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Gene Pool Structure of Eastern Ukrainians as Inferred from the Y-Chromosome Haplogroups
Authors:V. N. Kharkov  V. A. Stepanov  S. A. Borinskaya  Zh. M. Kozhekbaeva  V. A. Gusar  E. Ya. Grechanina  V. P. Puzyrev  E. K. Khusnutdinova  N. K. Yankovsky
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Medical Genetics, Tomsk Research Center, Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, Tomsk, 634050, Russia;(2) Vavilov Institute of General Genetics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, 119991, Russia;(3) Kharkov Inter-Regional Center for Medical Genetics and Prenathal Diagnostics, Kharkov, 61072, Ukraine;(4) Institute of Biochemistry and Genetics, Ufa Research Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, Ufa, 450054 Bashkortostan, Russia
Abstract:
Y chromosomes from representative sample of Eastern Ukrainians (94 individuals) were analyzed for composition and frequencies of haplogroups, defined by 11 biallelic loci located in non-recombining part of the chromosome (SRY1532, YAP, 92R7, DYF155S2, 12f2, Tat, M9, M17, M25,M89, andM56). In the Ukrainian gene, pool six haplogroups were revealed: E, F (including G and I), J, N3, P, and R1a1. These haplogroups were earlier detected in a study of Y-chromosome diversity on the territory of Europe as a whole. The major haplogroup in the Ukrainian gene pool, haplogroup R1a1 (earlier designated HG3), accounted for about 44% of all Y chromosomes in the sample examined. This haplogroup is thought to mark the migration patterns of the early Indo-Europeans and is associated with the distribution of the Kurgan archaeological culture. The second major haplogroup is haplogroup F (21.3%), which is a combination of the lineages differing by the time of appearance. Haplogroup P found with the frequency of 9.6%, represents the genetic contribution of the population originating from the ancient autochthonous population of Europe. Haplogroups J and E (11.7 and 4.2%, respectively) mark the migration patterns of the Middle-Eastern agriculturists during the Neolithic. The presence of the N3 lineage (9.6%) is likely explained by a contribution of the assimilated Finno–Ugric tribes. The data on the composition and frequencies of Y-chromosome haplogroups in the sample studied substantially supplement the existing picture of the male lineage distribution in the Eastern Slav population.
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