41 results on '"Hofmanová, Zuzana"'
Search Results
2. The genomic origins of the world’s first farmers
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Marchi, Nina, Winkelbach, Laura, Schulz, Ilektra, Brami, Maxime, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Blöcher, Jens, Reyna-Blanco, Carlos S., Diekmann, Yoan, Thiéry, Alexandre, Kapopoulou, Adamandia, Link, Vivian, Piuz, Valérie, Kreutzer, Susanne, Figarska, Sylwia M., Ganiatsou, Elissavet, Pukaj, Albert, Struck, Travis J., Gutenkunst, Ryan N., Karul, Necmi, Gerritsen, Fokke, Pechtl, Joachim, Peters, Joris, Zeeb-Lanz, Andrea, Lenneis, Eva, Teschler-Nicola, Maria, Triantaphyllou, Sevasti, Stefanović, Sofija, Papageorgopoulou, Christina, Wegmann, Daniel, Burger, Joachim, and Excoffier, Laurent
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- 2022
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3. Ancient genomes reveal origin and rapid trans-Eurasian migration of 7th century Avar elites
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Gnecchi-Ruscone, Guido Alberto, Szécsényi-Nagy, Anna, Koncz, István, Csiky, Gergely, Rácz, Zsófia, Rohrlach, A.B., Brandt, Guido, Rohland, Nadin, Csáky, Veronika, Cheronet, Olivia, Szeifert, Bea, Rácz, Tibor Ákos, Benedek, András, Bernert, Zsolt, Berta, Norbert, Czifra, Szabolcs, Dani, János, Farkas, Zoltán, Hága, Tamara, Hajdu, Tamás, Jászberényi, Mónika, Kisjuhász, Viktória, Kolozsi, Barbara, Major, Péter, Marcsik, Antónia, Kovacsóczy, Bernadett Ny., Balogh, Csilla, Lezsák, Gabriella M., Ódor, János Gábor, Szelekovszky, Márta, Szeniczey, Tamás, Tárnoki, Judit, Tóth, Zoltán, Tutkovics, Eszter K., Mende, Balázs G., Geary, Patrick, Pohl, Walter, Vida, Tivadar, Pinhasi, Ron, Reich, David, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Jeong, Choongwon, and Krause, Johannes
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- 2022
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4. FORMOR project: analysis of the formation of complex societies in Early Medieval Moravia.
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Macháček, Jiří, Sládek, Vladimír, Balcárková, Adéla, Dresler, Petr, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Ingrová, Pavlína, Košťál, Martin, Nosek, Vojtěch, Prišťáková, Michaela, Přichystalová, Renáta, and Zlámalová, Denisa
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- 2024
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5. Runes from Lány (Czech Republic) - The oldest inscription among Slavs. A new standard for multidisciplinary analysis of runic bones
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Macháček, Jiří, Nedoma, Robert, Dresler, Petr, Schulz, Ilektra, Lagonik, Elias, Johnson, Stephen M., Kaňáková, Ludmila, Slámová, Alena, Llamas, Bastien, Wegmann, Daniel, and Hofmanová, Zuzana
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- 2021
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6. Palaeodemography of the foraging to farming transition: insights from the Danube Gorges Mesolithic-Neolithic transformations
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de Becdelièvre, Camille, primary, Blagojević, Tamara, additional, Jovanović, Jelena, additional, Stefanović, Sofia, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, and Porčić, Marko, additional
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- 2021
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7. Population genomic analysis of elongated skulls reveals extensive female-biased immigration in Early Medieval Bavaria
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Veeramah, Krishna R., Rott, Andreas, Groß, Melanie, van Dorp, Lucy, López, Saioa, Kirsanow, Karola, Sell, Christian, Blöcher, Jens, Wegmann, Daniel, Link, Vivian, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Peters, Joris, Trautmann, Bernd, Gairhos, Anja, Haberstroh, Jochen, Päffgen, Bernd, Hellenthal, Garrett, Haas-Gebhard, Brigitte, Harbeck, Michaela, and Burger, Joachim
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- 2018
8. Direct insight into dietary adaptations and the individual experience of Neolithisation
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de Becdelièvre, Camille, primary, Jovanović, Jelena, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, Goude, Gwenaëlle, additional, and Stefanović, Sofija, additional
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- 2020
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9. Fine-scale sampling uncovers the complexity of migrations in 5th–6th century Pannonia
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Vyas, Deven N., primary, Koncz, István, additional, Modi, Alessandra, additional, Mende, Balázs Gusztáv, additional, Tian, Yijie, additional, Francalacci, Paolo, additional, Lari, Martina, additional, Vai, Stefania, additional, Straub, Péter, additional, Gallina, Zsolt, additional, Szeniczey, Tamás, additional, Hajdu, Tamás, additional, Pejrani Baricco, Luisella, additional, Giostra, Caterina, additional, Radzevičiūtė, Rita, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, Évinger, Sándor, additional, Bernert, Zsolt, additional, Pohl, Walter, additional, Caramelli, David, additional, Vida, Tivadar, additional, Geary, Patrick J., additional, and Veeramah, Krishna R., additional
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- 2023
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10. Early Neolithic genomes from the eastern Fertile Crescent
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Broushaki, Farnaz, Thomas, Mark G., Link, Vivian, López, Saioa, van Dorp, Lucy, Kirsanow, Karola, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Diekmann, Yoan, Cassidy, Lara M., Díez-del-Molino, David, Kousathanas, Athanasios, Sell, Christian, Robson, Harry K., Martiniano, Rui, Blöcher, Jens, Scheu, Amelie, Kreutzer, Susanne, Bollongino, Ruth, Bobo, Dean, Davoudi, Hossein, Munoz, Olivia, Currat, Mathias, Abdi, Kamyar, Biglari, Fereidoun, Craig, Oliver E., Bradley, Daniel G., Shennan, Stephen, Veeramah, Krishna R., Mashkour, Marjan, Wegmann, Daniel, Hellenthal, Garrett, and Burger, Joachim
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- 2016
11. Early farmers from across Europe directly descended from Neolithic Aegeans
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Hofmanová, Zuzana, Kreutzer, Susanne, Hellenthal, Garrett, Sell, Christian, Diekmann, Yoan, Díez-del-Molino, David, van Dorp, Lucy, López, Saioa, Kousathanas, Athanasios, Link, Vivian, Kirsanow, Karola, Cassidy, Lara M., Martiniano, Rui, Strobel, Melanie, Scheu, Amelie, Kotsakis, Kostas, Halstead, Paul, Triantaphyllou, Sevi, Kyparissi-Apostolika, Nina, Urem-Kotsou, Dushka, Ziota, Christina, Adaktylou, Fotini, Gopalan, Shyamalika, Bobo, Dean M., Winkelbach, Laura, Blöcher, Jens, Unterländer, Martina, Leuenberger, Christoph, Çilingiroğlu, Çiler, Horejs, Barbara, Gerritsen, Fokke, Shennan, Stephen J., Bradley, Daniel G., Currat, Mathias, Veeramah, Krishna R., Wegmann, Daniel, Thomas, Mark G., Papageorgopoulou, Christina, and Burger, Joachim
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- 2016
12. Fine-scale sampling uncovers the complexity of migrations in 5th-6th century Pannonia
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Vyas, Deven Nikunj, primary, Koncz, István, additional, Modi, Alessandra, additional, Mende, Balázs Gusztáv, additional, Tian, Yijie, additional, Francalacci, Paolo, additional, Lari, Martina, additional, Vai, Stefania, additional, Straub, Péter, additional, Gallina, Zsolt, additional, Szeniczey, Tamás, additional, Hajdu, Tamás, additional, Radzevičiūtė, Rita, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, Évinger, Sándor, additional, Bernert, Zsolt, additional, Pohl, Walter, additional, Caramelli, David, additional, Vida, Tivadar, additional, Geary, Patrick J, additional, and Veeramah, Krishna Ranganaden, additional
