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    Refining the Y chromosome phylogeny with southern African sequences

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    Refining the Y-chromosome Phylogeny manuscript.pdf (638.7Kb)
    Date
    2016
    Author
    Mpoloka, Sununguko Wata
    Barbieri, Chiara
    Hübner, Alexander
    Macholdt, Enrico
    Ni, Shengyu
    Lippold, Sebastian
    Schröder, Roland
    Purps, Josephine
    Roewer, Lutz
    Stoneking, Mark
    Pakendorf, Brigitte
    Publisher
    Springerlink, http://www.springer.com/
    Link
    DOI 10.1007/s00439-016-1651-0
    Type
    Published Article
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    Abstract
    The recent availability of large-scale sequence data for the human Y chromosome has revolutionized analyses of and insights gained from this non-recombining, paternally inherited chromosome. However, the studies to date focus on Eurasian variation, and hence the diversity of early-diverging branches found in Africa has not been adequately documented. Here, we analyze over 900 kb of Y chromosome sequence obtained from 547 individuals from southern African Khoisan- and Bantu-speaking populations, identifying 232 new sequences from basal haplogroups A and B. We identify new clades in the phylogeny, an older age for the root, and substantially older ages for some individual haplogroups. Furthermore, while haplogroup B2a is traditionally associated with the spread of Bantu speakers, we find that it probably also existed in Khoisan groups before the arrival of Bantu speakers. Finally, there is pronounced variation in branch length between major haplogroups; in particular, haplogroups associated with Bantu speakers have significantly longer branches. Technical artifacts cannot explain this branch length variation, which instead likely reflects aspects of the demographic history of Bantu speakers, such as recent population expansion and an older average paternal age. The influence of demographic factors on branch length variation has broader implications both for the human Y phylogeny and for similar analyses of other species.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10311/1798
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    • Research articles (Dept of Biological Sciences) [78]

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