Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island

This is the author's accepted manuscript. The published version can be found here http://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol/vol82/iss5/12/ The fishing community of Bering Island, located in the Russian Commander Islands off the Kamchatka Peninsula, was originally founded by a small number of Russ...

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Main Authors: Rubicz, Rohina C., Zlojutro, Mark, Sun, Guangyun, Spitsyn, Victor A., Deka, Ranjan, Young, Kristin Leigh, Crawford, Michael H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Wayne State University Press 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1808/13567
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spelling ftunivkansas:oai:kuscholarworks.ku.edu:1808/13567 2023-05-15T13:14:17+02:00 Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island Rubicz, Rohina C. Zlojutro, Mark Sun, Guangyun Spitsyn, Victor A. Deka, Ranjan Young, Kristin Leigh Crawford, Michael H. 2014-04-22T19:40:12Z http://hdl.handle.net/1808/13567 unknown Wayne State University Press http://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol/vol82/iss5/12/ Rubicz, Rohina; Zlojutro, Mark; Sun, Guangyun; Spitsyn, Victor; Deka, Ranjan; Young, Kristin L.; and Crawford, Michael H. (2010) "Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island, Russia," Human Biology: Vol. 82: Iss. 5-6, Article 12. http://hdl.handle.net/1808/13567 openAccess Article 2014 ftunivkansas 2022-08-26T13:14:19Z This is the author's accepted manuscript. The published version can be found here http://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol/vol82/iss5/12/ The fishing community of Bering Island, located in the Russian Commander Islands off the Kamchatka Peninsula, was originally founded by a small number of Russian soldiers and merchants, along with Aleuts forcibly relocated from the western region of the Aleutian archipelago. The purpose of this study is to characterize the genetic variation of Bering Island inhabitants for autosomal, mitochondrial, and Y-chromosome DNA and classic genetic markers and to investigate the genetic impact of the 19th-century founding and subsequent demographic events on this heterogeneous community. Our results show a loss of diversity among maternal lineages in the Bering Aleut population, with fixation of mtDNA haplogroup D, as revealed by median-joining network analysis and mismatch differences. Conversely, paternal haplotypes exhibit an increase in diversity and the presence of a substantial number of non-Native lineages. Admixture results, based on autosomal STR data, indicate that parental contributions to the mixed Aleut population of Bering are approximately 60% Aleut and 40% Russian. Classic genetic markers show affinities between the Bering Island Aleuts and the other historically founded Aleut communities of St. Paul and St. George in the Pribilof Islands, Alaska. This study demonstrates that the opposing evolutionary forces of genetic drift and gene flow acted on the maternal and paternal lineages, respectively, to shape the genetic structure of the present-day inhabitants of Bering Island. Article in Journal/Newspaper aleut Archipelago Bering Island Kamchatka Kamchatka Peninsula Alaska The University of Kansas: KU ScholarWorks Kamchatka Peninsula ENVELOPE(160.000,160.000,56.000,56.000)
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Kansas: KU ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivkansas
language unknown
description This is the author's accepted manuscript. The published version can be found here http://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol/vol82/iss5/12/ The fishing community of Bering Island, located in the Russian Commander Islands off the Kamchatka Peninsula, was originally founded by a small number of Russian soldiers and merchants, along with Aleuts forcibly relocated from the western region of the Aleutian archipelago. The purpose of this study is to characterize the genetic variation of Bering Island inhabitants for autosomal, mitochondrial, and Y-chromosome DNA and classic genetic markers and to investigate the genetic impact of the 19th-century founding and subsequent demographic events on this heterogeneous community. Our results show a loss of diversity among maternal lineages in the Bering Aleut population, with fixation of mtDNA haplogroup D, as revealed by median-joining network analysis and mismatch differences. Conversely, paternal haplotypes exhibit an increase in diversity and the presence of a substantial number of non-Native lineages. Admixture results, based on autosomal STR data, indicate that parental contributions to the mixed Aleut population of Bering are approximately 60% Aleut and 40% Russian. Classic genetic markers show affinities between the Bering Island Aleuts and the other historically founded Aleut communities of St. Paul and St. George in the Pribilof Islands, Alaska. This study demonstrates that the opposing evolutionary forces of genetic drift and gene flow acted on the maternal and paternal lineages, respectively, to shape the genetic structure of the present-day inhabitants of Bering Island.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Rubicz, Rohina C.
Zlojutro, Mark
Sun, Guangyun
Spitsyn, Victor A.
Deka, Ranjan
Young, Kristin Leigh
Crawford, Michael H.
spellingShingle Rubicz, Rohina C.
Zlojutro, Mark
Sun, Guangyun
Spitsyn, Victor A.
Deka, Ranjan
Young, Kristin Leigh
Crawford, Michael H.
Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island
author_facet Rubicz, Rohina C.
Zlojutro, Mark
Sun, Guangyun
Spitsyn, Victor A.
Deka, Ranjan
Young, Kristin Leigh
Crawford, Michael H.
author_sort Rubicz, Rohina C.
title Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island
title_short Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island
title_full Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island
title_fullStr Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island
title_full_unstemmed Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island
title_sort genetic architecture of a small, recently aggregated aleut population: bering island
publisher Wayne State University Press
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/1808/13567
long_lat ENVELOPE(160.000,160.000,56.000,56.000)
geographic Kamchatka Peninsula
geographic_facet Kamchatka Peninsula
genre aleut
Archipelago
Bering Island
Kamchatka
Kamchatka Peninsula
Alaska
genre_facet aleut
Archipelago
Bering Island
Kamchatka
Kamchatka Peninsula
Alaska
op_relation http://digitalcommons.wayne.edu/humbiol/vol82/iss5/12/
Rubicz, Rohina; Zlojutro, Mark; Sun, Guangyun; Spitsyn, Victor; Deka, Ranjan; Young, Kristin L.; and Crawford, Michael H. (2010) "Genetic Architecture of a Small, Recently Aggregated Aleut Population: Bering Island, Russia," Human Biology: Vol. 82: Iss. 5-6, Article 12.
http://hdl.handle.net/1808/13567
op_rights openAccess
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