If you want to discover your genetic history and where you came from... you’ve found the right place!

888-806-2588

review of scientific and news articles on dna testing and popular genetics

Back to the Drawing Board on Post-Ice Age Refugiums

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Using mitochondrial DNA to test the hypothesis of a European post-glacial human recolonization from the Franco-Cantabrian refuge

O García1,4, R Fregel2,4, J M Larruga2, V Álvarez3, I Yurrebaso1, V M Cabrera2 and A M González2

  1. 1Basque Country Forensic Genetics Laboratory, Erandio, Bizkaia, Spain
  2. 2Área de Genética, Departamento de Parasitología, Ecología y Genética, Facultad de Biología, Universidad de La Laguna (ULL), La Laguna, Tenerife, Spain
  3. 3Unidad de Genética, Hospital Universitario Central de Asturias, Oviedo, Asturias, Spain
Received 1 December 2009; Revised 23 February 2010; Accepted 18 March 2010; Published online 21 April 2010.

Abstract

It has been proposed that the distribution patterns and coalescence ages found in Europeans for mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups V, H1 and H3 are the result of a post-glacial expansion from a Franco-Cantabrian refuge that recolonized central and northern areas. In contrast, in this refined mtDNA study of the Cantabrian Cornice that contributes 413 partial and 9 complete new mtDNA sequences, including a large Basque sample and a sample of Asturians, no experimental evidence was found to support the human refuge-expansion theory. In fact, all measures of gene diversity point to the Cantabrian Cornice in general and the Basques in particular, as less polymorphic for V, H1 and H3 than other southern regions in Iberia or in Central Europe. Genetic distances show the Cantabrian Cornice is a very heterogeneous region with significant local differences. The analysis of several minor subhaplogroups, based on complete sequences, also suggests different focal expansions over a local and peninsular range that did not affect continental Europe. Furthermore, all detected clinal trends show stronger longitudinal than latitudinal profiles. In Northern Iberia, it seems that the highest diversity values for some haplogroups with Mesolithic coalescence ages are centred on the Mediterranean side, including Catalonia and South-eastern France.

Mitochondrial testing specialists better get busy revising their haplogroup theories! Another Western European, Atlantic-facing prejudice has been disproved.

Comments
Post has no comments.

Please tell us what you think

Name, website, and email are optional; if we publish your comment, your name will be shown, and may be linked to your website if provided, but the email you enter will not be published.





Captcha Image

Bookmark and Share

Recent Posts


Tags

M. J. Harper Teresa Panther-Yates news climate change Nova Scotia Caucasian haplogroup X Gunnar Thompson Phoenicians Cohen Modal Haplotype Hopi Indians population isolates INORA Stacy Schiff Gregory Mendel Majorca Normans Phyllis Starnes European DNA Jone Entine surnames Applied Epistemology Micmac Indians Lebanon Bradshaw Foundation India education Iran Riane Eisler autosomal DNA Indo-Europeans Population genetics Abenaki Indians George van der Merwede Middle Ages medicine DNA Forums George Starr-Bresette Jewish genetics Sorbs Arabia Algonquian Indians personal genomics Maya megapopulations Native American DNA DNA Fingerprint Test Basques ethics Akhenaten American history population genetics evolution African DNA Neolithic Revolution haplogroup E human leukocyte antigens history of science Austronesian, Filipinos, Australoid Zuni Indians haplogroup B statistics N. Brent Kennedy linguistics Middle Eastern DNA anthropology Melungeons Elizabeth C. Hirschman Italy Jews Cherokee DNA Wales Great Goddess Tutankamun clan symbols Ireland Nikola Tesla rock art Stone Age Melungeon Heritage Association myths Keros archeology Pima Indians seafaring French Canadians Native American DNA Test Havasupai Indians Colin Renfrew Panther's Lodge Charles Darwin Melungeon Union Paleolithic Age Joseph Jacobs human migrations Arizona State University HapMap Gravettian culture Celts Shlomo Sand Stephen Oppenheimer Oxford Nanopore Marija Gimbutas Anne Marie Fine Kurgan Culture mental foramen Greeks haplogroup T Chuetas China DNA Fingerprint Test Dienekes Anthropology Blog haplogroup J Freemont Indians DNA testing companies Hohokam Indians Choctaw Indians Cornwall Neanderthals Current Anthropology Plato Etruscans BATWING Denisovans genomics labs Tifaneg Bode Technology Wendy Roth Melanesians Egyptians Roma People Irish history ethnic markers Asian DNA haplogroup U Chris Stringer Khazars forensics prehistory corn French DNA Y chromosome DNA Britain Helladic art Telltown Alabama health and medicine EURO DNA Fingerprint Test immunology Peter Parham Abraham Lincoln Jews and Muslims in British Colonial America FOX News epigenetics Russia religion Acadians England Gypsies Theodore Steinberg Maronites Anglo-Saxons occipital bun Tintagel King Arthur Michael Grant Europe Bryan Sykes mitochondrial DNA Ashkenazi Jews Belgium ethnicity Donald N. Yates ancient DNA Mary Settegast genealogy Kentucky Anasazi Magdalenian culture Turkic DNA cannibalism Arabic Pueblo Indians North African DNA Cajuns BBCNews Sea Peoples Finnish people genetics Barack Obama Y chromosomal haplogroups Cleopatra

Archive