TY - JOUR
T1 - Y-chromosomal DNA variation in Pakistan
AU - Qamar, Raheel
AU - Ayub, Qasim
AU - Mohyuddin, Aisha
AU - Helgason, Agnar
AU - Mazhar, Kehkashan
AU - Mansoor, Atika
AU - Zerjal, Tatiana
AU - Tyler-Smith, Chris
AU - Mehdi, S. Qasim
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by a Wellcome Trust Collaborative Research Initiative Grant to S.Q.M. T.Z. was also supported by The Wellcome Trust, and C.T.-S. by the Cancer Research Campaign. We express our appreciation to the original DNA donors who made this study possible. The Department of Health of the Government of Baluchistan and the Baluch Student Federation, Quetta, Pakistan, assisted in the collection of the Brahui and Baluch samples. Pathan samples were collected with the assistance of the Department of Paediatrics, Lady Reading Post Graduate Medical Hospital, Peshawar, Pakistan. We are also grateful to Dr. I. Kazmi and the Aga Khan Foundation Rural Health Support Program for their assistance in the collection of Burusho samples. Dr. F. Sethna provided valuable assistance in the collection of the Parsi samples. We thank Luis Quintana-Murci for his comments on the manuscript.
PY - 2002/5
Y1 - 2002/5
N2 - Eighteen binary polymorphisms and 16 multiallelic, short-tandem-repeat (STR) loci from the nonrecombining portion of the human Y chromosome were typed in 718 male subjects belonging to 12 ethnic groups of Pakistan. These identified 11 stable haplogroups and 503 combination binary marker/STR haplotypes. Haplogroup frequencies were generally similar to those in neighboring geographical areas, and the Pakistani populations speaking a language isolate (the Burushos), a Dravidian language (the Brahui), or a Sino-Tibetan language (the Balti) resembled the Indo-European-speaking majority. Nevertheless, median-joining networks of haplotypes revealed considerable substructuring of Y variation within Pakistan, with many populations showing distinct clusters of haplotypes. These patterns can be accounted for by a common pool of Y lineages, with substantial isolation between populations and drift in the smaller ones. Few comparative genetic or historical data are available for most populations, but the results can be compared with oral traditions about origins. The Y data support the well-established origin of the Parsis in Iran, the suggested descent of the Hazaras from Genghis Khan's army, and the origin of the Negroid Makrani in Africa, but do not support traditions of Tibetan, Syrian, Greek, or Jewish origins for other populations.
AB - Eighteen binary polymorphisms and 16 multiallelic, short-tandem-repeat (STR) loci from the nonrecombining portion of the human Y chromosome were typed in 718 male subjects belonging to 12 ethnic groups of Pakistan. These identified 11 stable haplogroups and 503 combination binary marker/STR haplotypes. Haplogroup frequencies were generally similar to those in neighboring geographical areas, and the Pakistani populations speaking a language isolate (the Burushos), a Dravidian language (the Brahui), or a Sino-Tibetan language (the Balti) resembled the Indo-European-speaking majority. Nevertheless, median-joining networks of haplotypes revealed considerable substructuring of Y variation within Pakistan, with many populations showing distinct clusters of haplotypes. These patterns can be accounted for by a common pool of Y lineages, with substantial isolation between populations and drift in the smaller ones. Few comparative genetic or historical data are available for most populations, but the results can be compared with oral traditions about origins. The Y data support the well-established origin of the Parsis in Iran, the suggested descent of the Hazaras from Genghis Khan's army, and the origin of the Negroid Makrani in Africa, but do not support traditions of Tibetan, Syrian, Greek, or Jewish origins for other populations.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0036238380&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1086/339929
DO - 10.1086/339929
M3 - Article
C2 - 11898125
AN - SCOPUS:0036238380
SN - 0002-9297
VL - 70
SP - 1107
EP - 1124
JO - American Journal of Human Genetics
JF - American Journal of Human Genetics
IS - 5
ER -