July 29, 2012

Estimating the age of Y chromosome Adam

I took chrY SNP data from the 1000Genomes Project, with the goal of estimating the age of the root of the Y chromosome phylogeny. I used the mutation rate of 3x10^-8 mutations/nucleotide/generation of Xue et al. (2009), and a generation length of 25 years.

I decided to use a rather unconventional model-free approach, not building a phylogeny, but simply observing the distribution of pairwise TMRCA between all 526 Y chromosomes. A histogram thereof can be seen below:

My assumption is that the most basal split in the tree will correspond to the local peak on the right. I used MCLUST to cluster the observations, and, as is visually apparent, the right-most local peak forms a cluster with a mean of ~184 thousand years. This is a bit older than the 142 thousand year old date of Cruciani et al. (2011) which was based on a 200kb region of the MSY.

In any case, a re-rooting of the Y chromosome phylogeny is apparently in the works, so we're bound to know much more in the near future; we are long overdue for a systematic revision of node split times using the SNP counting method.

It is also imperative that African outliers in Eurasia be better studied to determine whether they have shallow or deep divergences with their African cousins. Much will depend on this, since the argument for recent Out-of-Africa crucially depends on Eurasia harboring a subset of African variation, a proposition which relies on the dismissal of apparently African outliers in Eurasia as recent migrants rather than relics.

UPDATE (July 30): I have now updated my age estimate using a newer cleaner version of the 1000 Genomes chrY data.

3 comments:

  1. "It is also imperative that African outliers in Eurasia be better studied to determine whether they have shallow or deep divergences with their African cousins".

    That will certainly throw light on your suggestion that those extra-Africa A and B haplogroups may indicate an original 'into Africa'. I have never seen any reason to assume that the modern haplogroups had originated in a group whose ancestors had always been confined to Africa. I have also never seen any reason to assume that both Y-DNA 'Adam' and mt-DNA "eve' originated in the same place and at the same time.

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  2. Ahh..but what if they were? Would this event not, in effect, be the origin of our 'species'?

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  3. "Ahh..but what if they were? Would this event not, in effect, be the origin of our 'species'?"

    Not necessarily. At 200,000 years ago it is doubtful that 'modern' humans had even first appeared. So even if both mt-DNA and Y-DNA originated at the same time, and in the same place, it need not be associated with fully-modern humans.

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