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Towards complete male individualization with rapidly mutating Y-chromosomal STRs

Authors :
Ballantyne, KN
Ralf, A
Aboukhalid, R
Achakzai, NM
Anjos, MJ
Ayub, Q
Balažic, J
Ballantyne, J
Ballard, DJ
Berger, B
Bobillo, C
Bouabdellah, M
Burri, H
Butler, J
Capal, T
Caratti, S
Carracedo, A
Cartault, F
Carvalho, EF
Cheng, B
Coble, MD
Comas, D
Corach, D
D'Amato, ME
Davison, S
de Carvalho, EF
de Knijff, Peter
de Ungria, M
Decorte, Ronny
Dobosz, T
Dupuy, BM
Elmrghni, S
Gliwinski, M
Gomes, SC
Grol, L
Haas, C
Hanson, E
Henke, J
Hill, CR
Holmlund, G
Honda, K
Immel, U
Inoue, S
Jobling, MA
Kaddura, M
Kim, JS
Kim, SH
Kim, W
King, TE
Klausriegler, E
Kling, D
Kovacevic, LL
Kovatsi, L
Krajewski, P
Kravchenko, S
Larmuseau, Maarten
Lee, EY
Lee, SH
Lessig, R
Livshits, LA
Marjanovic, D
Minarik, M
Mizuno, N
Moreira, H
Morling, N
Mukherjee, M
Nagaraju, J
Neuhuber, F
Nie, S
Nilasitsataporn, P
Nishi, T
Oh, HH
Olofsson, J
Onofri, V
Palo, JU
Pamjav, H
Parson, W
Payet, C
Petlach, M
Phillips, C
Ploski, R
Prasad, SPR
Primorac, D
Purnnomo, GA
Purps, J
Rangel, H
Rebala, K
Rerkamnuaychoke, B
Rey, D
Robino, C
Rodríguez, F
Roewer, L
Rosa, A
Sajantila, A
Sala, A
Salvador, J
Sanz, P
Schmitt, C
Sharma, AK
Silva, DA
Shin, KJ
Sijen, T
Sirker, M
Siváková, D
Skaro, V
Solano-Matamoros, C
Souto, L
Stenzl, V
Sudoyo, H
Syndercombe-Court, D
Tagliabracci, A
Taylor, D
Tillmar, A
Tsybovsky, IS
Tyler-Smith, C
van der Gaag, K
Vanek, D
Völgyi, A
Ward, D
Willemse, P
Winkler, C
Yap, EPH
Yong, RYY
Zupanic Pajnic, I
Kayser, M
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2014.

Abstract

Relevant for various areas of human genetics, Y-chromosomal short tandem repeats (Y-STRs) are commonly used for testing close paternal relationships among individuals and populations, and for male lineage identification. However, even the widely used 17-loci Yfiler set cannot resolve individuals and populations completely. Here, 52 centers generated quality-controlled data of 13 rapidly mutating (RM) Y-STRs in 14,644 related and unrelated males from 111 worldwide populations. Strikingly, >99% of the 12,272 unrelated males were completely individualized. Haplotype diversity was extremely high (global: 0.9999985, regional: 0.99836–0.9999988). Haplotype sharing between populations was almost absent except for six (0.05%) of the 12,156 haplotypes. Haplotype sharing within populations was generally rare (0.8% nonunique haplotypes), significantly lower in urban (0.9%) than rural (2.1%) and highest in endogamous groups (14.3%). Analysis of molecular variance revealed 99.98% of variation within populations, 0.018% among populations within groups, and 0.002% among groups. Of the 2,372 newly and 156 previously typed male relative pairs, 29% were differentiated including 27% of the 2,378 father–son pairs. Relative to Yfiler, haplotype diversity was increased in 86% of the populations tested and overall male relative differentiation was raised by 23.5%. Our study demonstrates the value of RMY-STRs in identifying and separating unrelated and related males and provides a reference database. ispartof: Human Mutation vol:35 issue:8 pages:1021-1032 status: published

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......1131..c4091677ebcae6f67f205a17be48b75d