University of Leicester
Browse

Recent male-mediated gene flow over a linguistic barrier in Iberia, suggested by analysis of a Y-chromosomal DNA polymorphism

Download (408.57 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2007-05-04, 09:10 authored by Matthew E. Hurles, R. Veitia, Eduardo Arroyo, M. Armenteros, J. Bertranpetit, A. Perez-Lezaun, Elena Bosch, M. Shlumukova, A. Cambon-Thomsen, Ken McElreavey, A. Lopez De Munain, A. Rohl, I.J. Wilson, L. Singh, Arpita Pandya, Fabricio R. Santos, Chris Tyler-Smith, Mark A. Jobling
We have examined the worldwide distribution of a Y-chromosomal base-substitution polymorphism, the T/C transition at SRY-2627, where the T allele defines haplogroup 22; sequencing of primate homologues shows that the ancestral state cannot be determined unambiguously but is probably the C allele. Of 1,191 human Y chromosomes analyzed, 33 belong to haplogroup 22. Twenty-nine come from Iberia, and the highest frequencies are in Basques (11%; n=117) and Catalans (22%; n=32). Microsatellite and minisatellite (MSY1) diversity analysis shows that non-Iberian haplogroup-22 chromosomes are not significantly different from Iberian ones. The simplest interpretation of these data is that haplogroup 22 arose in Iberia and that non-Iberian cases reflect Iberian emigrants. Several different methods were used to date the origin of the polymorphism: microsatellite data gave ages of 1,650, 2,700, 3,100, or 3,450 years, and MSY1 gave ages of 1,000, 2,300, or 2,650 years, although 95% confidence intervals on all of these figures are wide. The age of the split between Basque and Catalan haplogroup-22 chromosomes was calculated as only 20% of the age of the lineage as a whole. This study thus provides evidence for direct or indirect gene flow over the substantial linguistic barrier between the Indo-European and non-Indo-European-speaking populations of the Catalans and the Basques, during the past few thousand years.

History

Citation

American Journal of Human Genetics, 1999, 65, pp. 1437-1448.

Published in

American Journal of Human Genetics

Publisher

University of Chicago Press

Available date

2007-05-04

Notes

This is the version as published in the American Journal of Human Genetics by the University Of Chicago Press. Their website is http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/AJHG.home.html

Language

en

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC