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At the Crossroads of Continents: Ancient DNA Insights into the Maternal and Paternal Population History of Croatia.

Marjanović Damir, D Šarac, Jelena J et al.

41595500 PubMed ID
18 Authors
2026-01-09 Published
1,565 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

MD
Marjanović Damir
D Šarac
JJ
Jelena J
HA
Havaš Auguštin Dubravka
DN
D Novak
MM
Mario M
Bašić Željana
ŽK
Ž Kružić
II
Ivana I
NN
Novokmet Natalija
NC
N Cheronet
OO
Olivia O
GP
Gelabert Pere
PP
P Pinhasi
RR
Ron R
LG
Lauc Gordan
GP
G Primorac
DD
Dragan D
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Southeastern Europe and Croatia have served as a genetic crossroads between the Near East and Europe since prehistoric times, shaped by numerous and repeated migrations. By integrating 19 newly generated ancient genomes with 285 previously published ancient genomes from Croatia, we investigated patterns of maternal and paternal landscapes from the Neolithic, Bronze, and Iron Ages through to the Antiquity and medieval periods, as well as the modern Croatian population.Ancient DNA extraction from human remains and library preparation were conducted in dedicated clean-room facilities, followed by high-throughput sequencing on the Illumina platform. Sequencing data were analyzed with established pipelines to determine mitochondrial and Y-chromosomal haplogroups and the genetic sex of individuals.New ancient data reveal a predominantly European maternal profile, dominated by haplogroups H, U, and HV0, whereas Y-chromosomal lineages are characterized by J subclades and R1a, with limited representation of R1b and the absence of I2a. When combined with published ancient Croatian genomes, the results reveal similar haplogroup diversity and patterns, as well as the expansion of mtDNA haplogroup H over time and a substantial increase in Y-chromosome R1a and I2a haplogroup frequency from the prehistoric to the modern period.Although the analyzed samples are heterogeneous and originate from different historical periods, their genetic signatures conform to the broader patterns expected for the region. In a wider context, the ancient Croatian mitochondrial data reveal stronger genetic persistence from prehistory to modern times, unlike paternal lineages, which show significantly higher divergence.

Chapter III

AI-Generated Summary

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

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Historical Context