Dergi makalesi Açık Erişim

Human inbreeding has decreased in time through the Holocene

   Ceballos, Francisco C.; Gurun, Kanat; Altinisik, N. Ezgi; Gemici, Hasan Can; Karamurat, Cansu; Koptekin, Dilek; Vural, Kivilcim Basak; Mapelli, Igor; Saglican, Ekin; Surer, Elif; Erdal, Yilmaz Selim; Gotherstrom, Anders; Ozer, Fusun; Atakuman, Cigdem; Somel, Mehmet

The history of human inbreeding is controversial.(1) In particular, how the development of sedentary and/or agricultural societies may have influenced overall inbreeding levels, relative to those of hunter-gatherer communities, is unclear.(2-5) Here, we present an approach for reliable estimation of runs of homozygosity (ROHs) in genomes with >= 3x mean sequence coverage across >1 million SNPs and apply this to 411 ancient Eurasian genomes from the last 15,000 years.(5-34) We show that the frequency of inbreeding, as measured by ROHs, has decreased over time. The strongest effect is associated with the Neolithic transition, but the trend has since continued, indicating a population size effect on inbreeding prevalence. We further show that most inbreeding in our historical sample can be attributed to small population size instead of consanguinity. Cases of high consanguinity were rare and only observed among members of farming societies in our sample. Despite the lack of evidence for common consanguinity in our ancient sample, consanguineous traditions are today prevalent in various modem-day Eurasian societies,(1, 35-37) suggesting that such practices may have become widespread within the last few millennia.

Dosyalar (294 Bytes)
Dosya adı Boyutu
bib-d83d13f1-b5cc-4d5d-9e08-5385633e99a6.txt
md5:8a8c2802b288ba5c49cbae2e7596d26e
294 Bytes İndir
23
3
görüntülenme
indirilme
Görüntülenme 23
İndirme 3
Veri hacmi 882 Bytes
Tekil görüntülenme 22
Tekil indirme 3

Alıntı yap