Mark A JoblingUniversity of Leicester | LE · Department of Genetics
Mark A Jobling
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Publications (283)
High-altitude environments pose substantial challenges for human survival and reproduction, attracting considerable attention to the demographic and adaptive histories of high-altitude populations. Previous work focused mainly on Tibetans, establishing their genetic relatedness to East Asians and their genetic adaptation to high altitude, especiall...
Background
Great apes are a global conservation concern, with anthropogenic pressures threatening their survival. Genetic analysis can be used to assess the effects of reduced population sizes and the effectiveness of conservation measures. In humans, autosomal short tandem repeats (aSTRs) are widely used in population genetics and for forensic ind...
Background
As a population genetic tool, mitochondrial DNA is commonly divided into the ~ 1-kb control region (CR), in which single nucleotide variant (SNV) diversity is relatively high, and the coding region, in which selective constraint is greater and diversity lower, but which provides an informative phylogeny. In some species, the CR contains...
Hair shed by domestic cats is a potentially useful source of forensic evidence. Analysable hair DNA is predominantly mitochondrial, but the recent domestication history of cats means that mtDNA diversity is low. A 402-bp control region segment is usually sequenced, defining only a small number of distinct mitotypes in populations. Previously, we us...
As a population genetic tool, mitochondrial DNA is commonly divided into the ∼1-kb control region (CR), in which single nucleotide variant (SNV) diversity is relatively high, and the coding region, in which selective constraint is greater and diversity lower, but which provides an informative phylogeny. In some species, the CR contains variable tan...
Background
Great apes are a global conservation concern, with anthropogenic pressures threatening their survival. Genetic analysis can be used to assess the effects of reduced population sizes and the effectiveness of conservation measures. In humans, autosomal short tandem repeats (aSTRs) are widely used in population genetics and for forensic ind...
Short tandem repeat (STR) polymorphisms are traditionally assessed by measuring allele lengths via capillary electrophoresis (CE). Massively parallel sequencing (MPS) reveals differences among alleles of the same length, thus improving discrimination, but also identifying groups of alleles likely related by descent. These may have relatively restri...
In his famous 1972 paper, Richard Lewontin used ‘classical’ protein-based markers to show that greater than 85% of human genetic diversity was contained within, rather than between, populations. At that time, these same markers also formed the basis of forensic technology aiming to identify individuals. This review describes the evolution of forens...
Kenya is a diverse and populous nation that employs DNA evidence in its criminal justice system, and therefore requires reliable information on autosomal STR allele frequency variation across the country and in its many ethnic groups. In order to provide reference data and to assess population structure, we analysed the 21 autosomal STRs in the Glo...
Male infertility is a prevalent condition, affecting 5–10% of men. So far, few genetic factors have been described as contributors to spermatogenic failure. Here, we report the first re-sequencing study of the Y-chromosomal Azoospermia Factor c (AZFc) region, combined with gene dosage analysis of the multicopy DAZ, BPY2, and CDYgenes and Y-haplogro...
Male infertility is a prevalent condition, concerning 5-10% of men. So far, only some recurrent genetic factors have been described as confident contributors to spermatogenic failure. Here, we report the first re-sequencing study of the Y-chromosomal Azoospermia Factor c ( AZFc ) region combined with gene dosage and Y-haplogroup determination. In a...
The influence of Viking-Age migrants to the British Isles is obvious in archaeological and place-names evidence, but their demographic impact has been unclear. Autosomal genetic analyses support Norse Viking contributions to parts of Britain, but show no signal corresponding to the Danelaw, the region under Scandinavian administrative control from...
We have determined the distribution of Y-chromosomal haplotypes and predicted haplogroups in the ethnically diverse Kingdom of Bahrain, a small archipelago in the Arabian Gulf. Paternal population structure within Bahrain was investigated using the 27 Y-STRs (short tandem repeats) in the Yfiler Plus kit to generate haplotypes from 562 unrelated Bah...
Massively parallel sequencing (MPS) of forensic STRs has the potential to reveal additional allele diversity
compared to conventional capillary electrophoresis (CE) typing strategies, but population studies are currently
relatively few in number. The Verogen ForenSeq™ DNA Signature Prep Kit includes both Y-STRs and X-STRs
among its targeted loci, a...
Bahrain location in the Arabian Gulf contributed to the diversity of its indigenous population descended from Christian Arabs, Persians (Zoroastrians), Jews, and Aramaic-speaking agriculturalists. The aim of this study was to examine population substructure within Bahrain using the 27 Y-STRs (short tandem repeats) in the Yfiler Plus kit and to char...
Objective:
The male-specific region of the Y chromosome (MSY) remains one of the most unexplored regions of the genome. We sought to examine how the genetic variants of the MSY influence male susceptibility to coronary artery disease (CAD) and atherosclerosis. Approach and Results: Analysis of 129 133 men from UK Biobank revealed that only one of...
While many studies have been undertaken of Middle Eastern populations using autosomal STR profiling by capillary electrophoresis, little has so far been published from this region on the forensic use of massively parallel sequencing (MPS). Here, we carried out MPS of 27 autosomal STRs and 91 identity-informative SNPs (iiSNPs) with the Verogen Foren...
Sequence analysis of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region can provide forensically useful information,
particularly in challenging samples where autosomal DNA profiling fails. Sub-division of the 1122-bp region into
shorter PCR fragments improves data recovery, and such fragments can be analysed together via massively parallel
sequencing (M...
