4.7 Article

An in-depth analysis of the mitochondrial phylogenetic landscape of Cambodia

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-90145-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Austrian Cancer Society/Tirol
  2. Osterreichische Nationalbank
  3. Tiroler Standortagentur

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This study presents the genetic diversity of Cambodia based on the maternal gene pool of 299 Cambodian refugees from three different ethnic groups. The research shows genetic isolation within the Cambodian population and the absence of genetic barriers between ethnic groups. The mtDNA data significantly increases the phylogenetic resolution in Cambodia, highlighting the need for updating the current human mtDNA phylogeny.
Cambodia harbours a variety of human aboriginal populations that have scarcely been studied in terms of genetic diversity of entire mitochondrial genomes. Here we present the matrilineal gene pool of 299 Cambodian refugees from three different ethnic groups (Cham, Khmer, and Khmer Loeu) deriving from 16 Cambodian districts. After establishing a DNA-saving high-throughput strategy for mitochondrial whole-genome Sanger sequencing, a HaploGrep based workflow was used for quality control, haplogroup classification and phylogenetic reconstruction. The application of diverse phylogenetic algorithms revealed an exciting picture of the genetic diversity of Cambodia, especially in relation to populations from Southeast Asia and from the whole world. A total of 224 unique haplotypes were identified, which were mostly classified under haplogroups B5a1, F1a1, or categorized as newly defined basal haplogroups or basal sub-branches of R, N and M clades. The presence of autochthonous maternal lineages could be confirmed as reported in previous studies. The exceptional homogeneity observed between and within the three investigated Cambodian ethnic groups indicates genetic isolation of the whole population. Between ethnicities, genetic barriers were not detected. The mtDNA data presented here increases the phylogenetic resolution in Cambodia significantly, thereby highlighting the need for an update of the current human mtDNA phylogeny.

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