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Genetic Structure of the Ancestral Population of Modern Humans
Authors:Ewa Zi?tkiewicz  Vania Yotova  Michal Jarnik  Maria Korab-Laskowska  Kenneth K Kidd  David Modiano  Rosaria Scozzari  Mark Stoneking  Sarah Tishkoff  Mark Batzer  Damian Labuda
Institution:Centre de Recherche de l'H?pital Sainte-Justine, Centre de Cancérologie Charles Bruneau, Département de Pédiatrie, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, H3T-1C5 Canada, CA
Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT 06510, USA, US
Fondazione Pasteur Cenci-Bolognetti, Istituto di Parassitologia, Universita ``La Sapienza,' P. le A. Moro 5, 00185 Rome, Italy, IT
Dipartimento Genetica e Biologia Molecolare, Universita ``La Sapienza,' P. le A. Moro 5, 00185 Rome, Italy, IT
Department of Anthropology, Penn State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA, US
Department of Pathology, Stanley S. Scott Cancer Center, Louisiana State University Medical Center, 1901 Perdido Street, New Orleans, LA 70112, USA, US
Abstract:Neutral DNA polymorphisms from an 8-kb segment of the dystrophin gene, previously ascertained in a worldwide sample (n= 250 chromosomes), were used to characterize the population ancestral to the present-day human groups. The ancestral state of each polymorphic site was determined by comparing human variants with their orthologous sites in the great apes. The ``age before fixation' of the underlying mutations was estimated from the frequencies of the new alleles and analyzed in the context of these polymorphisms' distribution among 13 populations from Africa, Europe, Asia, New Guinea, and the Americas (n= 860 chromosomes in total). Seventeen polymorphisms older tan 100,000–200,000 years, which contributed ∼90% to the overall nucleotide diversity, were common to all human groups. Polymorphisms endemic to human groups or continentally restricted were younger than 100,000–200,000 years. Africans (six populations) with 13 such sites stood out from the rest of the world (seven populations), where only 2 population-specific variants were observed. The similarity of the frequencies of the old polymorphisms in Africans and non-Africans suggested a similar profile of genetic variability in the population before the modern human's divergence. This ancestral population was characterized by an effective size of about 10,000 as estimated from the nucleotide diversity; this size may describe the number of breeding individuals over a long time during the Middle Pleistocene or reflect a speciation bottleneck from an initially larger population at the end of this period. Received: 3 February 1998 / Accepted: 9 February 1998
Keywords:: Human evolution —  DNA polymorphisms —  Dystrophin locus —  Population size —  Neutral evolution —  Mutation rate
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