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Database Profile

General information

URL: https://yhrd.org
Full name: Y Chromosome Haplotype Reference Database
Description: The Y Chromosome Haplotype Reference Database (YHRD) is an open access, annotated collection of population samples typed for Y chromosomal sequence variants. Two important objectives are pursued: (1) the generation of reliable frequency estimates for Y-STR Haplotypes and Y-SNP Haplotypes to be used in the quantitative assessment of matches in forensic and kinship cases and (2) the characterization of male lineages to draw conclusions about the origins and history of human populations. Since its creation in 1999 it has been curated by Lutz Roewer and Sascha Willuweit at the Institute of Legal Medicine and Forensic Sciences, Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin. The database is endorsed by the International Society for Forensic Genetics (ISFG) and partially funded by Life Technologies and Promega Corporation. By October 2017 more than 197,000 9-locus haplotypes, among them 145,816 17-locus haplotypes, 39,414 23-locus haplotypes, 22,832 27-locus haplotypes and 20,495 Y SNP profiles sampled in 133 countries have been directly submitted by 293 institutes and laboratories from 71 countries. In geographic terms, about 41% of the YHRD samples stem from Asia, 34% from Europe, 14% from Latin America, 5% from North America, 4% from Africa and 1% from Oceania/Australia. The 1128 individual sampling projects are described in 479 peer-reviewed publications
Year founded: 2002
Last update:
Version: YHRD 4.0
Accessibility:
Manual:
Accessible
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Country/Region: Germany

Classification & Tag

Data type:
DNA
Data object:
Database category:
Major species:
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: Charité University Medicine Berlin
Address: Department of Forensic Genetics, Institute of Legal Medicine, Charité-Universitätsmedizin, Berlin, Germany
City: Berlin
Province/State:
Country/Region: Germany
Contact name (PI/Team): Sascha Willuweit
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): sascha.willuweit@charite.de

Publications

25529991
The new Y Chromosome Haplotype Reference Database. [PMID: 25529991]
Willuweit S, Roewer L.

After opening the first version of an internet-accessible worldwide reference database of Y chromosome profiles 14 years ago and six years after the last major relaunch the new YHRD 4.0 repository and website has been rolled-out. By November 2014 about 136k 9-locus haplotypes, among these 84k 17-locus haplotypes, 25k 23-locus haplotypes and 15k Y SNP profiles from 917 sampling locations in 128 countries have been submitted by more than 250 institutes and laboratories. In geographic terms, about 39% of the YHRD samples are from Europe, 32% from Asia, 16% from South America, 6% from North America, 4% from Africa and 2% from Oceania/Australia. Worldwide collaboration is the driving force for the rapid growth of the database and this, in turn, allows the evaluation and implementation of enhanced interpretation tools (variable frequency estimators, LR-based mixture and kinship analysis, Y-SNP-based ancestry assessment).

Forensic Sci Int Genet. 2015:15() | 74 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-06)
19083734
Y chromosome haplotype reference database (YHRD): update. [PMID: 19083734]
Willuweit S, Roewer L, International Forensic Y Chromosome User Group.

The freely accessible YHRD (Y Chromosome Haplotype Reference Database, www.yhrd.org) is designed to store Y chromosome haplotypes from global populations and had replaced three earlier database versions collecting European, Asian and US American Y chromosomes separately. The focus is to disseminate haplotype frequency data to forensic analysts, researchers, and to everyone who is interested in historical and family genetics. YHRD considers reduction of the available number of polymorphisms on the Y chromosome to a uniform data string of 11 highly variable Y-STR loci as an efficient way to rapidly screen many world populations and to make their Y chromosome profiles comparable. Typing of the YHRD 11-locus core set is facilitated by commercial products, namely diagnostic PCR kits, and endorsed by scientific and forensic analyst's societies as ISFG or SWGDAM. YHRD is structured by the assignment of each submitted population sample to a set of populations sharing a common linguistic, demographic, genetic or geographic background (metapopulations). This principle facilitates the statistical evaluation of haplotype matches due to a significant enlargement of sample sizes. With the rapid growth of the database the definition of homogeneous metapopulations is now also feasible solely on the basis of the genetic data as exemplified for the whole dataset of YHRD, release 19 (August 2006). Large sample numbers within genetically defined metapopulations also allows the development of biostatistical methods to estimate the frequency of unobserved or rare haplotypes ("haplotype frequency surveying method"). Essential for the YHRD project is its collaborative character relying on the engagement of individual laboratories to make their data accessible via YHRD and to share the YHRD standards regarding data quality.

