Mitochondrial Haplogroup U5b3: A Distant Echo of the Epipaleolithic in Italy and the Legacy of the Early Sardinians |
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Authors: | Maria Pala,Anna Olivieri,Ugo A. Perego,Daria Sanna,Kristiina Tambets,Matteo Accetturo,Hovirag Lancioni,Bettina Zimmermann,Nadia Al-Zahery,Francesca Brisighelli,Paolo Francalacci,Antonio Salas,Richard Villems,Hans-Jü rgen Bandelt |
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Affiliation: | 1 Dipartimento di Genetica e Microbiologia, Università di Pavia, Pavia 27100, Italy 2 Dipartimento di Biologia Cellulare e Ambientale, Università di Perugia, Perugia 06123, Italy 3 Sorenson Molecular Genealogy Foundation, Salt Lake City, UT 84115, USA 4 Dipartimento di Zoologia e Genetica Evoluzionistica, Università di Sassari, Sassari 07100, Italy 5 Department of Evolutionary Biology, University of Tartu and Estonian Biocentre, Tartu 51010, Estonia 6 Institute of Legal Medicine, Innsbruck Medical University, Innsbruck A-6020, Austria 7 Department of Biotechnology, College of Science, University of Baghdad, Iraq 8 Unidade de Xenética, Departamento de Anatomía Patolóxica e Ciencias Forenses; and Instituto de Medicina Legal, Facultade de Medicina, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Santiago de Compostela, Galicia 15782, Spain 9 Molecular Medicine Laboratory, Rambam Health Care Campus, Haifa 31096, Israel 10 Department of Mathematics, University of Hamburg, Hamburg 20146, Germany |
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Abstract: | There are extensive data indicating that some glacial refuge zones of southern Europe (Franco-Cantabria, Balkans, and Ukraine) were major genetic sources for the human recolonization of the continent at the beginning of the Holocene. Intriguingly, there is no genetic evidence that the refuge area located in the Italian Peninsula contributed to this process. Here we show, through phylogeographic analyses of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation performed at the highest level of molecular resolution (52 entire mitochondrial genomes), that the most likely homeland for U5b3—a haplogroup present at a very low frequency across Europe—was the Italian Peninsula. In contrast to mtDNA haplogroups that expanded from other refugia, the Holocene expansion of haplogroup U5b3 toward the North was restricted by the Alps and occurred only along the Mediterranean coasts, mainly toward nearby Provence (southern France). From there, ∼7,000–9,000 years ago, a subclade of this haplogroup moved to Sardinia, possibly as a result of the obsidian trade that linked the two regions, leaving a distinctive signature in the modern people of the island. This scenario strikingly matches the age, distribution, and postulated geographic source of a Sardinian Y chromosome haplogroup (I2a2-M26), a paradigmatic case in the European context of a founder event marking both female and male lineages. |
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