| General
Will
my test results be kept confidential?
Can
a DNA analysis identify my racial or ethnic background?
Can
you recommend any further reading on genes and
human evolution?
How is the DNA collected?
MatriLine
Do
I have to be European to use your MatriLine™ Service?
When
I discover which Daughter of Eve I am descended from,
what does this mean for my children and other relatives?
If
there are seven clans in Europe, how many are there
in the rest of the World?
When
I did the MatriLine™ test I expected to
receive a DNA sequence, but instead received a chart with
lines
and circles on it, what does this mean?
What
is the Cambridge Reference Sequence (CRS)?
What
characteristics of my mtDNA sequence determine which
clan I am in?
I
have one (or more) letters highlighted in red on
my sequence. Why am I still in the clan of Helena?
What
is the greatest number of changes you have ever found
in a mtDNA sequence?
Is
there a connection between the Seven Daughters of
Eve and the Bible?
Which of my relatives is linked to me through
an unbroken matrilineal link?
Y-Chromosome
Why do only
males have Y-chromosomes?
Can
paternal lines be traced back using Y-chromosomes
to a small number of men, in the same way that tracing
mitochondrial DNA identified the Seven Daughters
of Eve?
Can
the Y-Clan™ or the Y-Line™ analysis prove
paternity?
MatriLine Database
How do I determine the position, in numbers,
of the mutations on my MatriLine™ certificate?
How do the changes in the mitochondrial DNA
sequence relate to the numbering system that you use for MatriLine
database searches?
How
many samples are on your MatriLine™ database?
I
am in the clan of Ursula and have 4 mutations from
the Cambridge Reference Sequence in my own mitochondrial
DNA sequence. When I do a search on three out of the
four mutations the computer does not bring me up as
one of the matches. It also brings up people who are
in a different clan (Helena) to me. Please explain.
I am trying to contact people on
the database but their contact details are not available.
General
-
-
Yes. Oxford Ancestors will not use your
DNA for any other purpose than for the services you have
requested. Your results will be disclosed only to you,
unless you specifically instruct us otherwise, and your
DNA will be destroyed after your results have been despatched.
- Can a DNA analysis
identify my racial or ethnic background?
- No. There is no genetic basis for ethnicity
or race. Our MatriLine service identifies your ancient ancestral
mother, who lived at a time that pre-dates our notions of
ethnicity and race. We know upon which continent all the
clan mothers lived, but the modern day descendents of any
single clan mother will be from many different countries,
ethnic backgrounds and races.
- Can you recommend
any further reading on genes and human evolution?
- A good starting point for delving into
the scientific literature is "The Human Inheritance:
Genes Language and Evolution" edited by Bryan Sykes
and published by Oxford University Press in 1999. This contains
eight essays by leading academics on all aspects of the revolution
in understanding the past that has been triggered by developments
in genetics. It is edited for a general readership and there
is an extensive bibliography. Other recommended books are:"The
Rise and Fall of the Third Chimpanzee" by Jared Diamond
(ISBN 0 09 991380 1) and "The Language of the Genes" by
Steve Jones (ISBN 0 00 654676 5). Both are written for a
general audience. Professor Sykes' book, "The Seven
Daughters of Eve", was published in June 2001 in the
UK and has since appeared in over 23 countries. His book
tells the story of the scientific research that lead to the
discoveries made
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- How
is the DNA collected?
- When payment for your order has been
processed, you will be sent a sampling kit which contains
a small sampling brush with which you can painlessly take
the necessary sample for our analysis. This is done by rubbing
the brush gently on the cheek inside your mouth, putting
in back in the packet, and sealing this before returning
to us.
MatriLine
- If there are seven
clans in Europe, how many are there in the rest of the
World?