Forensic Sci Int Genet. 2007:1(2) | 162 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-06)
12935578
Asian online Y-STR Haplotype Reference Database. [PMID: 12935578]
Lessig R, Willuweit S, Krawczak M, Wu FC, Pu CE, Kim W, Henke L, Henke J, Miranda J, Hidding M, Benecke M, Schmitt C, Magno M, Calacal G, Delfin FC, de Ungria MC, Elias S, Augustin C, Tun Z, Honda K, Kayser M, Gusmao L, Amorim A, Alves C, Hou Y, Keyser C, Ludes B, Klintschar M, Immel UD, Reichenpfader B, Zaharova B, Roewer L.

For several years Y-chromosomal microsatellites (short tandem repeats, STRs) have been well established in forensic practice. In this context, the genetic characteristics of the Y chromosome (i.e. its paternal inheritance and lack of recombination) render STRs particularly powerful. However, genetic differences between male populations appear to be larger for Y-STRs than for autosomal STRs, a fact that is most likely due to the higher sensitivity of Y-chromosomal lineages to genetic drift (Forensic Sci Int 118 (2001) 153). The assessment of probabilities for matches between haplotyped male persons or traces/persons requires the typing of a large number of haplotypes in the appropriate reference populations. The haplotype data of a large number of European as well as South and North American populations have been collected and are continuously published online (Y-STR Haplotype Reference Database--YHRD; http://www.ystr.org). The most recent multicentric effort has led to the establishment of an Asian YHRD (http://www.ystr.org/asia) which has been available since January 2002. All databases are maintained and curated at the Institute of Legal Medicine, Humboldt-University, Berlin and will soon be fused to a global repository including populations from all continents.

Leg Med (Tokyo). 2003:5 Suppl 1() | 21 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-06)
12051329
Online Y-chromosomal short tandem repeat haplotype reference database (YHRD) for U.S. populations. [PMID: 12051329]
Kayser M, Brauer S, Willuweit S, Schädlich H, Batzer MA, Zawacki J, Prinz M, Roewer L, Stoneking M.

We describe here an online Y-chromosomal short tandem repeat haplotype reference database (YHRD) for U.S. populations, which represents 9-locus Y-STR haplotypes for 1705 African-Americans, European-Americans and Hispanics as of October 2001. This database is available online (http://www.ystr. org/usa/), free to access and was generated in order to supply the U.S. forensic DNA community with a valuable resource for frequencies of complete or incomplete 9-locus Y-STR haplotypes, as well as information about typing protocols and population genetic analyses. Pairwise R(ST)-statistics derived from the Y-STR haplotypes indicate no significant substructure among African-American populations from different regions of the U.S., nor (usually) among European-American and Hispanic populations. Thus, pooling of Y-STR haplotype data from regional populations within these three major groups is appropriate in order to obtain larger sample sizes. However, pooling of different major populations is generally not recommended due to statistically significant differences between African-American populations and all European-American/Hispanic populations, as well as between some European-American and Hispanic populations.

J Forensic Sci. 2002:47(3) | 26 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2024-04-06)

Ranking

All databases:
796/6000 (86.75%)
Genotype phenotype and variation:
103/852 (88.028%)
796
Total Rank
282
Citations
12.818
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Record metadata

Created on: 2018-01-28
Curated by:
Lina Ma [2020-07-06]
huma shireen [2018-09-04]
Fatima Batool [2018-04-12]
Yang Zhang [2018-01-27]