| Literature DB >> 28235025 |
Alexey G Nikitin1, Inna Potekhina2, Nadin Rohland3, Swapan Mallick3,4,5, David Reich3,4,5, Malcolm Lillie6.
Abstract
The agricultural revolution in Eastern Europe began in the Eneolithic with the Cucuteni-Trypillia culture complex. In Ukraine, the Trypillian culture (TC) existed for over two millennia (ca. 5,400-2,700 BCE) and left a wealth of artifacts. Yet, their burial rituals remain a mystery and to date almost nothing is known about the genetic composition of the TC population. One of the very few TC sites where human remains can be found is a cave called Verteba in western Ukraine. This report presents four partial and four complete mitochondrial genomes from nine TC individuals uncovered in the cave. The results of this analysis, combined with the data from previous reports, indicate that the Trypillian population at Verteba carried, for the most part, a typical Neolithic farmer package of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) lineages traced to Anatolian farmers and Neolithic farming groups of central Europe. At the same time, the find of two specimens belonging to haplogroup U8b1 at Verteba can be viewed as a connection of TC with the Upper Paleolithic European populations. At the level of mtDNA haplogroup frequencies, the TC population from Verteba demonstrates a close genetic relationship with population groups of the Funnel Beaker/ Trichterbecker cultural complex from central and northern Europe (ca. 3,950-2,500 BCE).Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28235025 PMCID: PMC5325568 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0172952
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and corresponding mitochondrial DNA haplogroups for Verteba samples from partial mtDNA sequences obtained at Grand Valley State University (GVSU) for the coding (sequence ranges: 4153–4396, 6950–7051, 12217–12308) and HVR-I (sequence range: 15974–16407) regions and complete mitochondrial genome sequences obtained at Harvard Medical School (HMS, sequence range: 1–16569).
Nucleotide positions reported are changes relative to the revised Cambridge Reference Sequence (rCRS) [16].
| Specimen ID, radiocarbon age (2 σ) | Mitochondrial haplogroup | SNPs (GVSU) | Number of clones sequenced (GVSU) | SNPs (HMS) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| V1.1.1, 3,700–3,500 cal BCE | U8b1a2 | C7028T, A12308G, T16172C, C16259T, C16266T, T16311C | 32 | Not determined |
| V1.2, 3,700–3,500 cal BCE | H | rCRS | 16 | Not determined |
| V3.13.1, 3,700–3,500 cal BCE | HV | Not determined | 0 | A263G, A750G, A1438G, A2706G, A4769G, C7028T, C13347T, A15326G, T16311C |
| V3.14.1, 3,700–3,500 cal BCE | T2b | C7028T, T16126C, C16294T, C16296T, T16304C | 33 | A073G, A263G, G513A, G709A, A750G, G930A, A1438G, G1888A, A4769G, A4917G, G5147A, T6293C, C7028T, G8697A, A8860G, T10463C, A11084G, A11251G, G11719A, A11812G, G13368A, A14233G, C14766T, G14905A, A15326G, C15452A, A15607G, G15928A, T16126C, C16294T, C16296T, T16304C, T16519C |
| V3.15.1, 3,700–3,500 cal BCE | U8b1b | C7028T, A12308G, T16189C, C16234T, T16324C | 42 | Not determined |
| V3.16.1, 3,700–3,500 cal BCE | HV0 | C7028T, T16298C | 16 | Not determined |
| V3.17.1, 3,700–3,500 cal BCE | H5a | rCRS | 16 | A263G, C456T, A750G, T3645C, A4769G, A8860G, T14978Y, A15326G, T16304C |
| M5, 3,600–2,900 cal BCE | H1b | T16189Y, T16356C | 30 | A093G, A263G, A750G, A1438G, G3010A, A3796G, A8860G, A15326G, T16189Y, T16356C, T16519C |
Fig 1PCA plot of mitochondrial DNA frequencies of 37 Eurasian populations from the Upper Paleolithic to the Early Bronze Age, including Trypillian population from Verteba (TC, shaded).
The Neo-Eneolithic cluster of farming populations from Asia Minor and Europe is circled on the graph. Culture abbreviations, population sizes and the sources of data are given in the S2 Table.