Literature DB >> 1840702

African populations and the evolution of human mitochondrial DNA.

L Vigilant1, M Stoneking, H Harpending, K Hawkes, A C Wilson.   

Abstract

The proposal that all mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) types in contemporary humans stem from a common ancestor present in an African population some 200,000 years ago has attracted much attention. To study this proposal further, two hypervariable segments of mtDNA were sequenced from 189 people of diverse geographic origin, including 121 native Africans. Geographic specificity was observed in that identical mtDNA types are shared within but not between populations. A tree relating these mtDNA sequences to one another and to a chimpanzee sequence has many deep branches leading exclusively to African mtDNAs. An African origin for human mtDNA is supported by two statistical tests. With the use of the chimpanzee and human sequences to calibrate the rate of mtDNA evolution, the age of the common human mtDNA ancestor is placed between 166,000 and 249,000 years. These results thus support and extend the African origin hypothesis of human mtDNA evolution.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1840702     DOI: 10.1126/science.1840702

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Science        ISSN: 0036-8075            Impact factor:   47.728


  263 in total

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5.  Why hunter-gatherer populations do not show signs of pleistocene demographic expansions.

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7.  The distribution of human genetic diversity: a comparison of mitochondrial, autosomal, and Y-chromosome data.

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8.  Recent common ancestry of human Y chromosomes: evidence from DNA sequence data.

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9.  Patterns of ancestral human diversity: an analysis of Alu-insertion and restriction-site polymorphisms.

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