Mitochondrial DNA signals of late glacial recolonization of Europe from near eastern refugia.
نویسندگان : Maria Pala Anna Olivieri Alessandro Achilli Matteo Accetturo Ene Metspalu Maere Reidla Erika Tamm Monika Karmin Tuuli Reisberg Baharak Hooshiar Kashani Ugo A. Perego Valeria Carossa Francesca Gandini Joana B. Pereira Pedro Soares Norman Angerhofer Sergei Rychkov Nadia Al-Zahery Valerio Carelli Mohammad Hossein Sanati Massoud Houshmand Jiri Hatina Vincent Macaulay Luı´sa Pereira Scott R. Woodward William Davies Clive Gamble Douglas Baird Ornella Semino Richard Villems Antonio Torroni Martin B. Richards
Human populations, along with those of many other species, are thought to have contracted into a number of refuge areas at the height of the last Ice Age. European populations are believed to be, to a large extent, the descendants of the inhabitants of these refugia, and some extant mtDNA lineages can be traced to refugia in Franco-Cantabria (haplogroups H1, H3, V, and U5b1), the Italian Peninsula (U5b3), and the East European Plain (U4 and U5a). Parts of the Near East, such as the Levant, were also continuously inhabited throughout the Last Glacial Maximum, but unlike western and eastern Europe, no archaeological or genetic evidence for Late Glacial expansions into Europe from the Near East has hitherto been discovered. Here we report, on the basis of an enlarged whole-genome mitochondrial database, that a substantial, perhaps predominant, signal from mitochondrial haplogroups J and T, previously thought to have spread primarily from the Near East into Europe with the Neolithic population, may in fact reflect dispersals during the Late Glacial period, ~19–12 thousand years (ka) ago.
کلید واژگان :Mitochondrial DNA
ارزش ریالی : 1200000 ریال
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