Author:
Watkins W. Scott,Rogers Alan R.,Ostler Christopher T.,Wooding Steve,Bamshad Michael J.,Brassington Anna-Marie E.,Carroll Marion L.,Nguyen Son V.,Walker Jerilyn A.,Prasad B.V. Ravi,Reddy P. Govinda,Das Pradipta K.,Batzer Mark A.,Jorde Lynn B.
Abstract
We examine the distribution and structure of human genetic diversity for
710 individuals representing 31 populations from Africa, East Asia, Europe,
and India using 100 Alu insertion polymorphisms from all 22
autosomes. Alu diversity is highest in Africans (0.349) and lowest in
Europeans (0.297). Alu insertion frequency is lowest in Africans
(0.463) and higher in Indians (0.544), E. Asians (0.557), and Europeans
(0.559). Large genetic distances are observed among African populations and
between African and non-African populations. The root of a neighbor-joining
network is located closest to the African populations. These findings are
consistent with an African origin of modern humans and with a bottleneck
effect in the human populations that left Africa to colonize the rest of the
world. Genetic distances among all pairs of populations show a significant
product-moment correlation with geographic distances (r = 0.69,
P < 0.00001). FST, the proportion of genetic diversity
attributable to population subdivision is 0.141 for Africans/E.
Asians/Europeans, 0.047 for E. Asians/Indians/Europeans, and 0.090 for all 31
populations. Resampling analyses show that ∼50 Alu polymorphisms
are sufficient to obtain accurate and reliable genetic distance estimates.
These analyses also demonstrate that markers with higher FST values
have greater resolving power and produce more consistent genetic distance
estimates.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
Cited by
182 articles.
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