Płoszaj T, Jerszyńska B, Jędrychowska-Dańska K, Lewandowska M, Kubiak D, Grzywnowicz K, Masłowska A, Witas H W
Department of Molecular Biology, Medical University of Łódź, Narutowicza 60, 90-136 Łódź, Poland.
Department of Human Evolutionary Biology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Umultowska 89, 61-614 Poznań, Poland.
Homo. 2015 Jun;66(3):229-50. doi: 10.1016/j.jchb.2014.11.003. Epub 2015 Mar 21.
We attempted to confirm the resemblance of a local medieval population and to reconstruct their contribution to the formation of the modern Polish population at the DNA level. The HVR I mtDNA sequence and two nuclear alleles, LCT-13910C/T SNP and deltaF508 CFTR, were chosen as markers since the distribution of selected nuclear alleles varies among ethnic groups. A total of 47 specimens were selected from a medieval cemetery in Cedynia (located in the western Polish lowland). Regarding the HVR I profile, the analyzed population differed from the present-day population (P = 0.045, F(st) = 0.0103), in contrast to lactase persistence (LP) based on the LCT-13910T allele, thus indicating the lack of notable frequency changes of this allele during the last millennium (P = 0.141). The sequence of the HVR I mtDNA fragment allowed to identify six major haplogroups including H, U5, T, K, and HV0 within the medieval population of Cedynia which are common in today's central Europe. An analysis of haplogroup frequency and its comparison with modern European populations shows that the studied medieval population is more closely related to Finno-Ugric populations than to the present Polish population. Identification of less common haplogroups, i.e., Z and U2, both atypical of the modern Polish population and of Asian origin, provides evidence for some kind of connections between the studied and foreign populations. Furthermore, a comparison of the available aDNA sequences from medieval Europe suggests that populations differed from one another and a number of data from other locations are required to find out more about the features of the medieval gene pool profile.
我们试图在DNA水平上确认当地中世纪人群的相似性,并重建他们对现代波兰人群形成的贡献。选择高变区I线粒体DNA(HVR I mtDNA)序列以及两个核等位基因,即LCT - 13910C/T单核苷酸多态性(SNP)和ΔF508囊性纤维化跨膜传导调节因子(CFTR)作为标记,因为所选核等位基因的分布在不同种族群体中存在差异。总共从塞迪尼亚的一个中世纪墓地(位于波兰西部低地)选取了47个样本。关于HVR I图谱,分析的人群与现代人群不同(P = 0.045,Fst = 0.0103),而基于LCT - 13910T等位基因的乳糖酶持续性(LP)则相反,这表明该等位基因在过去一千年中没有显著的频率变化(P = 0.141)。HVR I mtDNA片段的序列使得在塞迪尼亚的中世纪人群中能够识别出六个主要单倍群,包括H、U5、T、K和HV0,这些在当今中欧很常见。对单倍群频率的分析及其与现代欧洲人群的比较表明,所研究的中世纪人群与芬兰 - 乌戈尔人群的关系比与现代波兰人群的关系更密切。识别出不太常见的单倍群,即Z和U2,这两者在现代波兰人群中都不典型且起源于亚洲,这为所研究人群与外来人群之间存在某种联系提供了证据。此外,对中世纪欧洲可用的古DNA序列进行比较表明,不同人群之间存在差异,需要更多来自其他地点的数据才能更深入了解中世纪基因库图谱的特征。