Microsatellite Data Support an Early Population Expansion in Africa
Open Access
- 1 June 1997
- journal article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genome Research
- Vol. 7 (6) , 586-591
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gr.7.6.586
Abstract
We have developed a method for the analysis of microsatellite data that is useful in the elucidation of the demographic history of populations. This method, the PK distribution method of pairwise comparisons, is analogous to the mismatch distribution of sequence comparisons developed for the analysis of mitochondrial sequence data by Rodgers and Harpending and is defined as the distribution of the number of repeat unit differences between alleles when each allele in a sample is compared with every other allele in the sample. Using computer simulations of microsatellite loci, we show that the shape of the distribution of PK changes in a distinctive manner as a function either of time since population expansion or effective population size. Increases in both of these affect the PK distribution in a similar fashion leading to a change from a steep distribution with a P0 peak to one with a nonzero peak. Analysis of three data sets from surveys of microsatellite loci in ethnographically defined populations reveals that most (9/12) of the African populations analyzed, but none of the 30 non-African populations showed PK distributions with nonzero peaks. These PK distributions indicate either an earlier expansion or a larger effective population size for African populations. This observation is consistent with the hypothesized African origin of modern human.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relative mutation rates at di-, tri-, and tetranucleotide microsatellite lociProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1997
- Genetic absolute dating based on microsatellites and the origin of modern humans.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1995
- Intra‐ and inter‐population diversity at short tandem repeat loci in diverse populations of the worldElectrophoresis, 1995
- Inference of human evolution through cladistic analysis of nuclear DNA restriction polymorphisms.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- Mutational processes of simple-sequence repeat loci in human populations.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- High resolution of human evolutionary trees with polymorphic microsatellitesNature, 1994
- Mutation of human short tandem repeatsHuman Molecular Genetics, 1993
- Reconstruction of human evolution: bringing together genetic, archaeological, and linguistic data.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1988
- Mitochondrial DNA and human evolutionNature, 1987
- Wandering distributions and the electrophoretic profileTheoretical Population Biology, 1975