Abstract

Forensic haplotype analysis of the male Y chromosome is currently used to establish the number of male donors in sexual assaults, the number of male bleeders in blood pattern analysis, and for ancestry correlation to genetic founder populations in biogeographic studies. In forensic laboratory applications, its primary use is for DNA profile generation with trace amounts of male DNA in the presence of excess female DNA (e.g. spermatozoa identification, male component of fingernail scrapings). Our study supports the potential use of the Y chromosome in a “dragnet” approach (most haplotypes are unique) similar to that described by Kayser in 2017 for solving a cold case sex assault and homicide in The Netherlands. Our study also researched the potential for the identification of an ancestral Irish genetic “footprint” linked to surname O’Brien and identified multiple founder group origins in Ireland and England as well as three samples with the Dal Riata (a Gaelic overkingdom) ancestral haplotype. This study indicates correlation to ancestral Irish ancestry by haplotype but not conclusively to the O’Brien surname.

Highlights

  • Genetic markers are used routinely for forensic applications and DNA databases [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • This study indicates correlation to ancestral Irish ancestry by haplotype but not conclusively to the O’Brien surname

  • Our best interpretation is that the Y-chromosome and O’Brien surname is evolving over generations and once geographically unrestricted to Irish birthplace, only portions of the O’Brien surname “genetic footprint” remain

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Summary

Introduction

Genetic markers are used routinely for forensic applications and DNA databases [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Y-STR markers are male specific, inherited as a genetic block, and often represent a common paternal lineage [7,8,9,10]. Individuals who share a common surname might be expected to share more of their DNA if genetically related and, barring mutation, should be genetically identical by descent (IBD) [6,7]. For this project, the loci DYS19, DYS389I/II, DYS390, DYS391, DYS392, DYS393 and DYS385a/b

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