Mitochondrial haplogroup N1a phylogeography, with implication to the origin of European farmers.

BMC Evol Biol

Laboratory for Conservation and Utilization of Bio-resources, Yunnan University, 2 North Green Lake Street, Kunming 650091, China.

Published: October 2010

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the genetic origins of the N1a lineages found in central European farmers to better understand how farming technology spread across the region during prehistoric times.
  • Researchers sequenced 12 modern mitochondrial DNA samples similar to ancient farmer N1a types and conducted a comprehensive analysis, revealing multiple sources for these lineages, including eastern Europe, local central Europe, and the Near East through southern Europe.
  • The findings suggest that the introduction of central European farmer lineages was not a straightforward migration from the Near East, but rather a complex process involving various waves of movement, indicating a more complicated Neolithic transition in the area.

Article Abstract

Background: Tracing the genetic origin of central European farmer N1a lineages can provide a unique opportunity to assess the patterns of the farming technology spread into central Europe in the human prehistory. Here, we have chosen twelve N1a samples from modern populations which are most similar with the farmer N1a types and performed the complete mitochondrial DNA genome sequencing analysis. To assess the genetic and phylogeographic relationship, we performed a detailed survey of modern published N1a types from Eurasian and African populations.

Results: The geographic origin and expansion of farmer lineages related N1a subclades have been deduced from combined analysis of 19 complete sequences with 166 N1a haplotypes. The phylogeographic analysis revealed that the central European farmer lineages have originated from different sources: from eastern Europe, local central Europe, and from the Near East via southern Europe.

Conclusions: The results obtained emphasize that the arrival of central European farmer lineages did not occur via a single demic diffusion event from the Near East at the onset of the Neolithic spread of agriculture into Europe. Indeed these results indicate that the Neolithic transition process was more complex in central Europe and possibly the farmer N1a lineages were a result of a 'leapfrog' colonization process.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2964711PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-10-304DOI Listing

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