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Sequencing an Ashkenazi reference panel supports population-targeted personal genomics and illuminates Jewish and European origins.

Carmi Shai, S Hui, Ken Y KY et al.

25203624 PubMed ID
48 Authors
2014-09-09 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

CS
Carmi Shai
SH
S Hui
KY
Ken Y KY
KE
Kochav Ethan
EL
E Liu
XX
Xinmin X
XJ
Xue James
JG
J Grady
FF
Fillan F
GS
Guha Saurav
SU
S Upadhyay
KK
Kinnari K
BD
Ben-Avraham Dan
DM
D Mukherjee
SS
Semanti S
BB
Bowen B Monica
BT
BM Thomas
TT
Tinu T
VJ
Vijai Joseph
JC
J Cruts
MM
Marc M
FG
Froyen Guy
GL
G Lambrechts
DD
Diether D
PS
Plaisance Stéphane
SV
S Van Broeckhoven
CC
Christine C
VD
Van Damme Philip
PV
P Van Marck
HH
Herwig H
BN
Barzilai Nir
ND
N Darvasi
AA
Ariel A
OK
Offit Kenneth
KB
K Bressman
SS
Susan S
OL
Ozelius Laurie J
LP
LJ Peter
II
Inga I
CJ
Cho Judy H
JO
JH Ostrer
HH
Harry H
AG
Atzmon Gil
GC
G Clark
LN
Lorraine N LN
LT
Lencz Todd
TP
T Pe'er
II
Itsik I
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The Ashkenazi Jewish (AJ) population is a genetic isolate close to European and Middle Eastern groups, with genetic diversity patterns conducive to disease mapping. Here we report high-depth sequencing of 128 complete genomes of AJ controls. Compared with European samples, our AJ panel has 47% more novel variants per genome and is eightfold more effective at filtering benign variants out of AJ clinical genomes. Our panel improves imputation accuracy for AJ SNP arrays by 28%, and covers at least one haplotype in ≈ 67% of any AJ genome with long, identical-by-descent segments. Reconstruction of recent AJ history from such segments confirms a recent bottleneck of merely ≈ 350 individuals. Modelling of ancient histories for AJ and European populations using their joint allele frequency spectrum determines AJ to be an even admixture of European and likely Middle Eastern origins. We date the split between the two ancestral populations to ≈ 12-25 Kyr, suggesting a predominantly Near Eastern source for the repopulation of Europe after the Last Glacial Maximum.

Chapter III

AI-Generated Summary

AI-generated by DNAGENICS

Independent AI summary of ancestry and genetic findings from the published study

Important: This summary is AI-generated by DNAGENICS for informational purposes only. It was not created by, affiliated with, or endorsed by the researchers behind the original publication, and is based solely on that published research. It may contain errors or omissions. DNAGENICS disclaims all liability for any inaccuracies or consequences arising from use of this information. Verify all information against the original publication. This is not professional scientific review or medical advice.

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Historical Context