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1.
Cell ; 2024 Jun 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38851187

RESUMO

We examined the rate and nature of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations in humans using sequence data from 64,806 contemporary Icelanders from 2,548 matrilines. Based on 116,663 mother-child transmissions, 8,199 mutations were detected, providing robust rate estimates by nucleotide type, functional impact, position, and different alleles at the same position. We thoroughly document the true extent of hypermutability in mtDNA, mainly affecting the control region but also some coding-region variants. The results reveal the impact of negative selection on viable deleterious mutations, including rapidly mutating disease-associated 3243A>G and 1555A>G and pre-natal selection that most likely occurs during the development of oocytes. Finally, we show that the fate of new mutations is determined by a drastic germline bottleneck, amounting to an average of 3 mtDNA units effectively transmitted from mother to child.

2.
Cell ; 186(1): 32-46.e19, 2023 01 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36608656

RESUMO

We investigate a 2,000-year genetic transect through Scandinavia spanning the Iron Age to the present, based on 48 new and 249 published ancient genomes and genotypes from 16,638 modern individuals. We find regional variation in the timing and magnitude of gene flow from three sources: the eastern Baltic, the British-Irish Isles, and southern Europe. British-Irish ancestry was widespread in Scandinavia from the Viking period, whereas eastern Baltic ancestry is more localized to Gotland and central Sweden. In some regions, a drop in current levels of external ancestry suggests that ancient immigrants contributed proportionately less to the modern Scandinavian gene pool than indicated by the ancestry of genomes from the Viking and Medieval periods. Finally, we show that a north-south genetic cline that characterizes modern Scandinavians is mainly due to the differential levels of Uralic ancestry and that this cline existed in the Viking Age and possibly earlier.


Assuntos
Genoma Humano , Humanos , Europa (Continente) , Variação Genética , Países Escandinavos e Nórdicos , Reino Unido , População Branca/genética , População Branca/história , Migração Humana
4.
Curr Biol ; 32(21): 4743-4751.e6, 2022 11 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36182700

RESUMO

Human populations have been shaped by catastrophes that may have left long-lasting signatures in their genomes. One notable example is the second plague pandemic that entered Europe in ca. 1,347 CE and repeatedly returned for over 300 years, with typical village and town mortality estimated at 10%-40%.1 It is assumed that this high mortality affected the gene pools of these populations. First, local population crashes reduced genetic diversity. Second, a change in frequency is expected for sequence variants that may have affected survival or susceptibility to the etiologic agent (Yersinia pestis).2 Third, mass mortality might alter the local gene pools through its impact on subsequent migration patterns. We explored these factors using the Norwegian city of Trondheim as a model, by sequencing 54 genomes spanning three time periods: (1) prior to the plague striking Trondheim in 1,349 CE, (2) the 17th-19th century, and (3) the present. We find that the pandemic period shaped the gene pool by reducing long distance immigration, in particular from the British Isles, and inducing a bottleneck that reduced genetic diversity. Although we also observe an excess of large FST values at multiple loci in the genome, these are shaped by reference biases introduced by mapping our relatively low genome coverage degraded DNA to the reference genome. This implies that attempts to detect selection using ancient DNA (aDNA) datasets that vary by read length and depth of sequencing coverage may be particularly challenging until methods have been developed to account for the impact of differential reference bias on test statistics.


Assuntos
Peste , Humanos , Peste/epidemiologia , Peste/genética , Pandemias/história , Metagenômica , Genoma Bacteriano , Filogenia
5.
Nature ; 610(7930): 112-119, 2022 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36131019

RESUMO

The history of the British Isles and Ireland is characterized by multiple periods of major cultural change, including the influential transformation after the end of Roman rule, which precipitated shifts in language, settlement patterns and material culture1. The extent to which migration from continental Europe mediated these transitions is a matter of long-standing debate2-4. Here we study genome-wide ancient DNA from 460 medieval northwestern Europeans-including 278 individuals from England-alongside archaeological data, to infer contemporary population dynamics. We identify a substantial increase of continental northern European ancestry in early medieval England, which is closely related to the early medieval and present-day inhabitants of Germany and Denmark, implying large-scale substantial migration across the North Sea into Britain during the Early Middle Ages. As a result, the individuals who we analysed from eastern England derived up to 76% of their ancestry from the continental North Sea zone, albeit with substantial regional variation and heterogeneity within sites. We show that women with immigrant ancestry were more often furnished with grave goods than women with local ancestry, whereas men with weapons were as likely not to be of immigrant ancestry. A comparison with present-day Britain indicates that subsequent demographic events reduced the fraction of continental northern European ancestry while introducing further ancestry components into the English gene pool, including substantial southwestern European ancestry most closely related to that seen in Iron Age France5,6.


