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.2016 Mar 21;26(6):827-33.
doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.01.037. Epub 2016 Feb 4.

Pleistocene Mitochondrial Genomes Suggest a Single Major Dispersal of Non-Africans and a Late Glacial Population Turnover in Europe

Cosimo Posth  1Gabriel Renaud  2Alissa Mittnik  3Dorothée G Drucker  4Hélène Rougier  5Christophe Cupillard  6Frédérique Valentin  7Corinne Thevenet  8Anja Furtwängler  9Christoph Wißing  4Michael Francken  10Maria Malina  11Michael Bolus  11Martina Lari  12Elena Gigli  12Giulia Capecchi  13Isabelle Crevecoeur  14Cédric Beauval  15Damien Flas  16Mietje Germonpré  17Johannes van der Plicht  18Richard Cottiaux  8Bernard Gély  19Annamaria Ronchitelli  13Kurt Wehrberger  20Dan Grigorescu  21Jiří Svoboda  22Patrick Semal  17David Caramelli  12Hervé Bocherens  23Katerina Harvati  24Nicholas J Conard  25Wolfgang Haak  26Adam Powell  27Johannes Krause  28
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Free article

Pleistocene Mitochondrial Genomes Suggest a Single Major Dispersal of Non-Africans and a Late Glacial Population Turnover in Europe

Cosimo Posth et al. Curr Biol..
Free article

Erratum in

  • Curr Biol. 2016 Feb 22;26(4):557-61

Abstract

How modern humans dispersed into Eurasia and Australasia, including the number of separate expansions and their timings, is highly debated [1, 2]. Two categories of models are proposed for the dispersal of non-Africans: (1) single dispersal, i.e., a single major diffusion of modern humans across Eurasia and Australasia [3-5]; and (2) multiple dispersal, i.e., additional earlier population expansions that may have contributed to the genetic diversity of some present-day humans outside of Africa [6-9]. Many variants of these models focus largely on Asia and Australasia, neglecting human dispersal into Europe, thus explaining only a subset of the entire colonization process outside of Africa [3-5, 8, 9]. The genetic diversity of the first modern humans who spread into Europe during the Late Pleistocene and the impact of subsequent climatic events on their demography are largely unknown. Here we analyze 55 complete human mitochondrial genomes (mtDNAs) of hunter-gatherers spanning ∼35,000 years of European prehistory. We unexpectedly find mtDNA lineage M in individuals prior to the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). This lineage is absent in contemporary Europeans, although it is found at high frequency in modern Asians, Australasians, and Native Americans. Dating the most recent common ancestor of each of the modern non-African mtDNA clades reveals their single, late, and rapid dispersal less than 55,000 years ago. Demographic modeling not only indicates an LGM genetic bottleneck, but also provides surprising evidence of a major population turnover in Europe around 14,500 years ago during the Late Glacial, a period of climatic instability at the end of the Pleistocene.

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