A preliminary study on the origin of Koreans based on Y-STR variation

To investigate the origin of Koreans, we examined the 12-locus Y-chromosome short tandem repeat (Y-STR) variation in a sample of 310 unrelated males from three localities (Gochang, Andong and Geoje) in Korea and statistically analyzed the previously published four Y-STR databases (n = 1655) of Korea...

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Published in:Genes & genomics Vol. 32; no. 4; pp. 353 - 359
Main Authors: Kim, S.H., National Institute of Scientific Investigation, Seoul, Republic of Korea, Chun, B.W., National Institute of Scientific Investigation, Seoul, Republic of Korea, Jung, J.W., Ewha Womans University, Seoul, Republic of Korea, Kemp, Brian M., Washington State University, Pullman, WA, USA, Kwak, K.D., National Institute of Scientific Investigation, Seoul, Republic of Korea, Cho, N.S., National Institute of Scientific Investigation, Seoul, Republic of Korea, Kim, J.J., National Institute of Scientific Investigation, Seoul, Republic of Korea, Han, M.S., National Institute of Scientific Investigation, Seoul, Republic of Korea, Kim, W., Seoul National University, Seoul, Republic of Korea
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Heidelberg The Genetics Society of Korea 01-08-2010
한국유전학회
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Summary:To investigate the origin of Koreans, we examined the 12-locus Y-chromosome short tandem repeat (Y-STR) variation in a sample of 310 unrelated males from three localities (Gochang, Andong and Geoje) in Korea and statistically analyzed the previously published four Y-STR databases (n = 1655) of Korean population. The median joining network of 9-locus Y-STR haplotypes inferred as haplogroup O2b-SRY∧+465 showed a "star cluster" indicative of a population expansion from a centrally positioned haplotype. The central haplotype in the "star cluster" was the most frequently occurring Y-STR haplotype among the Korean male gene pool (6%, 127 of 1965, 10,14,12,13,14,16,13,13,23, for loci DYS391, DYS389I, DYS439, DYS438, DYS437, DYS19, DYS392, DYS393, and DYS390), which was shared among all seven datasets. Based on the "star cluster" pattern from both our data (41%, 128 of 310) and those previously published (34%, 563 of 1655), we suggest that the most frequent Y-STR haplotype among the Korean male gene pool seems to be the Korean modal (ancestral) haplotype. Further study with additional Y-STR and Y-SNP data of the east Asian populations as well as Korean population are needed to providing a genetic clue for the "star cluster" (O2b-SRY∧+465) associated with the ethnohistoric events of the Koreans.
Bibliography:A50
2011000505
G704-000317.2010.32.4.005
ISSN:1976-9571
2092-9293
DOI:10.1007/s13258-010-0030-9