| Literature DB >> 26173964 |
Sergio Tofanelli1, Francesca Brisighelli2,3, Paolo Anagnostou4,5, George B J Busby2,6, Gianmarco Ferri7, Mark G Thomas8, Luca Taglioli1, Igor Rudan9, Tatijana Zemunik10, Caroline Hayward11, Deborah Bolnick11, Valentino Romano12,13, Francesco Cali12, Donata Luiselli14, Gillian B Shepherd15, Sebastiano Tusa16, Antonino Facella17, Cristian Capelli2.
Abstract
Greek colonisation of South Italy and Sicily (Magna Graecia) was a defining event in European cultural history, although the demographic processes and genetic impacts involved have not been systematically investigated. Here, we combine high-resolution surveys of the variability at the uni-parentally inherited Y chromosome and mitochondrial DNA in selected samples of putative source and recipient populations with forward-in-time simulations of alternative demographic models to detect signatures of that impact. Using a subset of haplotypes chosen to represent historical sources, we recover a clear signature of Greek ancestry in East Sicily compatible with the settlement from Euboea during the Archaic Period (eighth to fifth century BCE). We inferred moderate sex-bias in the numbers of individuals involved in the colonisation: a few thousand breeding men and a few hundred breeding women were the estimated number of migrants. Last, we demonstrate that studies aimed at quantifying Hellenic genetic flow by the proportion of specific lineages surviving in present-day populations may be misleading.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26173964 PMCID: PMC4757772 DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2015.124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246