Chakraborty Ranajit, Deka Ranjan, Jin Li, Ferrell Robert E
Center for Demographic and Population Genetics, University of Texas Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Houston, Texas 77225.
Department of Human Genetics, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261.
Am J Hum Biol. 1992;4(3):387-397. doi: 10.1002/ajhb.1310040315.
Because of their high degree of polymorphisms, the variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) loci have become extremely useful in studies involving gene mapping, determination of identity and relatedness of individuals, and evolutionary relationships among populations. However, there are some concerns regarding whether or not the patterns of such genetic variation can be studied by the classical population models that are developed for studying genetic variation at blood groups and protein loci, since VNTR alleles detected by molecular size may not always be identical by descent. Although theoretical and empirical studies demonstrate that this concern is overstated, this study provides further support of the application of the traditional mutation-drift models to predict the pattern of intra- and inter-populational variation at VNTR loci. By comparing genetic variation at six VNTR loci with that at 16 blood groups and protein loci in three ethnically defined populations, we show that the patterns of variability at these two sets of loci are in general parallel to each other. Shared VNTR alleles among populations are generally more frequent than the ones which are not present in every population; the proportion of shared alleles among populations increases with increasing genetic similarity of populations; and the number of VNTR alleles is positively correlated with gene diversity at these loci. All of these observations are in agreement with the prediction of the mutation-drift models, particularly when the possibility of forward-backward mutations are taken into account. This parallelism of genetic variation at VNTR loci and blood groups/protein loci further asserts the potential of using such hypervariable loci for microevoltionary studies, where closely related populations may exhibit considerably less allele frequency differences at the classical blood group and protein loci. © 1992 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
由于其高度的多态性,串联重复可变数目(VNTR)位点在涉及基因图谱绘制、个体身份和亲缘关系的确定以及群体间进化关系的研究中变得极其有用。然而,对于是否可以通过为研究血型和蛋白质位点的遗传变异而开发的经典群体模型来研究这种遗传变异的模式存在一些担忧,因为通过分子大小检测到的VNTR等位基因不一定总是同源相同的。尽管理论和实证研究表明这种担忧有些夸大,但本研究为应用传统的突变 - 漂变模型来预测VNTR位点的群体内和群体间变异模式提供了进一步的支持。通过比较三个种族定义群体中六个VNTR位点的遗传变异与16个血型和蛋白质位点的遗传变异,我们表明这两组位点的变异模式总体上彼此平行。群体间共享的VNTR等位基因通常比在每个群体中都不存在的等位基因更频繁;群体间共享等位基因的比例随着群体遗传相似性的增加而增加;并且VNTR等位基因的数量与这些位点的基因多样性呈正相关。所有这些观察结果都与突变 - 漂变模型的预测一致,特别是当考虑到正向 - 反向突变的可能性时。VNTR位点与血型/蛋白质位点遗传变异的这种平行性进一步证实了使用这种高变位点进行微进化研究的潜力,在微进化研究中,亲缘关系密切的群体在经典血型和蛋白质位点上可能表现出相当小的等位基因频率差异。© 1992 Wiley - Liss, Inc.