Beneker Owyn, Molinaro Ludovica, Guellil Meriam, Sasso Stefania, Kabral Helja, Bonucci Biancamaria, Gaens Noah, D'Atanasio Eugenia, Mezzavilla Massimo, Delbrassine Hélios, Braet Linde, Lambert Bart, Deckers Pieterjan, Biagini Simone Andrea, Hui Ruoyun, Becelaere Sara, Geypen Jan, Hoebreckx Maxim, Berk Birgit, Driesen Petra, Pijpelink April, van Damme Philip, Vanhoutte Sofie, De Winter Natasja, Saag Lehti, Pagani Luca, Tambets Kristiina, Scheib Christiana L, Larmuseau Maarten H D, Kivisild Toomas
Department of Human Genetics, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Department for Evolutionary Anthropology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Genome Biol. 2025 May 20;26(1):127. doi: 10.1186/s13059-025-03580-z.
Processes shaping the formation of the present-day population structure in highly urbanized Northern Europe are still poorly understood. Gaps remain in our understanding of when and how currently observable regional differences emerged and what impact city growth, migration, and disease pandemics during and after the Middle Ages had on these processes.
We perform low-coverage sequencing of the genomes of 338 individuals spanning the eighth to the eighteenth centuries in the city of Sint-Truiden in Flanders, in the northern part of Belgium. The early/high medieval Sint-Truiden population was more heterogeneous, having received migrants from Scotland or Ireland, and displayed less genetic relatedness than observed today between individuals in present-day Flanders. We find differences in gene variants associated with high vitamin D blood levels between individuals with Gaulish or Germanic ancestry. Although we find evidence of a Yersinia pestis infection in 5 of the 58 late medieval burials, we were unable to detect a major population-scale impact of the second plague pandemic on genetic diversity or on the elevated differentiation of immunity genes.
This study reveals that the genetic homogenization process in a medieval city population in the Low Countries was protracted for centuries. Over time, the Sint-Truiden population became more similar to the current population of the surrounding Limburg province, likely as a result of reduced long-distance migration after the high medieval period, and the continuous process of local admixture of Germanic and Gaulish ancestries which formed the genetic cline observable today in the Low Countries.
高度城市化的北欧地区当今人口结构形成过程仍未得到充分理解。我们对当前可观察到的区域差异何时以及如何出现,以及中世纪期间和之后城市发展、移民和疾病大流行对这些过程产生了何种影响,仍知之甚少。
我们对比利时北部佛兰德省圣特吕登市8世纪至18世纪的338个人的基因组进行了低覆盖测序。中世纪早期/盛期的圣特吕登人口更加多样化,有来自苏格兰或爱尔兰的移民,与当今佛兰德地区个体之间的遗传相关性相比,当时的遗传相关性更低。我们发现高卢或日耳曼血统个体之间与高维生素D血液水平相关的基因变异存在差异。虽然我们在58个中世纪晚期墓葬中的5个中发现了鼠疫耶尔森菌感染的证据,但我们无法检测到第二次鼠疫大流行对遗传多样性或免疫基因分化加剧的主要群体规模影响。
这项研究表明,低地国家中世纪城市人口的遗传同质化过程持续了几个世纪。随着时间的推移,圣特吕登人口变得与周围林堡省的当前人口更加相似,这可能是由于中世纪盛期之后长途迁移减少,以及日耳曼和高卢血统在当地持续混合的过程,形成了如今在低地国家可观察到的遗传渐变群。