1. Recent Male-Mediated Gene Flow over a Linguistic Barrier in Iberia, Suggested by Analysis of a Y-Chromosomal DNA Polymorphism
- Author
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Anne Cambon-Thomsen, Elena Bosch, Arpita Pandya, Fabrício R. Santos, Mark A. Jobling, Adolfo López de Munain, Chris Tyler-Smith, Anna Pérez-Lezaun, Lalji Singh, Ian J. Wilson, Jaume Bertranpetit, Arne Röhl, Ken McElreavey, Reiner A. Veitia, Eduardo Arroyo, Manuel Armenteros, Matthew E. Hurles, and Maria Shlumukova
- Subjects
Male ,Lineage (genetic) ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Population genetics ,Biology ,Y chromosome ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Haplogroup ,Evolution, Molecular ,03 medical and health sciences ,Ethnicity ,Haplotype ,Genetics ,Humans ,Genetics(clinical) ,Allele ,Genetics (clinical) ,Language ,030304 developmental biology ,Basques ,0303 health sciences ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Base Sequence ,030305 genetics & heredity ,Nuclear Proteins ,Articles ,Sex-Determining Region Y Protein ,Gene flow ,humanities ,Linguistics ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Minisatellite ,Haplotypes ,Spain ,Microsatellite ,Iberia ,Dating ,Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length ,Microsatellite Repeats ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
SummaryWe 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.
- Published
- 1999
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