2010
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.21372
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Divergent patrilineal signals in three Roma populations

Abstract: Previous studies have revealed that the European Roma share close genetic, linguistic and cultural similarities with Indian populations despite their disparate geographical locations and divergent demographic histories. In this study, we report for the first time Y-chromosome distributions in three Roma collections residing in Belgrade, Vojvodina and Kosovo. Eighty-eight Y-chromosomes were typed for 14 SNPs and 17 STRs. The data were subsequently utilized for phylogenetic comparisons to pertinent reference col… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 59 publications
(92 reference statements)
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“…Hainan Li, an isolated population, experienced limited gene flows with surrounding populations by virtue of geography, history and culture. Such populations include the Andaman Islanders [203,204] and Sardinians [205][206][207] who maintained their unique allele frequency and phenotypic characteristics due to the geographic barriers; the Roma [178,208,209] and the Jews [210][211][212] have maintained genetic coherence over vast geographical distances because of their distinctive history and culture. Population isolation is more likely to generate population-specific haplotypes or lineages, allowing geneticists to trace population history.…”
Section: Discussion and Significancesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hainan Li, an isolated population, experienced limited gene flows with surrounding populations by virtue of geography, history and culture. Such populations include the Andaman Islanders [203,204] and Sardinians [205][206][207] who maintained their unique allele frequency and phenotypic characteristics due to the geographic barriers; the Roma [178,208,209] and the Jews [210][211][212] have maintained genetic coherence over vast geographical distances because of their distinctive history and culture. Population isolation is more likely to generate population-specific haplotypes or lineages, allowing geneticists to trace population history.…”
Section: Discussion and Significancesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast with the maternal lineages, where three South Asian-specific lineages were reported [16], the paternal lineage of Roma carries only a single currently discernible South Asian-specific Y-chromosomal founder hg H1a1a-M82, ranging from 10 to 60% frequency in various Roma populations [10], [17], [27][31]. The paternal ancestor of hg H1a1a-M82, viz.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is noteworthy that the most common haplotype representing the Roma cluster in the H1-M52 network ( Figure 6) matches the 7 Y-STR loci Romani Modal Haplotype (DYS19=15, DYS389I=14, DYS389II=16, DYS390=22, DYS391=10, DYS392=11, DYS393=12) (Gusmao et al, 2008;Regueiro et al, 2011). Interestingly, this haplotype differs from the other two South Asian representative haplotypes in the network ( Figure 6) by only one mutational step at DYS389I (13), suggesting their shared common ancestry (Gusmao et al, 2008;Regueiro et al, 2011) and recent dispersal of Roma from the Indian subcontinent (Fraser 1992).…”
Section: Ancient South Asian Lineagesmentioning
confidence: 69%
“…Interestingly, this haplotype differs from the other two South Asian representative haplotypes in the network ( Figure 6) by only one mutational step at DYS389I (13), suggesting their shared common ancestry (Gusmao et al, 2008;Regueiro et al, 2011) and recent dispersal of Roma from the Indian subcontinent (Fraser 1992). The considerable degree of haplotype diversity presented by south Indian H1-M52 chromosomes confirms their antiquity (Table 4) and possibly reflects an ancestral homeland for this marker (Sengupta et al, 2006).…”
Section: Ancient South Asian Lineagesmentioning
confidence: 70%
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