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A Link To The Past: The 'Armenian Dna Project'

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  • A Link To The Past: The 'Armenian Dna Project'

    A LINK TO THE PAST: THE 'ARMENIAN DNA PROJECT'

    by Shantal Der Boghosian
    January 31, 2013

    Technological and medical advances in the last decade have opened many
    doors to research and development. It seems that the more answers we
    find, the more complex and layered our questions become. DNA testing
    is one of the advances that have become more readily available to the
    public. DNA is a self-replicating material present in all living
    things as the main constituent of chromosomes. A human normally has 23
    pairs of chromosomes and inherits the 2 sets of chromosomes from
    his/her parents. Two of the chromosomes are the sex chromosomes: If
    you have an XY chromosome, you are a male, and if you have an XX
    chromosome, you are a female. DNA testing allows a person to determine
    changes in genes that may indicate a specific disorder, and the test
    results can reveal a large amount of family history.

    To learn more about the project, visit www.familytreedna.com and
    search for the "Armenia DNA Project."

    But what if you wanted a genetic map of your ancestry? What if you
    wanted to know if all families that shared your last name were related
    to you genetically? This is particularly important to Armenians,
    considering the variability of Armenian last names and the destruction
    of genealogical records of Ottoman-Armenians during the genocide. A
    group of scientists decided to find answers to these questions, and
    began the Armenian DNA Project.

    The Armenian DNA Project was launched in September 2009 by Hovann
    Simonian, Peter Hrechdakian, and Mark Arslan to help researchers from
    common or related families work together to find their shared
    heritage, to identify and confirm genetic Lineages of ancestral
    families, and to ultimately catalogue pedigrees and genetic
    connections of all known project families. The Armenian DNA Project
    works in close cooperation with Levon Yepiskoposyan, a professor at
    the Institute of Molecular Biology. Yepiskoposyan began his ambitious
    experiment in January 2010, aiming to reconstruct the genetic history
    of Armenia and provide a precise interpretation of Armenians' genetic
    DNA makeup. In 2010, he administered a blood test to 500 male
    Armenians, free of charge. In human genetic genealogy, use of the
    information contained in the Y chromosome is of particular interest
    since, unlike other chromosomes, the Y chromosome is passed on
    exclusively from father to son. Testing the Y chromosome can provide
    insight into the recent and ancient genetic ancestry, as a human male
    should largely share the same Y chromosome as his father, give or take
    a few mutations. Similar genetic sequences on the Y chromosome can
    reveal that two males are related. Although Yepiskoposyan focuses only
    on males, the same test can be conducted on females by studying their
    mitochondrial DNA, as the mitochondria is passed from mother to child.

    The founders of the Armenian DNA Project aim to find genetic traces of
    both the ancient peoples whose descendants make up the current
    Armenian population, and the ancient invaders who conquered or passed
    through Armenian lands. The project is open to individuals with direct
    paternal or maternal ancestors of Armenian ancestry. To learn more
    about the project, visit www.familytreedna.com and search for the
    "Armenia DNA Project."

    For readers who have studied DNA in biology, you'll recall that
    chromosomes are very stringy, so what better recipe to share with you
    than spun sugar? All I ask from you is that you follow this recipe
    carefully and do not burn yourself!

    http://www.armenianweekly.com/2013/01/31/a-link-to-the-past-the-armenian-dna-project/

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