New study finds that Jews are the genetic brothers of Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese

11 May 2000

Contact: Michael Hammer, Ph.D.
Laboratory of Molecular Systematics and Evolution
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Biosciences
West room 239
University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ 85721
(520) 621-9828
fax: (520) 621-9247
[email protected]

If a common heritage conferred peace, then perhaps the long history of conflict in the Middle East would have been resolved years ago.

According to a new scientific study, Jews are the genetic brothers of Palestinians, Syrians and Lebanese, and they all share a common genetic lineage that stretches back thousands of years.

"Jews and Arabs are all really children of the House of Abraham," says Harry Ostrer, M.D., Director of the Human Genetics Program at New York University School of Medicine, an author of the new study by an international team of researchers in the United States and Israel. "And all havepreserved their Middle Eastern genetic roots over 4000 years." The researchers analyzed the Y chromosome, which is usually passed unchanged from father to son, of more than 1,000 men worldwide. Throughout human history, alterations have occurred in the sequence of chemical bases that make up the DNA in this so-called male chromosome, leaving variations that can be pinpointed with modern genetic techniques. Related populations carry the same specific variations.

In this way, scientists can track descendants of large populations and determine their common ancestors. Specific regions of the Y chromosome were analyzed in 1,371 men from 29 worldwide populations, including Jews and non-Jews from the Middle East, North Africa, sub-Saharan Africa, and Europe. The study, published in the May 9 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, found that Jewish men shared a set of common genetic signatures with non-Jews from the Middle East, including Palestinians, Syrians, and Lebanese, and these signatures diverged significantly from those of non-Jewish men outside of this region. Consequently, Jews and Arabs share a common ancestor and are more closely related to one another than to non-Jews from other areas of the world. The study also revealed that, despite the complex history of Jewish migration in the Diaspora (the time since 556 B.C. when Jews migrated out of Palestine), Jewish communities have generally not intermixed with non-Jewish populations. If they had, then Jewish men from different regions of the world would not share the same genetic signature in their Y chromosome. "Because ancient Jewish law states that Jewish religious affiliation is assigned maternally, our study afforded the opportunity to assess the contribution of non-Jewish men to present-day Jewish genetic diversity, said Michael Hammer, who directed the research at the University of Arizona. "It was surprising to see how significant the Middle Eastern genetic signal was in Jewish men from different communities in the Diaspora." The authors of this study are: Dr. Ostrer from NYU School of Medicine; Michael F. Hammer, University of Arizona, Tucson; Alan. J. Redd, (University of Arizona); Elizabeth T. Wood (University of Arizona); Roxane Bonner (University of Arizona); Hamdi Jarjanazi (University of Arizona); Tanya. Karafet (University of Arizona), Silvana Santachiara-Benerecetti (Universityof Pavia, Italy); Ariella Oppenheim (Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel); Mark Jobling (University of Leicester, England); Trefor Jenkins (University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa) and Batsheva Bonne-Tamir (Tel Aviv University, Israel).

***EDITORS: The research article can be downloaded at the web site, PNAS reprint ****

Search words for this story on the UA News Services science web site, UA science include: y chromosome, hammer, genetics

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