A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Santos-Lopes, Simone S.
Data de Publicação: 2007
Outros Autores: Pereira, Rinaldo Wellerson, Wilson, Ian J., Pena, Sérgio Danilo J.
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional da UCB
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/204
https://repositorio.ucb.br:9443/jspui/handle/123456789/7427
Resumo: We reasoned that by identifying genetic markers on human X chromosome regions where recombination is rare or absent, we should be able to construct X chromosome genealogies analogous to those based on Y chromosome and mitochondrial DNA polymorphisms, with the advantage of providing information about both male and female components of the population. Methodology/Principal Findings. We identified a 47 Kb interval containing an Alu insertion polymorphism (DXS225) and four microsatellites in complete linkage disequilibrium in a low recombination rate region of the long arm of the human X chromosome. This haplotype block was studied in 667 males from the HGDP-CEPH Human Genome Diversity Panel. The haplotypic diversity was highest in Africa (0.99260.0025) and lowest in the Americas (0.83960.0378), where no insertion alleles of DXS225 were observed. Africa shared few haplotypes with other geographical areas, while those exhibited significant sharing among themselves. Median joining networks revealed that the African haplotypes were numerous, occupied the periphery of the graph and had low frequency, whereas those from the other continents were few, central and had high frequency. Altogether, our data support a single origin of modern man in Africa and migration to occupy the other continents by serial founder effects. Coalescent analysis permitted estimation of the time of the most recent common ancestor as 182,000 years (56,700–479,000) and the estimated time of the DXS225 Alu insertion of 94,400 years (24,300–310,000). These dates are fully compatible with the current widely accepted scenario of the origin of modern mankind in Africa within the last 195,000 years and migration out-of-Africa circa 55,000–65,000 years ago. Conclusions/Significance. A haplotypic block combining an Alu insertion polymorphism and four microsatellite markers on the human X chromosome is a useful marker to evaluate genetic diversity of human populations and provides a highly informative tool for evolutionary studies.
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spelling Santos-Lopes, Simone S.Pereira, Rinaldo WellersonWilson, Ian J.Pena, Sérgio Danilo J.2016-10-10T03:51:27Z2016-10-10T03:51:27Z2007SANTOS-LOPES, Simone S. et al. A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome. PLoS ONE, v.2, n.6, 2007.http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/204https://repositorio.ucb.br:9443/jspui/handle/123456789/7427We reasoned that by identifying genetic markers on human X chromosome regions where recombination is rare or absent, we should be able to construct X chromosome genealogies analogous to those based on Y chromosome and mitochondrial DNA polymorphisms, with the advantage of providing information about both male and female components of the population. Methodology/Principal Findings. We identified a 47 Kb interval containing an Alu insertion polymorphism (DXS225) and four microsatellites in complete linkage disequilibrium in a low recombination rate region of the long arm of the human X chromosome. This haplotype block was studied in 667 males from the HGDP-CEPH Human Genome Diversity Panel. The haplotypic diversity was highest in Africa (0.99260.0025) and lowest in the Americas (0.83960.0378), where no insertion alleles of DXS225 were observed. Africa shared few haplotypes with other geographical areas, while those exhibited significant sharing among themselves. Median joining networks revealed that the African haplotypes were numerous, occupied the periphery of the graph and had low frequency, whereas those from the other continents were few, central and had high frequency. Altogether, our data support a single origin of modern man in Africa and migration to occupy the other continents by serial founder effects. Coalescent analysis permitted estimation of the time of the most recent common ancestor as 182,000 years (56,700–479,000) and the estimated time of the DXS225 Alu insertion of 94,400 years (24,300–310,000). These dates are fully compatible with the current widely accepted scenario of the origin of modern mankind in Africa within the last 195,000 years and migration out-of-Africa circa 55,000–65,000 years ago. Conclusions/Significance. A haplotypic block combining an Alu insertion polymorphism and four microsatellite markers on the human X chromosome is a useful marker to evaluate genetic diversity of human populations and provides a highly informative tool for evolutionary studies.Made available in DSpace on 2016-10-10T03:51:27Z (GMT). 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dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome
title A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome
spellingShingle A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome
Santos-Lopes, Simone S.
DNA
Genealogies
Human
Chromosome
title_short A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome
title_full A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome
title_fullStr A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome
title_full_unstemmed A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome
title_sort A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome
author Santos-Lopes, Simone S.
author_facet Santos-Lopes, Simone S.
Pereira, Rinaldo Wellerson
Wilson, Ian J.
Pena, Sérgio Danilo J.
author_role author
author2 Pereira, Rinaldo Wellerson
Wilson, Ian J.