- A great deal of work has been done in
other parts of the World in the past decade and it is very
clear that there are many more clans. Our present estimate
is that there are 36 clans in the World, including the 'Seven
Daughters of Eve'. Twelve of them are found predominantly
in people of Africa origin, four in the peoples of East Eurasia
and the Americas, six in East Eurasia, twelve in the peoples
of Central and West Eurasia, one predominantly in West Eurasia
and North America, and one in Africa and West Eurasia. As
the precise definition of what makes a clan depends on having
a good set of DNA samples from different countries, we expect
other clan mothers to be identified as more samples are obtained
from peoples living in those parts of the World that have
thus far been studied only very sparsely.
- What is the Cambridge
Reference Sequence (CRS)?
- This is the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)
sequence against which we compare all of the mtDNA sequences
generated for our customers. It was determined by a group
of researchers in Cambridge (hence the name) as being the
most common sequence found in native Europeans. If your sequence
is the same as the CRS, then you are in the clan of Helena.
The 400 base pairs of the CRS that we analyse is shown below:
ATTCTAATTT AAACTATTCT CTGTTCTTTC ATGGGGAAGC AGATTTGGGT
ACCACCCAAG TATTGACTCA CCCATCAACA ACCGCTATGT ATTTCGTACA
TTACTGCCAG CCACCATGAA TATTGTACGG TACCATAAAT ACTTGACCAC
CTGTAGTACA TAAAAACCCA ATCCACATCA AAACCCCCTC CCCATGCTTA
CAAGCAAGTA CAGCAATCAA CCCTCAACTA TCACACATCA ACTGCAACTC
CAAAGCCACC CCTCACCCAC TAGGATACCA ACAAACCTAC CCACCCTTAA
CAGTACATAG TACATAAAGC CATTTACCGT ACATAGCACA TTACAGTCAA
ATCCCTTCTC GTCCCCATGG ATGACCCCCC TCAGATAGGG GTCCCTTGAC
- What characteristics
of my mtDNA sequence determine which clan I am in?
- All the clans have DNA sequence characteristics
that allow us to determine from which clan mother you are
descended. Some of these clan/characteristic associations
are straightforward; others are more complicated. As a general
rule, if your ancestors lived in the geographical area we
now call Europe, and your sequence does not contain one of
the characteristic changes listed below, then you are a descendant
of Helena. The table below is a guide to some of the characteristic
changes associated with the other 'Daughters of Eve':
| CLAN
MOTHER |
|
|
| Ursula |
16270
|
C - T
|
| Xenia |
16223
|
C - T
|
| Velda |
16298
|
T - C
|
| Tara |
16126
|
T - C
|
|
16294
|
C - T
|
| Katrine |
16224
|
T - C
|
|
16311
|
T - C
|
| Jasmine |
16069
|
C - T
|
|
16126
|
T - C
|
- I have one
(or more) letters highlighted in red on my sequence.
Why am I still in the clan of Helena?
- The highlighted letters show where your
mtDNA sequence varies from the Cambridge Reference Sequence
(CRS). Your mtDNA changes overtime and only certain changes
at specific positions are characteristic of your clan. If
your sequence contains one of these characteristic changes,
then your clan mother is identified appropriately. If your
sequence does not contain one of these changes, then your
clan mother was Helena.
- Is there
a connection between the Seven Daughters of Eve and the
Bible?
- No. There is no biblical significance
to the use of the term 'Seven Daughters of Eve'. When scientists
discovered that we can all trace our maternal ancestry back
to one woman, she was immediately dubbed 'Mitochondrial Eve'
by the popular press. Even though the name was no doubt chosen
because of the familiarity with our descent from Eve in the
Bible, the scientific discovery does not confirm the biblical
context of Eve. When it became clear that almost all native
Europeans are descended from only seven women, it made sense
to refer to them as the Seven Daughters of Eve, as they are
all descendants of "Mitochondrial Eve".
- Which of
my relatives is linked to me through an unbroken matrilineal
link?
- Any relative whose relationship to you
does not pass through a male. These include your mother,
all your brothers and sisters and, if you are a woman, all
your children and all your daughters’ children. They
also include your maternal grandmother (your mother’s
mother), all your mother’s brothers and sisters (your
maternal aunts and uncles) and all your aunts’ children.
