4.4 Article

Consistent treatment of length variants in the human mtDNA control region: a reappraisal

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LEGAL MEDICINE
Volume 122, Issue 1, Pages 11-21

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00414-006-0151-5

Keywords

mitochondrial DNA; haplogroup; alignment; phylogeny

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In forensic science, as well as in molecular anthropology and medical genetics, human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation is being recorded by aligning mtDNA sequences to the revised Cambridge reference sequence (rCRS). This task is straightforward for the vast majority of nucleotide positions but appears to be difficult for some short sequence stretches, namely, in regions displaying length variation. Earlier guidelines for imposing a unique alignment relied on binary alignment to a standard sequence (the rCRS) and used additional priority rules for resolving ambiguities. It turns out, however, that these rules have not been applied rigorously and led to inconsistent nomenclature. There is no way to adapt the priority rules in a reasonable way because binary alignment to a standard sequence is bound to produce artificial alignments that may place sequences separated by a single mutation at mismatch distance larger than 1. To remedy the situation, we propose a phylogenetic approach for multiple alignment and resulting notation.

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