Abstract

Factors affecting the rate and pattern of the mutational process are being identified for human autosomes, but the same relationships for the male specific portion of the Y chromosome (MSY) are not established. We considered 3,390 mutations occurring in 19 sequence bins identified by sequencing 1.5 Mb of the MSY from each of 104 present-day chromosomes. The occurrence of mutations was not proportional to the amount of sequenced bases in each bin, with a 2-fold variation. The regression of the number of mutations per unit sequence against a number of indicators of the genomic features of each bin, revealed the same fundamental patterns as in the autosomes. By considering the sequences of the same region from two precisely dated ancient specimens, we obtained a calibrated region-specific substitution rate of 0.716 × 10-9/site/year. Despite its lack of recombination and other peculiar features, the MSY then resembles the autosomes in displaying a marked regional heterogeneity of the mutation rate. An immediate implication is that a given figure for the substitution rate only makes sense if bound to a specific DNA region. By strictly applying this principle we obtained an unbiased estimate of the antiquity of lineages relevant to the genetic history of the human Y chromosome. In particular, the two deepest nodes of the tree highlight the survival, in Central-Western Africa, of lineages whose coalescence (291 ky, 95% C.I. 253–343) predates the emergence of anatomically modern features in the fossil record.

Highlights

  • MethodsThe samplesWe report here the results obtained in 104 subjects coming from three different datasets: (1) 68 subjects examined in the same experiment of, but not described in detail in ref.[4]; (2) 9 additional males carrying haplogroups relevant for reconstructing the Y-chromosomal phylogeny and sequenced in the present study; (3) 27 unrelated males from the diversity panel of the Complete Genomics company

  • The uniparental genetic systems have been so far consideredthe clearest markers of past human dispersals, since they allow the reconstruction and dating of molecular radiations on the basis of parsimony [1].PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0134646 July 30, 2015Heterogeneity of Mutation Rate in the male-specific portion of the Y chromosome (MSY) publish, or preparation of the manuscript

  • We report here the results obtained in 104 subjects coming from three different datasets: (1) 68 subjects examined in the same experiment of, but not described in detail in ref.[4]; (2) 9 additional males carrying haplogroups relevant for reconstructing the Y-chromosomal phylogeny and sequenced in the present study; (3) 27 unrelated males from the diversity panel of the Complete Genomics company

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Summary

Methods

The samplesWe report here the results obtained in 104 subjects coming from three different datasets: (1) 68 subjects examined in the same experiment of, but not described in detail in ref.[4]; (2) 9 additional males carrying haplogroups relevant for reconstructing the Y-chromosomal phylogeny and sequenced in the present study; (3) 27 unrelated males from the diversity panel of the Complete Genomics company. As far as the proposed research did not involve any issue relevant for the donor's health, only a subset of the WMA Declaration of Helsinki and COE Oviedo Convention prescriptions were applicable and obeyed. For these reasons written consent was requested in most cases but, in some series collected before 1995, oral consent was considered sufficient and recorded in the corresponding log sheets (filed at the collecting Institutions). The study was prospectively examined and approved by the "Policlinico Umberto I, Sapienza Università di Roma" ethical committee (document number 496/13), who expressly considered the list of collaborators, anonymity of samples and the compliance with consent regulations of previous publications which included the same samples

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