An investigation of admixture in an Australian Aboriginal Y-chromosome STR database

被引:16
作者
Taylor, Duncan [2 ]
Nagle, Nano [1 ]
Ballantyne, Kaye N. [3 ]
van Oorschot, Roland A. H. [3 ]
Wilcox, Stephen [4 ]
Henry, Julianne [2 ]
Turakulov, Rust [4 ]
Mitchell, R. John [1 ]
机构
[1] La Trobe Univ, Sch Mol Sci, Dept Genet, Bundoora, Vic 3086, Australia
[2] Forens Sci SA, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia
[3] Victoria Police Forens Serv Dept, Melbourne, Vic 3085, Australia
[4] Australian Genome Res Facil Ltd, Parkville, Vic 3050, Australia
关键词
Y chromosome; Haplogroup; Y-STR haplotypes; Admixture; Australian Aboriginals; SNP; HAPLOGROUP PREDICTIONS; DIVERSITY; RESOLUTION; SOFTWARE; ARTICLE; WORD; DNA;
D O I
10.1016/j.fsigen.2012.01.001
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Y-chromosome specific STR profiling is increasingly used in forensic casework. However, the strong geographic clustering of Y haplogroups can lead to large differences in Y-STR haplotype frequencies between different ethnicities, which may have an impact on database composition in admixed populations. Aboriginal people have inhabited Australia for over 40,000 years and until similar to 300 years ago they lived in almost complete isolation. Since the late 18th century Australia has experienced massive immigration, mainly from Europe, although in recent times from more widespread origins. This colonisation resulted in highly asymmetrical admixture between the immigrants and the indigenes. A State jurisdiction within Australia has created an Aboriginal Y-STR database in which assignment of ethnicity was by self-declaration. This criterion means that some males who identify culturally as members of a particular ethnic group may have a Y haplogroup characteristic of another ethnic group, as a result of admixture in their paternal line. As this may be frequent in Australia, an examination of the extent of genetic admixture within the database was performed. A Y haplogroup predictor program was first used to identify Y haplotypes that could be assigned to a European haplogroup. Of the 757 males (589 unique haplotypes), 445 (58.8%) were identified as European (354 haplotypes). The 312 non-assigned males (235 haplotypes) were then typed, in a hierarchical fashion, with a Y-SNP panel that detected the major Y haplogroups, C-S, as well as the Aboriginal subgroup of C, C4. Among these 96 males were found to have non-Aboriginal haplogroups. In total, similar to 70% of Y chromosomes in the Aboriginal database could be classed as non-indigenous, with only 169 (129 unique haplotypes) or 22% of the total being associated with haplogroups denoting Aboriginal ancestry, C4 and K* or more correctly K(xL,M,N,O,P,Q,R,S). The relative frequencies of these indigenous haplogroups in South Australia (S. A.) were significantly different to those seen in samples from the Northern Territory and Western Australia. In S. A., K* (similar to 60%) has a much higher frequency than C4 (similar to 40%), and the subgroup of C4, C4(DYS390.1del), comprised only 17%. Clearly admixture in the paternal line is at high levels among males who identify themselves as Australian Aboriginals and this knowledge may have implications for the compilation and use of Y-STR databases in frequency estimates. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:532 / 538
页数:7
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