September 26, 2013

Y chromosomes of Slavic minorities inhabiting Vojvodina, Serbia

From the paper:
Scrutiny of predicted haplogroups revealed high incidence of haplogroup R1a in both Northern Slavic minorities inhabiting Serbia (42.0% and 44.0% in Slovaks and Ruthenians, respectively), which was comparable to its prevalence in the two Northern Slavic reference populations (45.1% and 43.5% in Slovaks and Ukrainians, respectively), but considerably higher than the one observed in Southern Slavic Serbs (15.1%, Table S4).
Forensic Science International: Genetics Volume 8, Issue 1, January 2014, Pages 126–131

Northern Slavs from Serbia do not show a founder effect at autosomal and Y-chromosomal STRs and retain their paternal genetic heritage

Krzysztof Rębała et al.

Studies on Y-chromosomal markers revealed significant genetic differentiation between Southern and Northern (Western and Eastern) Slavic populations. The northern Serbian region of Vojvodina is inhabited by Southern Slavic Serbian majority and, inter alia, Western Slavic (Slovak) and Eastern Slavic (Ruthenian) minorities. In the study, 15 autosomal STR markers were analysed in unrelated Slovaks, Ruthenians and Serbs from northern Serbia and western Slovakia. Additionally, Slovak males from Serbia were genotyped for 17 Y-chromosomal STR loci. The results were compared to data available for other Slavic populations. Genetic distances for autosomal markers revealed homogeneity between Serbs from northern Serbia and Slovaks from western Slovakia and distinctiveness of Serbian Slovaks and Ruthenians. Y-STR variation showed a clear genetic departure of the Slovaks and Ruthenians inhabiting Vojvodina from their Serbian neighbours and genetic similarity to the Northern Slavic populations of Slovakia and Ukraine. Admixture estimates revealed negligible Serbian paternal ancestry in both Northern Slavic minorities of Vojvodina, providing evidence for their genetic isolation from the Serbian majority population. No reduction of genetic diversity at autosomal and Y-chromosomal markers was found, excluding genetic drift as a reason for differences observed at autosomal STRs. Analysis of molecular variance detected significant population stratification of autosomal and Y-chromosomal microsatellites in the three Slavic populations of northern Serbia, indicating necessity for separate databases used for estimations of frequencies of autosomal and Y-chromosomal STR profiles in forensic casework. Our results demonstrate that regarding Y-STR haplotypes, Serbian Slovaks and Ruthenians fit in the Eastern European metapopulation defined in the Y chromosome haplotype reference database.

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2 comments:

sidoroffs said...

Expected.

Many people want to take the dominant identity, but not much want to take a mnority identity.

Adam Czajka said...

Nope.
And there is no melting pot.