High-resolution mtDNA evidence for the late-glacial resettlement of Europe from an Iberian refugium
- Luísa Pereira1,
- Martin Richards2,
- Ana Goios1,
- Antonio Alonso3,
- Cristina Albarrán3,
- Oscar Garcia4,
- Doron M. Behar5,
- Mukaddes Gölge6,
- Jiři Hatina7,
- Lihadh Al-Gazali8,
- Daniel G. Bradley9,
- Vincent Macaulay10,12, and
- António Amorim1,11
- 1 IPATIMUP (Instituto de Patologia e Imunologia Molecular da Universidade do Porto), 4200-465 Porto, Portugal
- 2 Schools of Biology and Computing, University of Leeds, Leeds, L52 9JT, United Kingdom
- 3 Instituto de Toxicología, Sección de Biologia, 28002 Madrid, Spain
- 4 Area de Laboratorio Ertzaintza, Gobierno Vasco, 48950 Bilbao, Spain
- 5 Bruce Rappaport Faculty of Medicine and Research Institute, Technion and Rambam Medical Center, Haifa 31096, Israel
- 6 Department of Physiology, University of Kiel, 24118 Kiel, Germany
- 7 Charles University, Medical Faculty in Pilsen, Institute of Biology, CZ-301 66 Pilsen, Czech Republic
- 8 Department of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, UAE University, Dubai
- 9 Smurfit Institute of Genetics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
- 10 Department of Statistics, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom
- 11 Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade do Porto, 4099-002 Porto, Portugal
Abstract
The advent of complete mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence data has ushered in a new phase of human evolutionary studies. Even quite limited volumes of complete mtDNA sequence data can now be used to identify the critical polymorphisms that define sub-clades within an mtDNA haplogroup, providing a springboard for large-scale high-resolution screening of human mtDNAs. This strategy has in the past been applied to mtDNA haplogroup V, which represents <5% of European mtDNAs. Here we adopted a similar approach to haplogroup H, by far the most common European haplogroup, which at lower resolution displayed a rather uninformative frequency distribution within Europe. Using polymorphism information derived from the growing complete mtDNA sequence database, we sequenced 1580 base pairs of targeted coding-region segments of the mtDNA genome in 649 individuals harboring mtDNA haplogroup H from populations throughout Europe, the Caucasus, and the Near East. The enhanced genealogical resolution clearly shows that sub-clades of haplogroup H have highly distinctive geographical distributions. The patterns of frequency and diversity suggest that haplogroup H entered Europe from the Near East ∼20,000–25,000 years ago, around the time of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), and some sub-clades re-expanded from an Iberian refugium when the glaciers retreated ∼15,000 years ago. This shows that a large fraction of the maternal ancestry of modern Europeans traces back to the expansion of hunter-gatherer populations at the end of the last Ice Age.
Footnotes
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[The sequence data from this study have been submitted to GenBank under accession nos. AY776364–AY778959.]
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Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.3182305.
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↵12 Corresponding author. E-mail vincent{at}stats.gla.ac.uk; fax 44 141 330 4814.
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- Accepted November 2, 2004.
- Received August 23, 2004.
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press