It is therefore evolving slowly and provides a particularly useful polymorphic marker for Chinese populations.


Archive | 1999

The Use of Y-Chromosomal DNA Variation to Investigate Population History

Tatiana Zerjal; Arpita Pandya; Fabrício R. Santos; Raju Adhikari; Eduardo Tarazona; Manfred Kayser; Oleg V. Evgrafov; Lalji Singh; Kumarasamy Thangaraj; Giovanni Destro-Bisol; Mark G. Thomas; Raheel Qamar; S. Qasim Mehdi; Zoë H. Rosser; Matthew E. Hurles; Mark A. Jobling; Chris Tyler-Smith

Y-chromosomal DNA lineages can be used to trace the origins of males in modern populations. A combination of biallelic markers has been used to identify “haplogroup 3” Y chromosomes, which are widespread and common in many European and Asian populations. Microsatellite analysis shows that the diversity of haplogroup 3 chromosomes is low, suggesting a recent spread.

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Chris Tyler-Smith

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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Fabrício R. Santos

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Lalji Singh

Banaras Hindu University

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Kumarasamy Thangaraj

Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology

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