Ancestry inference of 96 population samples using microhaplotypes
Date
2018Author
Pakstis, Andrew J.
Bulbul, Ozlem
Kidd, Kenneth K.
Soundararajan, Usha
GURKAN, Cemal
Brissenden, Jane E.
Roscoe, Janet M.
EVSANAA, Baigalmaa
TOGTOKH, Ariunaa
PASCHOU, Peristera
GRIGORENKO, Elena L.
Gurwitz, David
WOOTTON, Sharon
LAGACE, Robert
CHANG, Joseph
Speed, William C.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Microhaplotypes have become a new type of forensic marker with a great ability to identify and deconvolute mixtures because massively parallel sequencing (MPS) allows the alleles (haplotypes) of the multi-SNP loci to be determined directly for an individual. As originally defined, a microhaplotype locus is a short segment of DNA with two or more SNPs defining three or more haplotypes. The length is short enough, less than about 300 bp, that the read length of current MPS technology can produce a phase-known sequence of each chromosome of an individual. As part of the discovery phase of our studies, data on 130 microhaplotype loci with estimates of haplotype frequency data on 83 populations have been published. To provide a better picture of global allele frequency variation, we have now tested 13 more populations for 65 of the microhaplotype loci from among those with higher levels of inter-population gene frequency variation, including 8 loci not previously published. These loci provide clear distinctions among 6 biogeographic regions and provide some information distinguishing up to 10 clusters of populations.
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