Abstract
JC virus (JCV) is a useful marker to trace human dispersal. Two genotypes of JCV (MY and CY) are mainly distributed in Northeast Asia. The population history of people carrying MY has been studied in some detail but that of people carrying CY remains poorly understood. To gain insights into the population history of Northeast Asians carrying CY we analyzed the genetic variation in CY isolates. We constructed a neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree from 28 complete CY DNA sequences: on the resultant tree the CY DNA sequences diverged into two clades, designated CY-a and -b, each clustered with a high bootstrap probability. The split into CY-a and -b was estimated to have occurred about 10 000 years ago, based on Ks values (synonymous substitutions per synonymous site) and the suggested rate of synonymous nucleotide substitutions. Comparison of the 28 complete CY sequences revealed six nucleotide mismatches between CY-a and -b, one of which showed a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP). We then PCR-amplified a region of the genome containing this polymorphic site from many CY isolates in various Northeast Asian populations and classified the isolates into CY-a or -b according to the RFLP analysis. CY-a was more abundant than CY-b in various Chinese and Japanese populations but CY-b was more abundant than CY-a in South Koreans. On the basis of the present findings we inferred the population history in East Asians carrying CY.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 596-603 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | Microbes and Infection |
Volume | 6 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - May 2004 |
Keywords
- AIK
- Akaike Information Criterion
- Human migrations
- JC virus
- JCV
- large T antigen
- LT
- neighbor-joining
- NJ
- Northeast Asians
- nt
- nucleotide
- Phylogenetic analysis
- restriction fragment length polymorphism
- RFLP