Helgason A, Nicholson G, Stefánsson K, Donnelly P
deCODE Genetics, 101 Reykjavik, Iceland.
Ann Hum Genet. 2003 Jul;67(Pt 4):281-97. doi: 10.1046/j.1469-1809.2003.00046.x.
There has been some controversy in the literature concerning whether Icelanders are genetically homogenous or heterogeneous relative to other European populations. We reassess this question in the light of large data sets spanning 83 autosomal SNP loci, 14 serogenetic loci, 6622 Y-chromosomes and 3214 sequences from mtDNA hypervariable segments 1 and 2 (HVS1 and HVS2). Our results strongly support the hypothesis that genetic drift, with a consequent loss of variation, has had a greater impact on Icelanders than most other Europeans. We also analyse 7245 HVS1 sequences from 25 European populations. In line with other studies, we observe a deficit of rare HVS1 haplotypes and an excess of intermediate frequency haplotypes in Icelanders compared to most European populations, with some measures of genetic diversity indicating relative heterogeneity and others indicating relative homogeneity of Icelanders. Simulations indicate that genetic drift, and not admixture (as proposed by Arnason, 2003) is the most likely cause of the atypical Icelandic HVS1 frequency spectrum. These simulations reveal that gene diversity (heterozygosity) and mean pairwise differences are largely insensitive to events in recent population history, while statistics based on the number of haplotypes or segregating sites are much more sensitive. Overall, our analyses strongly indicate that the Icelandic gene pool is less heterogeneous than those of most other European populations.
关于冰岛人相对于其他欧洲人群在基因上是同质还是异质,文献中存在一些争议。我们根据涵盖83个常染色体单核苷酸多态性(SNP)位点、14个血清遗传学位点、6622条Y染色体以及来自线粒体DNA高变区1和2(HVS1和HVS2)的3214条序列的大型数据集,重新评估了这个问题。我们的结果有力地支持了以下假设:遗传漂变以及随之而来的变异丧失,对冰岛人的影响比对大多数其他欧洲人的影响更大。我们还分析了来自25个欧洲人群的7245条HVS1序列。与其他研究一致,我们观察到与大多数欧洲人群相比,冰岛人罕见的HVS1单倍型不足,中频单倍型过剩,一些遗传多样性指标表明冰岛人相对异质,而另一些指标则表明冰岛人相对同质。模拟表明,遗传漂变而非混合(如Arnason在2003年所提出的)是冰岛人非典型HVS1频率谱的最可能原因。这些模拟揭示,基因多样性(杂合性)和平均成对差异在很大程度上对近期种群历史中的事件不敏感,而基于单倍型数量或分离位点的统计则更为敏感。总体而言,我们的分析有力地表明,冰岛的基因库比大多数其他欧洲人群的基因库异质性更低。