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The mitogenome portrait of Umbria in Central Italy as depicted by contemporary inhabitants and pre-Roman remains.

Modi Alessandra, A Lancioni, Hovirag H et al.

32612271 PubMed ID
34 Authors
2020-07-01 Published
415 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

MA
Modi Alessandra
AL
A Lancioni
HH
Hovirag H
CI
Cardinali Irene
IC
I Capodiferro
MR
Marco R MR
RM
Rambaldi Migliore Nicola
NH
N Hussein
AA
Abir A
SC
Strobl Christina
CB
C Bodner
MM
Martin M
SL
Schnaller Lisa
LX
L Xavier
CC
Catarina C
RE
Rizzi Ermanno
EB
E Bonomi Ponzi
LL
Laura L
VS
Vai Stefania
SR
S Raveane
AA
Alessandro A
CB
Cavadas Bruno
BS
B Semino
OO
Ornella O
TA
Torroni Antonio
AO
A Olivieri
AA
Anna A
LM
Lari Martina
MP
M Pereira
LL
Luisa L
PW
Parson Walther
WC
W Caramelli
DD
David D
AA
Achilli Alessandro
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Umbria is located in Central Italy and took the name from its ancient inhabitants, the Umbri, whose origins are still debated. Here, we investigated the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation of 545 present-day Umbrians (with 198 entire mitogenomes) and 28 pre-Roman individuals (obtaining 19 ancient mtDNAs) excavated from the necropolis of Plestia. We found a rather homogeneous distribution of western Eurasian lineages across the region, with few notable exceptions. Contemporary inhabitants of the eastern part, delimited by the Tiber River and the Apennine Mountains, manifest a peculiar mitochondrial proximity to central-eastern Europeans, mainly due to haplogroups U4 and U5a, and an overrepresentation of J (30%) similar to the pre-Roman remains, also excavated in East Umbria. Local genetic continuities are further attested to by six terminal branches (H1e1, J1c3, J2b1, U2e2a, U8b1b1 and K1a4a) shared between ancient and modern mitogenomes. Eventually, we identified multiple inputs from various population sources that likely shaped the mitochondrial gene pool of ancient Umbri over time, since early Neolithic, including gene flows with central-eastern Europe. This diachronic mtDNA portrait of Umbria fits well with the genome-wide population structure identified on the entire peninsula and with historical sources that list the Umbri among the most ancient Italic populations.

Chapter III

AI-Generated Summary

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Summary

Key Findings

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Historical Context