Larmuseau Maarten H D, Otten Gilles P P L, Decorte Ronny, Van Damme Philip, Moisse Matthieu
UZ Leuven, Laboratory of Forensic Genetics and Molecular Archaeology, Leuven, Belgium; KU Leuven, Forensic Biomedical Science, Department of Imaging & Pathology, Leuven, Belgium.
Leiden Observatory, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Forensic Sci Int Genet. 2017 Nov;31:e12-e16. doi: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2017.10.008. Epub 2017 Oct 28.
Y-chromosomal single nucleotide polymorphisms (Y-SNPs) represent a powerful tool in forensic research and casework, especially for inferring paternal ancestry of unknown perpetrators and unidentified bodies. However, the wealth of recently discovered Y-SNPs, the 'jungle' of different evolutionary lineage trees and nomenclatures, and the lack of population-wide data of many phylogenetically mapped Y-SNPs, limits the use of Y-SNPs in routine forensic approaches. Recently, a concise reference phylogeny of the human Y chromosome, the 'Minimal Reference Y-tree', was introduced aiming to provide a stable phylogeny with optimal global discrimination capacity by including the most resolving Y-SNPs. Here, we obtained a representative sample of 270 whole-genome sequences (WGS) to grasp the Y-SNP variation within the autochthonous Flemish population (Belgium, Western Europe) according to this reference Y-tree. The high quality of the Y-SNP calling was guaranteed for the WGS sample as well as its representativeness for the Flemish population based on the comparison of the main haplogroup frequencies with those from earlier studies on Flanders and the Netherlands. The 270 Flemish Y chromosomes were assigned to 98 different sub-haplogroups of the Minimal Reference Y-tree, showing its high potential of discrimination and confirming the spectrum of evolutionary lineages within Western Europe in general and within Flanders in particular. The full database with all Y-SNP calls of the Flemish sample is public available for future updates including forensic and population genetic studies. New initiatives to categorise Y-SNP variation in other populations according to the reference phylogeny of the Y chromosome are highly encouraged for forensic applications. Recommendations to realise such future population sample sets are discussed based on this study.
Y染色体单核苷酸多态性(Y-SNPs)是法医研究和实际案件工作中的有力工具,尤其适用于推断未知犯罪者和身份不明尸体的父系血统。然而,最近发现的大量Y-SNPs、不同进化谱系树和命名法的“丛林”,以及许多系统发育映射的Y-SNPs缺乏全人群数据,限制了Y-SNPs在常规法医方法中的应用。最近,引入了一种简洁的人类Y染色体参考系统发育树,即“最小参考Y树”,旨在通过纳入最具分辨力的Y-SNPs,提供具有最佳全球鉴别能力的稳定系统发育树。在此,我们根据这一参考Y树获得了270个全基因组序列(WGS)的代表性样本,以掌握比利时(西欧)弗拉芒本土人群中的Y-SNP变异情况。基于主要单倍群频率与佛兰德斯和荷兰早期研究结果的比较,保证了WGS样本的Y-SNP分型质量及其对弗拉芒人群的代表性。这270条弗拉芒Y染色体被归入最小参考Y树的98个不同亚单倍群,显示出其高度的鉴别潜力,并证实了一般西欧尤其是弗拉芒地区内进化谱系的范围。包含弗拉芒样本所有Y-SNP分型的完整数据库可供公众使用,以供未来包括法医和群体遗传学研究在内的更新。强烈鼓励根据Y染色体参考系统发育对其他人群中的Y-SNP变异进行分类的新举措,以用于法医应用。基于本研究讨论了实现此类未来人群样本集的建议。