December 06, 2012

Romani origins and admixture (Mendizabal et al.)

I will comment on the paper in this space after I read it. For the time being here's a link to the press release.
"From a genome-wide perspective, Romani people share a common and unique history that consists of two elements: the roots in northwestern India and the admixture with non-Romani Europeans accumulating with different magnitudes during the out-of-India migration across Europe," Kayser said. "Our study clearly illustrates that understanding the Romani's genetic legacy is necessary to complete the genetic characterization of Europeans as a whole, with implications for various fields, from human evolution to the health sciences."
The results seem to complement a recent Y-chromosome study of the major founder lineage of European Roma H-M82.

Current Biology dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2012.10.039

Reconstructing the Population History of European Romani from Genome-wide Data

Isabel Mendizabal et al.

The Romani, the largest European minority group with approximately 11 million people [1], constitute a mosaic of languages, religions, and lifestyles while sharing a distinct social heritage. Linguistic [2] and genetic [3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8] studies have located the Romani origins in the Indian subcontinent. However, a genome-wide perspective on Romani origins and population substructure, as well as a detailed reconstruction of their demographic history, has yet to be provided. Our analyses based on genome-wide data from 13 Romani groups collected across Europe suggest that the Romani diaspora constitutes a single initial founder population that originated in north/northwestern India ∼1.5 thousand years ago (kya). Our results further indicate that after a rapid migration with moderate gene flow from the Near or Middle East, the European spread of the Romani people was via the Balkans starting ∼0.9 kya. The strong population substructure and high levels of homozygosity we found in the European Romani are in line with genetic isolation as well as differential gene flow in time and space with non-Romani Europeans. Overall, our genome-wide study sheds new light on the origins and demographic history of European Romani.

Link

3 comments:

Mongoose said...

Is there a good book you would recommend about what has been established so far about prehistoric human migrations based on DNA research? I don't even know where to start searching on Amazon.

terryt said...

Things are moving so rapidly that by the time any book is published it is already out of date. This bog, and many others, are well worth visiting regularly for updates on the latest papers published on the subject. But I have found these maps great for a general overview of the distribution of haplogroups. The maps don't go into depth as to to subdivisions within the basal haplogroups though:

http://www.google.co.nz/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=2&sqi=2&ved=0CEAQFjAB&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.scs.illinois.edu%2F~mcdonald%2FWorldHaplogroupsMaps.pdf&ei=u-zCUJ3OKO-ViQfbyIGgBg&usg=AFQjCNF2fvIH5U7Sdy_9Ds3mu24BqpOeXw

Hope you can access them.

Mongoose said...

Thanks!