Enlarging the gene-geography of Europe and the Mediterranean area to STR loci of common forensic use: longitudinal and latitudinal frequency gradients
Language English Country England, Great Britain Media print
Document type Journal Article
- Keywords
- Mediterranean, Population structuring, allele frequency gradients, inbreeding, spatial PCA,
- MeSH
- Gene Frequency * MeSH
- Genetic Variation * MeSH
- Genotype * MeSH
- Microsatellite Repeats * MeSH
- Genetics, Population MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Geographicals
- Africa, Northern MeSH
- Middle East MeSH
- Mediterranean Region MeSH
BACKGROUND: Tetranucleotide Short Tandem Repeats (STRs) for human identification and common use in forensic cases have recently been used to address the population genetics of the North-Eastern Mediterranean area. However, to gain confidence in the inferences made using STRs, this kind of analysis should be challenged with changes in three main aspects of the data, i.e. the sizes of the samples, their distance across space and the genetic background from which they are drawn. AIM: To test the resilience of the gradients previously detected in the North-Eastern Mediterranean to the enlargement of the surveyed area and population set, using revised data. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: STR genotype profiles were obtained from a publicly available database (PopAffilietor databank) and a dataset was assembled including >7000 subjects from the Arabian Peninsula to Scandinavia, genotyped at eight loci. Spatial principal component analysis (sPCA) was applied and the frequency maps of the nine alleles which contributed most strongly to sPC1 were examined in detail. RESULTS: By far the greatest part of diversity was summarised by a single spatial principal component (sPC1), oriented along a SouthEast-to-NorthWest axis. The alleles with the top 5% squared loadings were TH01(9.3), D19S433(14), TH01(6), D19S433(15.2), FGA(20), FGA(24), D3S1358(14), FGA(21) and D2S1338(19). These results confirm a clinal pattern over the whole range for at least four loci (TH01, D19S433, FGA, D3S1358). CONCLUSIONS: Four of the eight STR loci (or even alleles) considered here can reproducibly capture continental arrangements of diversity. This would, in principle, allow for the exploitation of forensic data to clarify important aspects in the formation of local gene pools.
b Pediatrics Department TOBB Economy and Technology University Hospital Ankara Turkey
c National Center for Thalassemias Athens Greece
Department of Biology University of Rome Tor Vergata Rome Italy
Department of Forensic Sciences University of Crete School of Medicine Heraklion Crete Greece
e Institute of Hematology and Blood Transfusion Praha Czech Republic
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