The Y-chromosome tree bursts into leaf: 13,000 high-confidence SNPs covering the majority of known clades

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Abstract

Many studies of human populations have used themale-specific region of the Y chromosome (MSY) as amarker, butMSY sequence variants have traditionally been subject to ascertainment bias.Also, dating of haplogroupshas relied onY-specific short tandem repeats (STRs), involving problems of mutation rate choice, and possible long-term mutation saturation. Next-generation sequencing can ascertain single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in an unbiased way, leading to phylogenies in which branch-lengths are proportional to time, and allowing the times-to-most-recent-common-ancestor (TMRCAs) of nodes to be estimated directly. Here we describe the sequencing of 3.7Mb of MSY in each of 448 human males at a mean coverage of 51, yielding 13,261 high-confidence SNPs, 65.9% of which are previously unreported. The resulting phylogeny covers the majority of the known clades, provides date estimates of nodes, and constitutes a robust evolutionary framework for analyzing the history of other classes of mutation. Different clades within the tree show subtle but significant differences in branch lengths to the root. We also apply a set of 23 Y-STRs to the same samples, allowing SNP- and STR-based diversity and TMRCA estimates to be systematically compared. Ongoing purifying selection is suggested by our analysis of the phylogenetic distribution of nonsynonymous variants in 15 MSY single-copy genes.

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Hallast, P., Batini, C., Zadik, D., Delser, P. M., Wetton, J. H., Arroyo-Pardo, E., … Jobling, M. A. (2014). The Y-chromosome tree bursts into leaf: 13,000 high-confidence SNPs covering the majority of known clades. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 32(3), 661–673. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msu327

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