| Literature DB >> 28256601 |
Alessandra Modi1, Francesca Tassi2, Roberta Rosa Susca2, Stefania Vai1, Ermanno Rizzi3,4, Gianluca De Bellis4, Carlo Lugliè5, Gloria Gonzalez Fortes2, Martina Lari1, Guido Barbujani2, David Caramelli1, Silvia Ghirotto2.
Abstract
Little is known about the genetic prehistory of Sardinia because of the scarcity of pre-Neolithic human remains. From a genetic perspective, modern Sardinians are known as genetic outliers in Europe, showing unusually high levels of internal diversity and a close relationship to early European Neolithic farmers. However, how far this peculiar genetic structure extends and how it originated was to date impossible to test. Here we present the first and oldest complete mitochondrial sequences from Sardinia, dated back to 10,000 yBP. These two individuals, while confirming a Mesolithic occupation of the island, belong to rare mtDNA lineages, which have never been found before in Mesolithic samples and that are currently present at low frequencies not only in Sardinia, but in the whole Europe. Preliminary Approximate Bayesian Computations, restricted by biased reference samples for Mesolithic Sardinia (the two typed samples) and Neolithic Europe (limited to central and north European sequences), suggest that the first inhabitants of the island have had a small or negligible contribution to the present-day Sardinian population, which mainly derives its genetic diversity from continental migration into the island by Neolithic times.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28256601 PMCID: PMC5335606 DOI: 10.1038/srep42869
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Su Carroppu site and samples.
(a) the location of Su Carroppu rockshelter, Sardiania (Italy) and (b) pictures of the 3 samples used in this study. The map is plotted using data available on http://webgis.regione.sardegna.it/Download/raccolteCartografiche/modelliDigitaliTerreno/DTM10m/.The material is licensed under the Creative Commons attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode). The map was processed with Corel Photo-Paint 9 v9.439 (http://www.coreldraw.com/en/product/graphic-design-software/? topNav=en, version 9.439 licensed to CL) and modified with Photoshop CC (2015.5).
Samples analyzed.
| Sample ID | 14C Age (BCE) | nt covered at least at 3-fold coverage (% of mtDNA) | Average fragment lenght | C to T misincorporation at 5′-end (%) | Contamination estimate (95% CI) | Hg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CAR-H3 | 7938–7525 | 13,730 (82.88%) | 72.74 | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| CAR-H7 | 8227–7596 | 16,527 (99.75%) | 62.59 | 34.45 | 0.9–7.3% | J2b1 |
| CAR-H8 | 9124–7851 | 16,446 (99.24%) | 53.09 | 43.18 | 0.4–5.9% | I3 |
| CI = credibility interval | ||||||
For each sample, radiocarbon date, the percentage of mtDNA covered at least at 3-fold coverage, average fragment length, deamination at 5′-end, contamination estimate and mitochondrial haplogroup are reported.
Figure 2Median-joining network based on nucleotide variation in the whole mtDNA within (a) Pre-Neolithic dataset (Supplementary Table S5) (b) J2b dataset (Supplementary Table S6).
Figure 3Alternative models of the genealogical relationships among past and present populations, and their posterior probabilities based on 50,000 best fitting simulations.
MSS: Mesolithics from Sardinia; MS: Moderns from Sardinia; EN: Early Neolithics; MN: Middle Neolithics.
Parameters estimation of the admixture tot model.
| Median | Mode | 95% HPD-LowB | 95% HPD-UppB | R Squared | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P | 0.872 | 0.966 | 0.518 | 1 | 0.400 |
| rs | 1.647 | 1 | 1 | 4.050 | 0.088 |
| Nan | 2,649 | 1,517 | 107 | 7,626 | 0.500 |
| Nas | 793 | 461 | 100 | 2,785 | 0.503 |
| Ncn | 38,574 | 14,871 | 1673 | 94,089 | 0.060 |
| Ncs | 21,371 | 9,801 | 1,000 | 84,554 | 0.312 |
| mut | 2.1E-08 | 2E-08 | 1.3E-08 | 3.1E-08 | 0.523 |
P is the proportion of Sardinian lineages coming from Neolithic Europe, rs is the extent of population reduction due to the bottleneck of the first colonization of Sardinia, Nan is the ancient effective population size of Neolithic Europe, Nas is the ancient Sardinian effective population size, Ncn is the current European effective population size, Ncs is the current Sardinian effective population size and mut is the mutation rate per nucleotide per year.