Assuntos
Pool Gênico , Migração Humana , Arqueologia , DNA Antigo/análise , Dinamarca , Inglaterra , Feminino , França , Genética Populacional , Genoma Humano/genética , Alemanha , História Medieval , Migração Humana/história , Humanos , Idioma , Masculino , Dinâmica Populacional , Armas/história
6.
Eur J Hum Genet ; 29(11): 1710-1718, 2021 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34002043

RESUMO

The aim of the present study was to describe the genetic structure of the Norwegian population using genotypes from 6369 unrelated individuals with detailed information about places of residence. Using standard single marker- and haplotype-based approaches, we report evidence of two regions with distinctive patterns of genetic variation, one in the far northeast, and another in the south of Norway, as indicated by fixation indices, haplotype sharing, homozygosity, and effective population size. We detect and quantify a component of Uralic Sami ancestry that is enriched in the North. On a finer scale, we find that rates of migration have been affected by topography like mountain ridges. In the broader Scandinavian context, we detect elevated relatedness between the mid- and northern border areas towards Sweden. The main finding of this study is that despite Norway's long maritime history and as a former Danish territory, the region closest to mainland Europe in the south appears to have been an isolated region in Norway, highlighting the open sea as a barrier to gene flow into Norway.


Assuntos
Polimorfismo Genético , População/genética , Haplótipos , Humanos , Noruega , Linhagem
7.
Bioinformatics ; 37(4): 570-572, 2021 05 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32805011

RESUMO

MOTIVATION: We introduce HaploGrouper, a versatile software to classify haplotypes into haplogroups on the basis of a known phylogenetic tree. A typical use case for this software is the assignment of haplogroups to human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) or Y-chromosome haplotypes. Existing state-of-the-art haplogroup-calling software is typically hard-wired to work only with either mtDNA or Y-chromosome haplotypes from humans. RESULTS: HaploGrouper exhibits comparable accuracy in these instances and has the advantage of being able to assign haplogroups to any kind of haplotypes from any species-given an extant annotated phylogenetic tree defined by sequence variants. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: The software is available at the following URL https://gitlab.com/bio_anth_decode/haploGrouper. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Assuntos
DNA Mitocondrial , Software , DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Haplótipos/genética , Humanos , Filogenia , Cromossomo Y
8.
Science ; 360(6392): 1028-1032, 2018 06 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29853688

RESUMO

Opportunities to directly study the founding of a human population and its subsequent evolutionary history are rare. Using genome sequence data from 27 ancient Icelanders, we demonstrate that they are a combination of Norse, Gaelic, and admixed individuals. We further show that these ancient Icelanders are markedly more similar to their source populations in Scandinavia and the British-Irish Isles than to contemporary Icelanders, who have been shaped by 1100 years of extensive genetic drift. Finally, we report evidence of unequal contributions from the ancient founders to the contemporary Icelandic gene pool. These results provide detailed insights into the making of a human population that has proven extraordinarily useful for the discovery of genotype-phenotype associations.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Deriva Genética , Genoma Humano , População/genética , DNA Antigo , Feminino , Efeito Fundador , Pool Gênico , Genótipo , Humanos , Islândia , Masculino , Fenótipo
9.
Nat Genet ; 50(2): 199-205, 2018 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29335549

RESUMO

A genome is a mosaic of chromosome fragments from ancestors who existed some arbitrary number of generations earlier. Here, we reconstruct the genome of Hans Jonatan (HJ), born in the Caribbean in 1784 to an enslaved African mother and European father. HJ migrated to Iceland in 1802, married and had two children. We genotyped 182 of his 788 descendants using single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) chips and whole-genome sequenced (WGS) 20 of them. Using these data, we reconstructed 38% of HJ's maternal genome and inferred that his mother was from the region spanned by Benin, Nigeria and Cameroon.


Assuntos
População Negra/genética , Pessoas Escravizadas , Genoma Humano , Haploidia , Linhagem , Características da Família/história , Estudo de Associação Genômica Ampla/métodos , História do Século XVIII , Humanos , Islândia , Masculino , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Análise de Sequência de DNA/métodos , Migrantes , Índias Ocidentais
10.
Nat Genet ; 47(5): 453-7, 2015 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25807285

RESUMO

Mutations are the fundamental source of biological variation, and their rate is a crucial parameter for evolutionary and medical studies. Here we used whole-genome sequence data from 753 Icelandic males, grouped into 274 patrilines, to estimate the point mutation rate for 21.3 Mb of male-specific Y chromosome (MSY) sequence, on the basis of 1,365 meioses (47,123 years). The combined mutation rate for 15.2 Mb of X-degenerate (XDG), X-transposed (XTR) and ampliconic excluding palindromes (rAMP) sequence was 8.71 × 10(-10) mutations per position per year (PPPY). We observed a lower rate (P = 0.04) of 7.37 × 10(-10) PPPY for 6.1 Mb of sequence from palindromes (PAL), which was not statistically different from the rate of 7.2 × 10(-10) PPPY for paternally transmitted autosomes. We postulate that the difference between PAL and the other MSY regions may provide an indication of the rate at which nascent autosomal and PAL de novo mutations are repaired as a result of gene conversion.


Assuntos
Cromossomos Humanos Y/genética , Taxa de Mutação , Mutação Puntual , Análise Mutacional de DNA , Evolução Molecular , Humanos , Masculino , Linhagem
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