Context: Due to its unique paternal inheritance, the Y-chromosome has been a highly popular marker among population geneticists for over two decades. Recently, the advent of cost-effective genome-wide methods has unlocked information-rich autosomal genomic data, paving the way to the postgenomic era. This seems to have announced the decreasing popularity of investigating Y-chromosome variation, which provides only the paternal perspective of human ancestries and is strongly influenced by genetic drift and social behaviour.Objective: For this special issue on population genetics of the Mediterranean, the aim was to demonstrate that the Y-chromosome still provides important insights in the postgenomic era and in a time when ancient genomes are becoming exponentially available.Methods: A systematic literature search on Y-chromosomal studies in the Mediterranean was performed.Results: Several applications of Y-chromosomal analysis with future opportunities are formulated and illustrated with studies on Mediterranean populations.Conclusions: There will be no reduced interest in Y-chromosomal studies going from reconstruction of male-specific demographic events to ancient DNA applications, surname history and population-wide estimations of extra-pair paternity rates. Moreover, more initiatives are required to collect population genetic data of Y-chromosomal markers for forensic research, and to include Y-chromosomal data in GWAS investigations and studies on male infertility.

Larmuseau, M., Ottoni, C. (2018). Mediterranean Y-chromosome 2.0—why the Y in the Mediterranean is still relevant in the postgenomic era. ANNALS OF HUMAN BIOLOGY, 45(1), 20-33 [10.1080/03014460.2017.1402956].

Mediterranean Y-chromosome 2.0—why the Y in the Mediterranean is still relevant in the postgenomic era

Ottoni C.
2018-01-01

Abstract

Context: Due to its unique paternal inheritance, the Y-chromosome has been a highly popular marker among population geneticists for over two decades. Recently, the advent of cost-effective genome-wide methods has unlocked information-rich autosomal genomic data, paving the way to the postgenomic era. This seems to have announced the decreasing popularity of investigating Y-chromosome variation, which provides only the paternal perspective of human ancestries and is strongly influenced by genetic drift and social behaviour.Objective: For this special issue on population genetics of the Mediterranean, the aim was to demonstrate that the Y-chromosome still provides important insights in the postgenomic era and in a time when ancient genomes are becoming exponentially available.Methods: A systematic literature search on Y-chromosomal studies in the Mediterranean was performed.Results: Several applications of Y-chromosomal analysis with future opportunities are formulated and illustrated with studies on Mediterranean populations.Conclusions: There will be no reduced interest in Y-chromosomal studies going from reconstruction of male-specific demographic events to ancient DNA applications, surname history and population-wide estimations of extra-pair paternity rates. Moreover, more initiatives are required to collect population genetic data of Y-chromosomal markers for forensic research, and to include Y-chromosomal data in GWAS investigations and studies on male infertility.
2018
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore BIO/08 - ANTROPOLOGIA
English
Mediterranean
Y-chromosome
extra-pair paternity
forensics
population genetics
surnames
Africa, Northern
Chromosomes, Human, Y
Humans
Male
Mediterranean Region
Middle East
Demography
Human Migration
Larmuseau, M., Ottoni, C. (2018). Mediterranean Y-chromosome 2.0—why the Y in the Mediterranean is still relevant in the postgenomic era. ANNALS OF HUMAN BIOLOGY, 45(1), 20-33 [10.1080/03014460.2017.1402956].
Larmuseau, Mhd; Ottoni, C
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/288687
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