Dipartimento di Zoologia e Genetica evoluzionistica, Università di Sassari, Sassari, Italy.
PLoS One. 2010 Apr 29;5(4):e10419. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010419.
Two alternative models have been proposed to explain the spread of agriculture in Europe during the Neolithic period. The demic diffusion model postulates the spreading of farmers from the Middle East along a Southeast to Northeast axis. Conversely, the cultural diffusion model assumes transmission of agricultural techniques without substantial movements of people. Support for the demic model derives largely from the observation of frequency gradients among some genetic variants, in particular haplogroups defined by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the Y-chromosome. A recent network analysis of the R-M269 Y chromosome lineage has purportedly corroborated Neolithic expansion from Anatolia, the site of diffusion of agriculture. However, the data are still controversial and the analyses so far performed are prone to a number of biases. In the present study we show that the addition of a single marker, DYSA7.2, dramatically changes the shape of the R-M269 network into a topology showing a clear Western-Eastern dichotomy not consistent with a radial diffusion of people from the Middle East. We have also assessed other Y-chromosome haplogroups proposed to be markers of the Neolithic diffusion of farmers and compared their intra-lineage variation--defined by short tandem repeats (STRs)--in Anatolia and in Sardinia, the only Western population where these lineages are present at appreciable frequencies and where there is substantial archaeological and genetic evidence of pre-Neolithic human occupation. The data indicate that Sardinia does not contain a subset of the variability present in Anatolia and that the shared variability between these populations is best explained by an earlier, pre-Neolithic dispersal of haplogroups from a common ancestral gene pool. Overall, these results are consistent with the cultural diffusion and do not support the demic model of agriculture diffusion.
两种替代模型被提出以解释新石器时代欧洲农业传播的原因。扩散模型认为农民从中东沿着东南至东北的轴线传播。相反,文化扩散模型假设农业技术的传播而没有大量人口的迁移。扩散模型的支持主要来自于对一些遗传变异频率梯度的观察,特别是在 Y 染色体上的单核苷酸多态性 (SNP) 定义的单倍群。最近对 R-M269 Y 染色体谱系的网络分析据称证实了农业从安纳托利亚扩散的新石器时代扩张。然而,数据仍然存在争议,到目前为止进行的分析容易受到多种偏见的影响。在本研究中,我们表明,添加一个单一的标记 DYSA7.2,显著改变了 R-M269 网络的形状,呈现出一个明显的东西二分的拓扑结构,这与从中东向外辐射的人群扩散不一致。我们还评估了其他被认为是新石器时代农民扩散标志的 Y 染色体单倍群,并比较了它们在安纳托利亚和撒丁岛的内部变异——由短串联重复序列 (STRs) 定义——在撒丁岛,这些谱系以相当高的频率存在,并且有大量的考古学和遗传学证据表明在新石器时代之前就有人居住。这些数据表明,撒丁岛不包含安纳托利亚存在的变异子集,而且这些人群之间共享的变异最好用更早的、新石器时代之前的来自共同祖先基因库的单倍群扩散来解释。总体而言,这些结果与文化扩散一致,不支持农业扩散的扩散模型。