2012
DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2012.59
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Afghanistan from a Y-chromosome perspective

Abstract: Central Asia has served as a corridor for human migrations providing trading routes since ancient times. It has functioned as a conduit connecting Europe and the Middle East with South Asia and far Eastern civilizations. Therefore, the study of populations in this region is essential for a comprehensive understanding of early human dispersal on the Eurasian continent. Although Y-chromosome distributions in Central Asia have been widely surveyed, present-day Afghanistan remains poorly characterized genetically.… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…One of the important sub-haplogroups includes the C3b2b1-M401 lineage that is amplified in Hazara, Kyrgyz and Mongol populations. Haplogroup G2c-M377 reaches 14.7% in Pashtun, consistent with previous results [31], whereas it is virtually absent from all other populations. J2a1-Page55 is found in 23% of Iranians, 13% of the Hazara from the Hindu Kush, 11% of the Tajik and Uzbek from the Hindu Kush, 10% of Pakistanis, 4% of the Turkmen from the Hindu Kush, 3% of the Pashtun and 2% of the Kyrgyz and Mongol populations.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…One of the important sub-haplogroups includes the C3b2b1-M401 lineage that is amplified in Hazara, Kyrgyz and Mongol populations. Haplogroup G2c-M377 reaches 14.7% in Pashtun, consistent with previous results [31], whereas it is virtually absent from all other populations. J2a1-Page55 is found in 23% of Iranians, 13% of the Hazara from the Hindu Kush, 11% of the Tajik and Uzbek from the Hindu Kush, 10% of Pakistanis, 4% of the Turkmen from the Hindu Kush, 3% of the Pashtun and 2% of the Kyrgyz and Mongol populations.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 92%
“…This region has been proposed to be the source of waves of migration leading into Europe, the Americas and India [36]. In such a context, the Y-chromosome studies conducted in Afghanistan by Lacau et al [30], [31] concluded that North Hindu Kush populations display some degree of genetic isolation compared to those in the South, and that Afghan paternal lineages reflect the consequences of pastoralism and recent historical events. However, these studies focused on the Pashtun and our results showed that this ethnic group is not representative of the other Afghan populations.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Also, most terminal West-Asian haplotypes germinate from other WestAsian collections. This is not surprising considering that the R1a1a-M198 mutation arose in either East Europe 8,21,22 or, alternately, a southern region of Central Asia 13,23 and is, today, very common in West Asia. As expected, and as we recently reported for Central and SouthAsian individuals, 23 the majority of the R1a1a-M198 Ladakh individuals (100% or 35/35) were R-Z93 (the Asian subclade).…”
Section: Phylogeography Of Y Haplogroups/haplotypesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…8 Amplification reactions, capillary gel electrophoresis, size comparison, analytical designations were performed as indicated in a previous publication. 7 …”
Section: Y-str Genotypingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The second largest ethnic group, Pathan (Pushtun), inhabits the area near the West Indus River in the province of Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. Subsets from the Pathan ethnic group seem to originate from European Greeks (24,25) and Afghans (26). The recent genome sequencing of one male Pathan from the North-West Province of Pakistan confirmed the admixture between European and Asian lineages (27).…”
Section: Population Geneticsmentioning
confidence: 89%