Recent spread of a Y-chromosomal lineage in northern China and Mongolia

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Abstract

We have identified a Y-chromosomal lineage that is unusually frequent in northeastern China and Mongolia, in which a haplotype cluster defined by 15 Y short tandem repeats was carried by ∼3.3% of the males sampled from East Asia. The most recent common ancestor of this lineage lived 590 ± 340 years ago (mean ± SD), and it was detected in Mongolians and six Chinese minority populations. We suggest that the lineage was spread by Qing Dynasty (1644-1912) nobility, who were a privileged elite sharing patrilineal descent from Giocangga (died 1582), the grandfather of Manchu leader Nurhaci, and whose documented members formed ∼0.4% of the minority population by the end of the dynasty. © 2005 by The American Society of Human Genetics. All rights reserved.

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Xue, Y., Zerjal, T., Bao, W., Zhu, S., Lim, S. K., Shu, Q., … Tyler-Smith, C. (2005). Recent spread of a Y-chromosomal lineage in northern China and Mongolia. American Journal of Human Genetics, 77(6), 1112–1116. https://doi.org/10.1086/498583

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