Genetic study The genetic structure of the Turkish population reveals high levels of variation

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The genetic structure of the Turkish population reveals high levels of variation and admixture


Significance

We delineated the fine-scale genetic structure of the Turkish population by using sequencing data of 3,362 unrelated Turkish individuals from different geographical origins and demonstrated the position of Turkey in terms of human migration and genetic drift. The results show that the genetic structure of present-day Anatolia was shaped by historical and modern-day migrations, high levels of admixture, and inbreeding. We observed that modern-day Turkey has close genetic relationships with the neighboring Balkan and Caucasus populations. We generated a Turkish Variome which defines the extent of variation observed in Turkey, listed homozygous loss-of-function variants and clinically relevant variants in the cohort, and generated an imputation panel for future genome-wide association studies.


Abstract

The construction of population-based variomes has contributed substantially to our understanding of the genetic basis of human inherited disease. Here, we investigated the genetic structure of Turkey from 3,362 unrelated subjects whose whole exomes (n = 2,589) or whole genomes (n = 773) were sequenced to generate a Turkish (TR) Variome that should serve to facilitate disease gene discovery in Turkey. Consistent with the history of present-day Turkey as a crossroads between Europe and Asia, we found extensive admixture between Balkan, Caucasus, Middle Eastern, and European populations with a closer genetic relationship of the TR population to Europeans than hitherto appreciated. We determined that 50% of TR individuals had high inbreeding coefficients (≥0.0156) with runs of homozygosity longer than 4 Mb being found exclusively in the TR population when compared to 1000 Genomes Project populations. We also found that 28% of exome and 49% of genome variants in the very rare range (allele frequency < 0.005) are unique to the modern TR population. We annotated these variants based on their functional consequences to establish a TR Variome containing alleles of potential medical relevance, a repository of homozygous loss-of-function variants and a TR reference panel for genotype imputation using high-quality haplotypes, to facilitate genome-wide association studies. In addition to providing information on the genetic structure of the modern TR population, these data provide an invaluable resource for future studies to identify variants that are associated with specific phenotypes as well as establishing the phenotypic consequences of mutations in specific genes.


https://www.pnas.org/content/118/36/e2026076118

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Wow, they were not kidding when they said that they encountered a lot of variation. Some Turks came from the Balkans, exchanged in the great population exchange of the 1920s so they show genetic affinity to Balkan populations. Is the inbreeding because of the inaccessibility of the mountain villages or tribe endogamy?
 
@Salento

only 2 samples are T1a2 branch

one is from ancient Greek Colchis area from the black sea and has snp P322 which we are negative for

and the other

is linked with viking sample VK398 which we are distantly related to
Sample: VK398 / Sweden_Skara 231
Location: Varnhem, Skara, Sweden
Age: Viking 10-12th centuries CE
Y-DNA: T-BY215080
mtDNA: H1b1-T16362C
 
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Wow, they were not kidding when they said that they encountered a lot of variation. Some Turks came from the Balkans, exchanged in the great population exchange of the 1920s so they show genetic affinity to Balkan populations. Is the inbreeding because of the inaccessibility of the mountain villages or tribe endogamy?

Yes, indeed. They seem to have sampled anyone with a Turkish passport. Those closest to the Greeks and Bulgarians are clearly Balkan Turks or even Balkan Slavic Turks.
 
it seems that he purpose of this large sample study was not ancestry but identifying genetically inherited diseases hence the large number of full genome and full exome tests. I am sure we will be the beneficiaries of this large and deep study.
 
Yes, indeed. They seem to have sampled anyone with a Turkish passport. Those closest to the Greeks and Bulgarians are clearly Balkan Turks or even Balkan Slavic Turks.


it is very likely that in the most famous back in the day
research
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00439-003-1031-4
they also sampled turkish citizens from each region
they didn't ask them are you a kurd ?
are you armenian ?
are you balkan turk ?
they just sampled 523 male y samples:)

now in this research
there in 440 males
out of them 370 came from known region ( turkish nalkan, turkish north, turkish west , turkish south , turkish east )
https://i.imgur.com/BplYV1j.jpg

it is pretty good research
and the fact that y haplogroup sequenced is great
and help us to see the exact sub clades in each y haplogroup present:cool-v:
 
it is very likely that in the most famous back in the day
research
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00439-003-1031-4
they also sampled turkish citizens from each region
they didn't ask them are you a kurd ?
are you armenian ?
are you balkan turk ?
they just sampled 523 male y samples:)

now in this research
there in 440 males
out of them 370 came from known region ( turkish nalkan, turkish north, turkish west , turkish south , turkish east )
https://i.imgur.com/BplYV1j.jpg

it is pretty good research
and the fact that y haplogroup sequenced is great
and help us to see the exact sub clades in each y haplogroup present:cool-v:

In the region TR-B is that D1a or E1b in the darker blue? If it is D1a that indicates a massive people movement from the eastern part of the country (turkic tribes) at some point. You don't see many D1a people in Europe. Upon further examination it is E1b. I see a lot of R1a in that region compared with much smaller R1b percentage indicating slavic descent.
 
In the region TR-B is that D1a or E1b in the darker blue? If it is D1a that indicates a massive people movement from the eastern part of the country (turkic tribes) at some point. You don't see many D1a people in Europe. Upon further examination it is E1b. I see a lot of R1a in that region compared with much smaller R1b percentage indicating slavic descent.

the d1a from east region TR-E107
in the turkish spreadsheet by
anthrogenica user
he cluster with azeri autosomally speaking

SRS8752467XQ3029618D-Y14813DR2e319.814.320.8906.249.224.340.2610.354.3240.2508.64Azerbaijani_Kars-Iğdır @ 4.347531
 
it seems that he purpose of this large sample study was not ancestry but identifying genetically inherited diseases hence the large number of full genome and full exome tests. I am sure we will be the beneficiaries of this large and deep study.

it is very likely that in the most famous back in the day
research
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00439-003-1031-4
they also sampled turkish citizens from each region
they didn't ask them are you a kurd ?
are you armenian ?
are you balkan turk ?
they just sampled 523 male y samples:)


I agree with both of you. Sampling and analyzing DNA still costs a lot of money, these samplings are usually funded more for medical reasons, and then only afterwards are used for population genetics. For this reason, modern samples are not always completely accurate with respect to the ancestry of each individual sampled.
 

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