Pena, Sérgio Danilo J.
author2_role author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Santos-Lopes, Simone S.
Pereira, Rinaldo Wellerson
Wilson, Ian J.
Pena, Sérgio Danilo J.
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv DNA
Genealogies
Human
Chromosome
topic DNA
Genealogies
Human
Chromosome
dc.description.abstract.por.fl_txt_mv We reasoned that by identifying genetic markers on human X chromosome regions where recombination is rare or absent, we should be able to construct X chromosome genealogies analogous to those based on Y chromosome and mitochondrial DNA polymorphisms, with the advantage of providing information about both male and female components of the population. Methodology/Principal Findings. We identified a 47 Kb interval containing an Alu insertion polymorphism (DXS225) and four microsatellites in complete linkage disequilibrium in a low recombination rate region of the long arm of the human X chromosome. This haplotype block was studied in 667 males from the HGDP-CEPH Human Genome Diversity Panel. The haplotypic diversity was highest in Africa (0.99260.0025) and lowest in the Americas (0.83960.0378), where no insertion alleles of DXS225 were observed. Africa shared few haplotypes with other geographical areas, while those exhibited significant sharing among themselves. Median joining networks revealed that the African haplotypes were numerous, occupied the periphery of the graph and had low frequency, whereas those from the other continents were few, central and had high frequency. Altogether, our data support a single origin of modern man in Africa and migration to occupy the other continents by serial founder effects. Coalescent analysis permitted estimation of the time of the most recent common ancestor as 182,000 years (56,700–479,000) and the estimated time of the DXS225 Alu insertion of 94,400 years (24,300–310,000). These dates are fully compatible with the current widely accepted scenario of the origin of modern mankind in Africa within the last 195,000 years and migration out-of-Africa circa 55,000–65,000 years ago. Conclusions/Significance. A haplotypic block combining an Alu insertion polymorphism and four microsatellite markers on the human X chromosome is a useful marker to evaluate genetic diversity of human populations and provides a highly informative tool for evolutionary studies.
dc.description.version.pt_BR.fl_txt_mv Sim
dc.description.status.pt_BR.fl_txt_mv Publicado
description We reasoned that by identifying genetic markers on human X chromosome regions where recombination is rare or absent, we should be able to construct X chromosome genealogies analogous to those based on Y chromosome and mitochondrial DNA polymorphisms, with the advantage of providing information about both male and female components of the population. Methodology/Principal Findings. We identified a 47 Kb interval containing an Alu insertion polymorphism (DXS225) and four microsatellites in complete linkage disequilibrium in a low recombination rate region of the long arm of the human X chromosome. This haplotype block was studied in 667 males from the HGDP-CEPH Human Genome Diversity Panel. The haplotypic diversity was highest in Africa (0.99260.0025) and lowest in the Americas (0.83960.0378), where no insertion alleles of DXS225 were observed. Africa shared few haplotypes with other geographical areas, while those exhibited significant sharing among themselves. Median joining networks revealed that the African haplotypes were numerous, occupied the periphery of the graph and had low frequency, whereas those from the other continents were few, central and had high frequency. Altogether, our data support a single origin of modern man in Africa and migration to occupy the other continents by serial founder effects. Coalescent analysis permitted estimation of the time of the most recent common ancestor as 182,000 years (56,700–479,000) and the estimated time of the DXS225 Alu insertion of 94,400 years (24,300–310,000). These dates are fully compatible with the current widely accepted scenario of the origin of modern mankind in Africa within the last 195,000 years and migration out-of-Africa circa 55,000–65,000 years ago. Conclusions/Significance. A haplotypic block combining an Alu insertion polymorphism and four microsatellite markers on the human X chromosome is a useful marker to evaluate genetic diversity of human populations and provides a highly informative tool for evolutionary studies.
publishDate 2007
dc.date.issued.fl_str_mv 2007
dc.date.accessioned.fl_str_mv 2016-10-10T03:51:27Z
dc.date.available.fl_str_mv 2016-10-10T03:51:27Z
dc.type.status.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
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dc.identifier.citation.fl_str_mv SANTOS-LOPES, Simone S. et al. A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome. PLoS ONE, v.2, n.6, 2007.
dc.identifier.uri.fl_str_mv http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/204
https://repositorio.ucb.br:9443/jspui/handle/123456789/7427
identifier_str_mv SANTOS-LOPES, Simone S. et al. A worldwide phytogeography for the human X chromosome. PLoS ONE, v.2, n.6, 2007.
url http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/204
https://repositorio.ucb.br:9443/jspui/handle/123456789/7427
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