High-resolution mtDNA evidence for the late-glacial resettlement of Europe from an Iberian refugium

  1. Luísa Pereira1,
  2. Martin Richards2,
  3. Ana Goios1,
  4. Antonio Alonso3,
  5. Cristina Albarrán3,
  6. Oscar Garcia4,
  7. Doron M. Behar5,
  8. Mukaddes Gölge6,
  9. Jiři Hatina7,
  10. Lihadh Al-Gazali8,
  11. Daniel G. Bradley9,
  12. Vincent Macaulay10,12, and
  13. António Amorim1,11
  1. 1 IPATIMUP (Instituto de Patologia e Imunologia Molecular da Universidade do Porto), 4200-465 Porto, Portugal
  2. 2 Schools of Biology and Computing, University of Leeds, Leeds, L52 9JT, United Kingdom
  3. 3 Instituto de Toxicología, Sección de Biologia, 28002 Madrid, Spain
  4. 4 Area de Laboratorio Ertzaintza, Gobierno Vasco, 48950 Bilbao, Spain
  5. 5 Bruce Rappaport Faculty of Medicine and Research Institute, Technion and Rambam Medical Center, Haifa 31096, Israel
  6. 6 Department of Physiology, University of Kiel, 24118 Kiel, Germany
  7. 7 Charles University, Medical Faculty in Pilsen, Institute of Biology, CZ-301 66 Pilsen, Czech Republic
  8. 8 Department of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, UAE University, Dubai
  9. 9 Smurfit Institute of Genetics, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
  10. 10 Department of Statistics, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, United Kingdom
  11. 11 Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade do Porto, 4099-002 Porto, Portugal

Abstract

The advent of complete mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence data has ushered in a new phase of human evolutionary studies. Even quite limited volumes of complete mtDNA sequence data can now be used to identify the critical polymorphisms that define sub-clades within an mtDNA haplogroup, providing a springboard for large-scale high-resolution screening of human mtDNAs. This strategy has in the past been applied to mtDNA haplogroup V, which represents <5% of European mtDNAs. Here we adopted a similar approach to haplogroup H, by far the most common European haplogroup, which at lower resolution displayed a rather uninformative frequency distribution within Europe. Using polymorphism information derived from the growing complete mtDNA sequence database, we sequenced 1580 base pairs of targeted coding-region segments of the mtDNA genome in 649 individuals harboring mtDNA haplogroup H from populations throughout Europe, the Caucasus, and the Near East. The enhanced genealogical resolution clearly shows that sub-clades of haplogroup H have highly distinctive geographical distributions. The patterns of frequency and diversity suggest that haplogroup H entered Europe from the Near East ∼20,000–25,000 years ago, around the time of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), and some sub-clades re-expanded from an Iberian refugium when the glaciers retreated ∼15,000 years ago. This shows that a large fraction of the maternal ancestry of modern Europeans traces back to the expansion of hunter-gatherer populations at the end of the last Ice Age.

Footnotes

  • [The sequence data from this study have been submitted to GenBank under accession nos. AY776364–AY778959.]

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.3182305.

  • 12 Corresponding author. E-mail vincent{at}stats.gla.ac.uk; fax 44 141 330 4814.

    • Accepted November 2, 2004.
    • Received August 23, 2004.
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