| Literature DB >> 27828728 |
Yuxin Guo1,2, Chunmei Shen3,4, Haotian Meng1,2, Qian Dong1,2, Tingting Kong1,2, Chunhua Yang1,5, Hongdan Wang6, Rui Jin7, Bofeng Zhu1,2.
Abstract
In recent years, Insertion/Deletion (InDel) polymorphisms have become a hot area of forensic research. In this study, 30 InDel loci were selected to investigate the genetic polymorphisms of Tibetan groups, which are from Tibet Autonomous Region and Qinghai province of China, and explore the genetic relationships between Tibetan groups and other groups. Allele frequencies of the 30 InDel loci ranged from 0.1219 (HLD111) to 0.5609 (HLD57) in the Tibet Tibetan group and 0.1639 (HLD118) to 0.5655 (HLD124) in the Qinghai Tibetan group. The combined power of discrimination, matching probability, and power of exclusion were 0.999999999986, 0.999999988, and 0.9913 in the Tibet Tibetan group, respectively, and 0.99999999999204, 0.9999999796, and 0.9862 in the Qinghai Tibetan group. The results of principal component analysis, phylogenetic tree, and population structure demonstrated that the four Tibetan groups (Tibetan1, Tibetan2, Tibet, and Qinghai Tibetan groups) clustered together and had relatively close genetic relationships with nine Asian groups and then European and Amerindian groups.Keywords: InDel; Tibetan groups; forensic research; genetic relationship
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27828728 DOI: 10.1089/dna.2016.3395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: DNA Cell Biol ISSN: 1044-5498 Impact factor: 3.311