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Published in: International Journal of Legal Medicine 3/2004

01-06-2004 | Original Article

Predicting sampling saturation of mtDNA haplotypes: an application to an enlarged Portuguese database

Authors: Luísa Pereira, Carla Cunha, António Amorim

Published in: International Journal of Legal Medicine | Issue 3/2004

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Abstract

An enlarged mtDNA database (n=549) for the Portuguese population, comprising HVRI and HVRII regions is reported. This database was used to test the effect of sample size on the estimation of relevant parameters such as haplotype diversity, number of different haplotypes, nucleotide diversity and number of polymorphic positions. Simulations were performed generating sets of random subsamples of variable sizes (n=50, 100, 200, 300 and 400). The results show that while haplotype and nucleotide diversities do not vary significantly with sample size, the numbers of haplotypes and polymorphic positions rise continuously inside the tested interval. These trends are interpretable by the evolution of the proportions of sequences that are found once or twice, which drop dramatically as sample size increases, with the corresponding rise in the frequency of those encountered 3 times or more. The generated data were also used to extrapolate saturation curves for the referred parameters. When considering for instance the number of haplotypes, it is shown that a sample size of 1,000 individuals is required for practical saturation (defined as the point where a sample size increase of 100 individuals corresponds to an increment in the diversity measure below 5%). For HVRII the same level is reached at n=900 and n=1,300 is needed when both regions are analysed simultaneously. Consequently, we can infer that currently used sample sizes are still rather inadequate for both anthropological and forensic purposes.
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Metadata
Title
Predicting sampling saturation of mtDNA haplotypes: an application to an enlarged Portuguese database
Authors
Luísa Pereira
Carla Cunha
António Amorim
Publication date
01-06-2004
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
International Journal of Legal Medicine / Issue 3/2004
Print ISSN: 0937-9827
Electronic ISSN: 1437-1596
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00414-003-0424-1

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