If you are still in doubt, or if you want to ask about other
relatives, please contact us at enquiries@oxfordancestors.com.
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to top
Y-Clan
- Why do only
males have Y-chromosomes?
- The Y-chromosome contains a gene that
directs the development of a human embryo along the pathway
to becoming male. As long as this gene is working properly,
any human embryo which has a Y-chromosome will grow into
a baby boy. Men produce two types of sperm in equal amounts.
Half contain a Y-chromosome and half contain an X-chromosome.
The eggs produced by women have only X-chromosomes. Fertilised
eggs have either two X-chromosomes, and become girls, or
one X and one Y and become boys.
- Can
the Y-Clan™ or the Y-Line™ analysis prove paternity?
- No. Neither our Y-Clan™ nor our
Y-Line™ services can prove paternity. If you want
a test of this nature, then you should contact a company
which specialises in paternity tests. However, both our
Y-chromosome analysis services will show if two males are
paternally unrelated. For example, if two brothers have
totally different Y-Clan™ or Y-Line™ results,
then they cannot have the same biological father. Please
be aware of this possibility before requesting our Y-Clan™
or Y-Line™ service.
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MatriLine Database
- How do I
determine the position, in numbers, of the mutations
on my MatriLine certificate?
- Your mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence
is shown at the bottom of your certificate. This sequence
is the section of mtDNA between positions 16001 and 16400
base pairs on the mitochondrial chromosome, which we analyse
for our MatriLine service. Any changes (mutations)
from the Cambridge Reference Sequence (CRS) are shown in
red. More details about the CRS may be found HERE
If you count across from position 16001at
the start of the sequence on your certificate,
to the point where there are any letters highlighted
in red, then this will give you the position,
as a number, of each mutation. So, for
example, if there is a red T (thymine) 23 base
pairs in, on the third row of the sequence, then
this is at position 16223, each of the four rows
being 100 base pairs long. At the corresponding
position on the CRS, there is a letter C (cytosine),
and so this particular mutation may be written
as 16223 C-T, as the C present in the CRS has
changed to a T.
Mutations can be written in an abbreviated form, missing out the “16” at
the beginning. For example, a mutation at position 16223 may be written
as just 223. This simpler format is used by Oxford Ancestors when searching
our MatriLine database.
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-
-
The vast majority of the changes (mutations)
that occur in the DNA sequence we analyse are known
as "transitions"; i.e., an “A”
changes to a “G”, a “G” changes
to an “A”, a “C” to a “T”,
and a “T” to a “C”. We record
the positions of these changes, relative to the Cambridge
Reference Sequence, using a three-digit number that
corresponds to the position of the mutation within the
sequence, from position 1 (written as 001) to position
400 (written, unsurprisingly, as 400).
However, other mutations can sometimes occur. We record
these by using the same three-digit numbering system
as described above to identify the position of the mutation,
but we then add a single digit (the “fourth digit”)
to the end of this number to indicate that the mutation
is something other than a simple transition. The "fourth
digit" used depends on the exact nature of the
mutation that has occurred and these are described below:
CHANGE |
|
A
- C |
1 |
A
- T |
2 |
G
- C |
3 |
G
- T |
4 |
C
- A |
5 |
C
- G |
6 |
T
- A |
7 |
T
- G |
8 |
Insertion
or deletion |
9 |
- How many
sample are in your MatriLine™ database?
- As you may be aware, we have recently
launched our MatriLine database, which is compiled from the
results of Oxford Ancestors' customers and numbers in the
thousands.
In the near future, we will be making accessible to our customers a database
of mitochondrial DNA sequences compiled from research data. There are over
10,000 mtDNA sequences in this database, which can be used for research purposes
or general interest.
Please check our website periodically for any updates on this.
-
-
If you contact us
with your details and the details of the person you are
trying to contact, we will forward this on to them. It
will then be up to them to decide whether to get in touch.
To contact us CLICK HERE
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