United States
Research Article
Y Chromosomal SNP Analysis Using the Minisequencing
Strategy in a Moroccan Population Samples
Author(s): Rachid Aboukhalid, Mehdi Bouabdellah, Ronald Lai, Nicholas Bradford, Hicham EL Ossmani, Jalal Talbi, Kaoutar Bentayebi, Driss Squalli, Daniele Podini and Saaid AmzaziRachid Aboukhalid, Mehdi Bouabdellah, Ronald Lai, Nicholas Bradford, Hicham EL Ossmani, Jalal Talbi, Kaoutar Bentayebi, Driss Squalli, Daniele Podini and Saaid Amzazi
The Y chromosome contains the largest non-recombining portion in the human genome. Y-Binary polymorphisms, also known as a single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), are a series of biallelic polymorphisms occurring on the non-recombining region of the Y chromosome (NRY), which represent a precious tool for human evolutionary studies and, potentially, for forensic applications. Low mutation rate, paternal inheritance, and absence of recombination make Y-SNPs particularly suitable for the identification of stable paternal lineages and the reconstruction of an ancestral state from which to explore the evolution of humans. Also, these markers would allow inference of the paternal ancestry of unknown samples which could be useful in forensic applications. In the present study we analyzed 22 biallelic Y-SNPs in 159 males belonging to three ethnic groups (Arab n = 42, Berber n = 67 and Sahrawi.. Read More»
DOI:
10.4172/2157-7145.1000113
Journal of Forensic Research received 2328 citations as per Google Scholar report