Variation in the 21 autosomal STRs detected by the GlobalFiler multiplex was investigated in a sample of 523 indigenous male Arabs from five geographic regions of Saudi Arabia. Although allele frequencies for the entire dataset were found to be broadly similar to those determined in previous studies of Saudi citizens, significant differences were f...
Sex chromosomes, recombination, pseudoautosomal region, sperm typing
The human X and Y chromosomes are heteromorphic but share a region of homology at the tips of their short arms, pseudoautosomal region 1 (PAR1), that supports obligate crossover in male meiosis. Although the boundary between pseudoautosomal and sex-specific DNA has traditionally been regarded as conserved among primates, it was recently discovered...
Duplication of the X chromosome in a North European sperm donor.
(PDF)
Summary statistics for Ion Torrent sequencing across the ePAR.
(PDF)
Primer sequences for sperm recombination analysis.
(PDF)
Primer sequences for Ion Torrent sequencing templates.
(PDF)
Median-joining network of I2a ePAR-carrying males.
(PDF)
Comparison of ePAR haplotype structures with phase known X chromosomes—Summary data.
(PDF)
Y-chromosome haplogrouping using a SNaPshot single-base extension assay.
(PDF)
Primer combinations and annealing temperatures used for sperm recombination analysis.
(PDF)
Validation of Ion Torrent data.
(PDF)
Features considered when choosing intervals for sperm recombination analysis.
(PDF)
Comparison of ePAR haplotype structures with phase known X chromosomes—SNP markers.
(PDF)
PowerPlex Y 23 haplotypes for haplogroup I2a ePARs.
(PDF)
Allele-specific oligonucleotide probe (ASO) sequences.
(PDF)
We genotyped 738 individuals belonging to 49 populations from Nepal, Bhutan, North India, or Tibet at over 500,000 SNPs, and analyzed the genotypes in the context of available worldwide population data in order to investigate the demographic history of the region and the genetic adaptations to the harsh environment. The Himalayan populations resemb...
Short tandem repeats on the male-specific region of the Y chromosome (Y-STRs) are permanently linked as haplotypes, and therefore Y-STR sequence diversity can be considered within the robust framework of a phylogeny of haplogroups defined by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Here we use massively parallel sequencing (MPS) to analyse the 23 Y-...
Saudi Arabia's indigenous population is organized into patrilineal descent groups, but to date, little has been done to characterize its population structure, in particular with respect to the male-specific region of the Y chromosome. We have used the 27-STR Yfiler® Plus kit to generate haplotypes in 597 unrelated Saudi males, classified into five...
Interpretations of genetic data concerning the prehistory of Europe have long been a subject of great debate, but increasing amounts of ancient and modern DNA data are now providing new and more informative evidence. Y-chromosome resequencing studies in Europe have highlighted the prevalence of recent expansions of male lineages, and focused intere...
The Y chromosome has long been considered a ‘genetic wasteland’ on a trajectory to completely disappear from the human genome. The perception of its physiological function was restricted to sex determination and spermatogenesis. These views have been challenged in recent times with the identification of multiple ubiquitously expressed Y-chromosome...
The properties of the human Y chromosome - namely, male specificity, haploidy and escape from crossing over - make it an unusual component of the genome, and have led to its genetic variation becoming a key part of studies of human evolution, population history, genealogy, forensics and male medical genetics. Next-generation sequencing (NGS) techno...
The great apes (orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, bonobos and humans) descended from a common ancestor around 13 million years ago, and since then their sex chromosomes have followed very different evolutionary paths. While great-ape X chromosomes are highly conserved, their Y chromosomes, reflecting the general lability and degeneration of this m...
Males and females display biological differences that lead to a higher variance of offspring number in males, and this is frequently exacerbated in human societies by mating practices, and possibly by past socio-cultural circumstances. This implies that the genetic record might contain the imprint of past male-mediated expansions, which can be inve...
Human genetic diversity in Europe has been extensively studied using uniparentally inherited sequences (mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and the Y chromosome), which reveal very different patterns indicating sex-specific demographic histories. The X chromosome, haploid in males and inherited twice as often from mothers as from fathers, could provide insig...
High-altitude adaptation in Tibetans is influenced by introgression of a 32.7-kb haplotype from the Denisovans, an extinct branch of archaic humans, lying within the endothelial PAS domain protein 1 (EPAS1), and has also been reported in Sherpa. We genotyped 19 variants in this genomic region in 1507 Eurasian individuals, including 1188 from Bhutan...
The distribution of genetic diversity in great-ape species is likely to have been affected by patterns of dispersal and mating. This has previously been investigated by sequencing autosomal and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), but large-scale sequence analysis of the male-specific region of the Y Chromosome (MSY) has not yet been undertaken. Here we use...
Patterns of genetic variation in human populations across the African continent are still not well studied in comparison with Eurasia and America, despite the high genetic and cultural diversity among African populations. In population and forensic genetic studies a single sample is often used to represent a complete African region. In such a scena...
High-frequency microsatellite haplotypes of the male-specific Y-chromosome can signal past episodes of high reproductive success of particular men and their patrilineal descendants. Previously, two examples of such successful Y-lineages have been described in Asia, both associated with Altaic-speaking pastoral nomadic societies, and putatively link...
Supplementary Figure 1: Summary of Y-chromosomal binary marker data generated in this study.
The phylogenetic tree shows Y-chromosomal binary markers typed, and the table shows frequencies of haplogroups in population samples. Three-letter codes are defined in the legend to Figure 1, and in Supplementary Table 1.
Supplementary Figure 2: Geographica...