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Genetic variability in a genomic region with long-range linkage disequilibrium reveals traces of a bottleneck in the history of the European population.

Authors :
Schmegner, Claudia
Hoegel, Josef
Vogel, Walther
Assum, Günter
Source :
Human Genetics. Nov2005, Vol. 118 Issue 2, p276-286. 11p. 2 Diagrams, 4 Charts, 4 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

The inference of the demographic history of populations from genetic variability data is not only of academic interest. It also provides background information for the identification of genes which may have played a role in human evolution or in the aetiology of human disease. To obtain a clear picture of this background, it is necessary to compare data obtained from a number of genomic loci. Due to its very low recombination rate, the NF1 gene region can be regarded as a further suitable locus. A combined resequencing and SNP typing project in a European population disclosed the presence of only two well separated subgroups of NF1 sequences. Statistical analysis revealed a bimodal distribution of the pairwise differences, a positive value of Tajima’s D and a TMRCA of 700,000 years for the whole sample, and pairwise differences indicative for a growing population and TMRCAs of 130,000 to 150,000 years for the subgroups. Together, the data lead to a model that the recent European population went through a bottleneck during the last 150,000 years of its history. Regarding the given timeframe, this bottleneck could either reflect a speciation event which led to the anatomically modern human (AMH), or a severe reduction of the population size during the emigration of AMHs out of Africa or the immigration into Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03406717
Volume :
118
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Human Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18843259
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00439-005-0056-2