2014
DOI: 10.1101/001792
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Human paternal and maternal demographic histories: insights from high-resolution Y chromosome and mtDNA sequences

Abstract: Background: Comparisons of maternally-inherited mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and paternally-inherited non-recombining Y chromosome (NRY) variation have provided important insights into the impact of sex-biased processes (such as migration, residence pattern, and so on) on human genetic variation. However, such comparisons have been limited by the different molecular methods typically used to assay mtDNA and NRY variation (for example, sequencing hypervariable segments of the control region for mtDNA vs. genotypin… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…alignment to the reference genome) possible only in the unique regions of the chromosome; these discontinuous segments dispersed along the MSY add up to about 10 Mb in total length (Box 1). Some studies have enriched specifically for 0.5-3.7-Mb subsets of these regions [22][23][24] , whereas others have sequenced the entire genome and subsequently extracted the relevant reads bioinformatically 4,20,[25][26][27] . Sequencing depth (the number of sequence reads covering a particular genomic position) is also important, because the low depth used in several early studies is likely to result in less efficient discovery of rare variants that are present in just one or a few individuals; as these variants lie on terminal branches of the phylogeny, such branches would be that occur in the male germline 132 .…”
Section: Technological Transformation Sequence-based Phylogeniesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…alignment to the reference genome) possible only in the unique regions of the chromosome; these discontinuous segments dispersed along the MSY add up to about 10 Mb in total length (Box 1). Some studies have enriched specifically for 0.5-3.7-Mb subsets of these regions [22][23][24] , whereas others have sequenced the entire genome and subsequently extracted the relevant reads bioinformatically 4,20,[25][26][27] . Sequencing depth (the number of sequence reads covering a particular genomic position) is also important, because the low depth used in several early studies is likely to result in less efficient discovery of rare variants that are present in just one or a few individuals; as these variants lie on terminal branches of the phylogeny, such branches would be that occur in the male germline 132 .…”
Section: Technological Transformation Sequence-based Phylogeniesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies suggest that sex-specific processes throughout paternal and maternal history indicate consistently larger effective population sizes for females than for males, which are roughly half that of females [62][63][64] . Higher variance of male reproductive success, existence of polygyny, and warfare with high male mortality rates may have produced different male versus female demographic histories in the Daghestani highlands.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Mongolian and Manchu samples [19] ; M401 and M546 were found in Mongolian and many related populations, especially the "star cluster", which was suspected to be the clan of Genghis Khan, also belongs to the clade C3b2b1-M401 [18] ( Fig. 3); and F5483/SK1074 from Orochon and Daur samples [20] .…”
Section: Among the 17-str Results Of All The 7 Testees 3 (A -A Descementioning
confidence: 99%