Abstract
We have already coamplified minimal haplotypes (DYS19, DYS389I, DYS389II, DYS390, DYS391, DYS392, DYS393, DYS385I/II), two additional loci, namely, DYS438, DYS439, and Amelogenin, in a single PCR using the Y-PLEX 12 kit. We investigated 107 unrelated male individuals from the Uigur ethnic group and studied the allelic frequency distribution and haplotype diversity of 11 Y-chromosomal STRs. A number of 43 alleles (nine STR loci) and 27 phenotypes (including DYS385) were detected, with frequencies ranging from 0.0092 to 0.6296. A total of 103 haplotypes were identified, among which 99 were individual-specific and four haplotypes were found twice. The haplotype diversity for these 12 Y-STR loci was 0.9993.
References
Underhill PA, Jin L, Zemans R, Oefner PJ, Cavalli-Sforza LL (1996) A pre-Columbian Y chromosome-specific transition and its implications for human evolutionary history. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 93:196–200
Jobling MA, Pandya A, Tyler-Smith C (1997) The Y chromosome in forensic analysis and paternity testing. Int J Leg Med 110:118–124
Caglià C, Boschi I, Scarnicci F, Dobosz M, Underhill P, Pascali VL, Capelli C (2003) High-resolution analysis of male genomes by the addition of nine biallelic polymorphisms to the classic 8-STR forensic haplotype. Int Congr Ser 1239:307–331
Kyoung DK, Han JJ, Dong JS, Jung MK, Lutz R, Michael K, Chris TS, Wook K (2005) Y-chromosomal STR haplotypes and their application to forensic and population studies in East Asia. Int J Leg Med (in press)
Tang JP, Hou YP, Li YB, Wu J, Zhang J, Zhang HJ (2003) Characterization of eight Y-STR loci and haplotypes in a Chinese Han population. Int J Leg Med 117:263–270
Kayser M, Caglia A, Corach DM, Fretwell N, Gehrig C, Graziosi G, Heidorn F, Herrmann S, Herzog B, Hidding M, Honda K, Jobling M, Krawczak M, Leim K, Meuser S, Meyer E, Oesterreich W, Pandya A, Parson W, Penacino G, Perez-Lezaun A, Piccinini A, Prinz M, Schmitt C, Schneider PM, Szibor R, Teifel-Greding J, Weichhol G, de Knijff P, Roewer L (1997) Evaluation of Y-chromosomal STRs: a multicenter study. Int J Leg Med 110:125–133
Walsh PS, Metzger DA, Higuchi R (1991) Chelex 100 as a medium for simple extraction of DNA for PCR-based from forensic material. BioTechniques 4:506–513
Nei M (1987) Molecular evolutionary genetics. Columbia University Press, New York
Li WS, Hu L, Chen S, Qiu N (2004) 10 Y-STRs haplotypes in Chinese. Forensic Sci Int 139:85–88
Tsai LC, Yuen TY, Hsieh HM, Lin M, Tzeng CH, Huang NE, Linacre A, Lee JC-I (2002) Haplotype frequencies of nine Y-chromosome STR loci in the Taiwanese Han population. Int J Leg Med 116:179–183
Martín P, García-Hirschfeld J, García O, Gusmão L, García P, Albarrán C, Sancho M, Alonso A (2004) A Spanish population study of 17 Y-chromosome STR loci. Forensic Sci Int 139:231–235
Lee HY, Oh J-E, Han G-R, Shin K-J (2003) Allele frequencies and haplotypes of six new Y-specific STR loci in Koreans. Forensic Sci Int 136:89–91
Hadi çakır A, çelebioğlu A, Yardımcı E (2004) Y-STR haplotypes in central Anatolia region of Turkey. Forensic Sci Int 144:59–64
Zhu BF, Li XS, Wang ZY, Wu HY, He YF, Zhao J, Liu Y, Y-STRs haplotypes of Chinese Mongol ethnic group using Y-PLEX 12. Forensic Sci Int (in press)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Zhu, B.F., Wang, Z.Y., Yang, C.H. et al. Y-chromosomal STR haplotypes in Chinese Uigur ethnic group. Int J Legal Med 119, 306–309 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00414-005-0549-5
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00414-005-0549-5