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1.
Genetica ; 107(1-3): 163-70, 1999.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10952209

ABSTRACT

Allelic frequency data derived from five polymorphic Alu insertion loci and five point mutation polymorphic loci were compared to determine their ability to infer phylogenetic relationships among human populations. While point mutation polymorphisms inferred a monophyletic Caucasian clade that is corroborated by other studies, these data failed to support the generally accepted monophyly of Orientals with native Americans. In addition, there is less statistical bootstrap support for the maximum-likelihood tree derived from the point mutation polymorphisms as compared to those generated from either the Alu insertion data or the combined Alu insertion + point mutation data. The Alu data and the combined Alu insertion + point mutation data inferred a monophyletic relationship among the Oriental and native American populations. The Alu insertion data and the combined Alu insertion + point mutation data also displayed two separate, well defined, tight clusters of the Caucasian and the Oriental + native American populations which was not inferred from the point mutation data. These findings indicate greater phylogenetic information contained in Alu insertion frequencies than in allelic frequencies derived from point-mutations.


Subject(s)
DNA Transposable Elements , Phylogeny , Point Mutation , Polymorphism, Genetic , Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid , Alleles , Gene Frequency , Humans
2.
Anat Rec ; 251(2): 221-5, 1998 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9624452

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The supranasal sac is an invagination of the skin between the supranasal and nasal shields of many true vipers. Viperinae behavior suggests that many true vipers hunt by thermal cues. METHODS: The supranasal sacs of two puff adder (Serpentes: Viperinae) were examined with modern histological and neurohistological techniques, including Kiernan's silver stain. RESULTS: There are nerve endings in the supranasal sac of the puff adder that resemble the nerve endings in the labial pits of boas. CONCLUSION: This suggests that the supranasal sac of true vipers is, like the labial pits of boas, a heat detector.


Subject(s)
Nerve Endings/anatomy & histology , Nose/innervation , Trigeminal Nerve/anatomy & histology , Viperidae/anatomy & histology , Animals , Silver Staining
3.
Hum Biol ; 70(1): 23-39, 1998 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9489232

ABSTRACT

A rapid PCR-based assay was used to study the distribution of 5 polymorphic Alu insertions in 895 unrelated individuals from 30 populations, 24 from North, Central, and South America. Although a significant level of interpopulation variability was detected, the variability was less than that observed in a worldwide population survey. This is consistent with the bottleneck effect and genetic drift forces that may have acted on the migrating founder groups. The results corroborate the Asian origin of native American populations but do not support the multiple-wave migration hypothesis supposedly responsible for the tri-partite Eskaleut, Nadene, and Amerind linguistic groups. Instead, these populations exhibit three major identifiable clusters reflecting geographic distribution. Close similarity between the Chinese and native Americans suggests recent gene flow from Asia.


Subject(s)
Indians, North American/genetics , Polymorphism, Genetic , Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid/genetics , Americas , Asia/ethnology , China/ethnology , DNA/analysis , Gene Frequency , Humans , Likelihood Functions , Logistic Models
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