Authors
Peter A Underhill, Peidong Shen, Alice A Lin, Li Jin, Giuseppe Passarino, Wei H Yang, Erin Kauffman, Batsheva Bonné-Tamir, Jaume Bertranpetit, Paolo Francalacci, Muntaser Ibrahim, Trefor Jenkins, Judith R Kidd, S Qasim Mehdi, Mark T Seielstad, R Spencer Wells, Alberto Piazza, Ronald W Davis, Marcus W Feldman, L Luca Cavalli-Sforza, Peter Oefner
Publication date
2000/11
Journal
Nature genetics
Volume
26
Issue
3
Pages
358-361
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Description
Binary polymorphisms associated with the non-recombining region of the human Y chromosome (NRY) preserve the paternal genetic legacy of our species that has persisted to the present, permitting inference of human evolution, population affinity and demographic history 1. We used denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC; ref. 2) to identify 160 of the 166 bi-allelic and 1 tri-allelic site that formed a parsimonious genealogy of 116 haplotypes, several of which display distinct population affinities based on the analysis of 1062 globally representative individuals. A minority of contemporary East Africans and Khoisan represent the descendants of the most ancestral patrilineages of anatomically modern humans that left Africa between 35,000 and 89,000 years ago.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
PA Underhill, P Shen, AA Lin, L Jin, G Passarino… - Nature genetics, 2000
PA Underhill, P Shen, AA Lin, L Jin, G Passarino… - B., Bertranpetit, J., Francalacci, P., Ibrahim, M., Jenkins …, 2000
PA Underhill, P Shen, AA Lin, L Jin - Yang WH, Kauffman E, BonneyTamir B, Bertranpetit J …, 2000