Calderón R, Ambrosio B, Guitard E, González-Martín A, Aresti U, Dugoujon J M
Departamento de Zoología y Antropología Física, Facultad de Biología, Universidad Complutense, 28040 Madrid, Spain.
Hum Biol. 2006 Dec;78(6):663-79. doi: 10.1353/hub.2007.0008.
An understanding of population relationships in the Mediterranean region is crucial to the reconstruction of recent human evolution. Andalusia, the most southern region of Spain, has been continuously and densely occupied since ancient times and has a rich history of contacts with many different Mediterranean populations. Thus, to understand the Mediterranean peopling process, investigators should analyze the population relationships between the Iberian peninsula and northern Africa based on an assessment of genetic diversity that takes Andalusia into consideration. The aim of this study was to address the extent of genetic variation in the Iberian peninsula between its geographic extremes (Huelva and the Basque area) and to explain the intensity of the phylogenetic relationships between Andalusians and other neighboring populations, such as those from North Africa. We present, for the first time, results on allotype markers (GM and KM) of human immunoglobulins in the Andalusian population from Huelva. The most frequent GM haplotypes in Andalusia correspond to those that are also the most common in Europe. A sub-Saharan haplotype was found at a relatively high frequency compared to other Iberian samples, and a North Asian marker did not reach polymorphic frequencies in the study sample. A hierarchical cluster analysis based on the first two principal components (94.1% of the total genetic variance) revealed an interesting geographic structure for the 49 populations selected from the literature. The Huelva sample showed a central position in the multivariate space--despite being geographically located at one of the extremes of the Mediterranean basin--and clustered with most Western European populations. Western Europe and Eastern Europe (the latter group paradoxically including Italy and the major islands of the western Mediterranean) were differentiated. North African populations were grouped in two clusters that did not separate either Arabs and Berbers or their present-day countries. Analysis of immunoglobulin allotype markers shows that gene flow among human populations should generally be interpreted in terms of complex patterns, with the observed frequencies being the consequence of the entire genetic and demographic history of the population. Single historical events rarely determine gene frequencies in large human populations. Analysis of the GM system has shown that the Andalusian population from Huelva, as a result of its complex history, is not simply an outstanding part of the Mediterranean world but rather the genetic center of gravity of that world.
了解地中海地区的人口关系对于重建近代人类进化至关重要。安达卢西亚是西班牙最南部的地区,自古以来就一直有人持续密集居住,并且与许多不同的地中海人群有着丰富的接触历史。因此,为了理解地中海地区的人口迁移过程,研究人员应基于对遗传多样性的评估,分析伊比利亚半岛和北非之间的人口关系,其中要将安达卢西亚考虑在内。本研究的目的是探讨伊比利亚半岛地理两端(韦尔瓦和巴斯克地区)之间的遗传变异程度,并解释安达卢西亚人与其他邻近人群(如来自北非的人群)之间系统发育关系的强度。我们首次展示了来自韦尔瓦的安达卢西亚人群中人类免疫球蛋白同种异型标记(GM和KM)的结果。安达卢西亚最常见的GM单倍型与欧洲最常见的单倍型相对应。与其他伊比利亚样本相比,一种撒哈拉以南单倍型的出现频率相对较高,而一种北亚标记在研究样本中未达到多态频率。基于前两个主成分(占总遗传方差的94.1%)的层次聚类分析揭示了从文献中选取的49个人群有趣的地理结构。韦尔瓦样本在地多变量空间中处于中心位置——尽管在地理位置上位于地中海盆地的一端——并且与大多数西欧人群聚类在一起。西欧和东欧(后一组矛盾地包括意大利和西地中海的主要岛屿)有所区分。北非人群分为两个聚类,这两个聚类既没有区分阿拉伯人和柏柏尔人,也没有区分他们现在所属的国家。免疫球蛋白同种异型标记的分析表明,人群之间的基因流动通常应根据复杂的模式来解释,观察到的频率是该人群整个遗传和人口历史的结果。单一的历史事件很少能决定大型人类群体中的基因频率。对GM系统的分析表明,由于其复杂的历史,来自韦尔瓦的安达卢西亚人群不仅仅是地中海世界的一个突出部分,而是那个世界的遗传重心。