4.5 Article

Estimating sex-specific processes in human populations: Are XY-homologous markers an effective tool?

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HEREDITY
卷 96, 期 3, 页码 214-221

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.hdy.6800779

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XY-homologous regions; sex-specific processes; migration rate; effective population size; microsatellites; human populations

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Homologous markers on the sex-specific regions of the X-and Y-chromosomes are differentially inherited through males and females, and have similar molecular characteristics. They may therefore be useful as a complement to the comparison of mtDNA and Y-chromosomal haplotypes for estimating sex-specific processes shaping human population structure. To test this idea, we analyzed XY-homologous microsatellite diversity in 33 human populations from Africa, Asia and Europe. Interpopulation comparisons suggest that the generally discordant pattern of genetic variation observed for X- and Y-linked markers could be an outcome of sex-specific migration processes (m(females)/m(males)similar to 3) or sex-specific demographic processes (N-females/N-males similar to 11) or a combination of both. However, intrapopulation diversity estimated by the X/Y ratio Watterson estimator (theta(H(Y))/theta(H(X))) suggests that the scenarios required to explain the global genetic variation of XY-homologous markers are many and complex, and that the sex-specific processes ( effective population size and migration rate) shaping human population structures are likely to be specific to each population under study. XY-homologous markers provide an insight into the genuine complexity of sex-specific processes, and their further exploitation in human population studies seems worthwhile.

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