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Admixture as a source for HLA variation in Neolithic European farming communities.

da Silva Nicolas Antonio, NA Özer, Onur O et al.

40022192 PubMed ID
27 Authors
2025-02-28 Published
449 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

DS
da Silva Nicolas Antonio
NA Özer
OO
Onur O
HM
Haller-Caskie Magdalena
MC
M Chen
YY
Yan-Rong YR
KD
Kolbe Daniel
DS
D Schade-Lindig
SS
Sabine S
WJ
Wahl Joachim
JB
J Berszin
CC
Carola C
FM
Francken Michael
MG
M Görner
II
Irina I
SK
Schierhold Kerstin
KP
K Pechtl
JJ
Joachim J
GG
Grupe Gisela
GR
G Rinne
CC
Christoph C
MJ
Müller Johannes
JL
J Lenz
TL
Tobias L TL
NA
Nebel Almut
AK
A Krause-Kyora
BB
Ben B
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The northern European Neolithic is characterized by two major demographic events: immigration of early farmers from Anatolia at 7500 years before present, and their admixture with local western hunter-gatherers forming late farmers, from around 6200 years before present. The influence of this admixture event on variation in the immune-relevant human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region is understudied.We analyzed genome-wide data of 125 individuals from seven archeological early farmer and late farmer sites located in present-day Germany. The late farmer group studied here is associated with the Wartberg culture, from around 5500-4800 years before present. We note that late farmers resulted from sex-biased admixture from male western hunter-gatherers. In addition, we observe Y-chromosome haplogroup I as the dominant lineage in late farmers, with site-specific sub-lineages. We analyze true HLA genotypes from 135 Neolithic individuals, the majority of which were produced in this study. We observe significant shifts in HLA allele frequencies from early farmers to late farmers, likely due to admixture with western hunter-gatherers. Especially for the haplotype DQB1*04:01-DRB1*08:01, there is evidence for a western hunter-gatherer origin. The HLA diversity increased from early farmers to late farmers. However, it is considerably lower than in modern populations.Both early farmers and late farmers exhibit a relatively narrow HLA allele spectrum compared to today. This coincides with sparse traces of pathogen DNA, potentially indicating a lower pathogen pressure at the time.

Chapter III

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