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High levels of Paleolithic Y-chromosome lineages characterize Serbia
Authors:Regueiro Maria  Rivera Luis  Damnjanovic Tatjana  Lukovic Ljiljana  Milasin Jelena  Herrera Rene J
Institution:Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, College of Medicine, Florida International University, Miami, FL 33199, USA.
Abstract:Whether present-day European genetic variation and its distribution patterns can be attributed primarily to the initial peopling of Europe by anatomically modern humans during the Paleolithic, or to latter Near Eastern Neolithic input is still the subject of debate. Southeastern Europe has been a crossroads for several cultures since Paleolithic times and the Balkans, specifically, would have been part of the route used by Neolithic farmers to enter Europe. Given its geographic location in the heart of the Balkan Peninsula at the intersection of Central and Southeastern Europe, Serbia represents a key geographical location that may provide insight to elucidate the interactions between indigenous Paleolithic people and agricultural colonists from the Fertile Crescent. In this study, we examine, for the first time, the Y-chromosome constitution of the general Serbian population. A total of 103 individuals were sampled and their DNA analyzed for 104 Y-chromosome bi-allelic markers and 17 associated STR loci. Our results indicate that approximately 58% of Serbian Y-chromosomes (I1-M253, I2a-P37.2 and R1a1a-M198) belong to lineages believed to be pre-Neolithic. On the other hand, the signature of putative Near Eastern Neolithic lineages, including E1b1b1a1-M78, G2a-P15, J1-M267, J2-M172 and R1b1a2-M269 accounts for 39% of the Y-chromosome. Haplogroup frequency distributions in Western and Eastern Europe reveal a spotted landscape of paleolithic Y chromosomes, undermining continental-wide generalizations. Furthermore, an examination of the distribution of Y-chromosome filiations in Europe indicates extreme levels of Paleolithic lineages in a region encompassing Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia, possibly the result of Neolithic migrations encroaching on Paleolithic populations against the Adriatic Sea.
Keywords:STR  Short Tandem Repeat  SNP  Single nucleotide polymorphism  KYA  Thousand years ago  aDNA  ancient DNA  mtDNA  mitochondrial DNA  LBK  Linearbandkeramik culture  AMH  Anatomically modern humans  PCR  Polymerase chain reaction  RFLP  Restriction-fragment length polymorphism  ISOGG  International Society of Genetic Genealogy  MDS  multidimensional scaling  SPSS  Statistical Package for the Social Sciences  MJ  Median joining  HD  Haplotype diversity  BC  Before Christ  LGM  Last Glacial Maximum  TMRCA  Time to most recent common ancestor
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