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- 2022
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13. Between fishing and farming: palaeogenomic analyses reveal cross-cultural interactions triggered by the arrival of the Neolithic in the Danube Gorges
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Hofmanová, Zuzana, primary, Reyna-Blanco, Carlos S., additional, de Becdelièvre, Camille, additional, Schulz, Ilektra, additional, Blöcher, Jens, additional, Jovanović, Jelena, additional, Winkelbach, Laura, additional, Figarska, Sylwia M., additional, Schulz, Anna, additional, Porčić, Marko, additional, Květina, Petr, additional, Tsoupas, Alexandros, additional, Currat, Mathias, additional, Buzhilova, Alexandra, additional, Gerritsen, Fokke, additional, Karul, Necmi, additional, McGlynn, George, additional, Orschiedt, Jörg, additional, Özbal, Rana, additional, Peters, Joris, additional, Ridush, Bogdan, additional, Terberger, Thomas, additional, Teschler-Nicola, Maria, additional, Zariņa, Gunita, additional, Zeeb-Lanz, Andrea, additional, Stefanović, Sofija, additional, Burger, Joachim, additional, and Wegmann, Daniel, additional
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- 2022
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14. Journey of a committed paleodemographer
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Berger, Jean-François, Blagojević, Tamara, Caussinus, Henri, Courgeau, Daniel, Darlu, Pierre, Degioanni, Anna, Demoule, Jean-Paul, de Becdelièvre, Camille, Dubouloz, Jérôme, Dutour, Olivier, Formoso, Bernard, Frankenberg, Susan R., Herrscher, Estelle, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Jovanović, Jelena, Konigsberg, Lyle W., Moussa, Richard, Naji, Stephan, Papageorgopoulou, Christina, Porčić, Marko, Pumain, Denise, Séguy, Isabelle, Stefanović, Sofia, Xanthopoulou, Panagiota, Zafeiris, Konstantinos, Zisis, Anastasios, Degioanni, Anna, Herrscher, Estelle, and Naji, Stephan
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estimateurs démographiques ,Demographic estimators ,anthropologie biologique ,Paleodemography ,paléodémographie ,biological anthropology ,histoire des sciences ,Neolithic Demographic Transition ,SOC006000 ,Science history ,Archaeology ,JHBD ,transition démographique néolithique ,Demography - Abstract
Cet ouvrage est dédié à Jean-Pierre Bocquet-Appel, anthropologue biologiste, l’un des pères fondateurs de la paléodémographie en France, disparu en 2018. Mondialement connu et reconnu, il a contribué au développement de nouvelles techniques d’estimation de l’âge au décès d’assemblages de squelettes et promu la mise en place des estimateurs en paléodémographie. Il a également participé à l’émergence de la démographie spatiale et de la modélisation de type-multi-agent en particulier des agriculteurs néolithiques. Nous lui devons une avancée considérable dans la compréhension des processus démographiques liés aux grandes transitions qu’ont vécu les hommes en différents points du globe avec la découverte de la signature de la transition démographique impliquée dans le passage des sociétés d’une économie de collecte à une économie agricole. Cet ouvrage offre un voyage au cœur de sa vie de chercheur, reprenant tour à tour, dans une démarche diachronique et pluridisciplinaire, la démographie anthropologique de la Préhistoire jusqu’à la période contemporaine. Il brosse également un portrait généreux de cet homme engagé qui n’a eu de cesse d’œuvrer pour sa discipline, que ce soit à travers une approche réflexive sur l’histoire des sciences et l’épistémologie ou la transmission de ses savoirs auprès de jeunes générations. Cet ouvrage convie ainsi le lecteur à une expérience originale et innovante aux confins d’une discipline rare, la paléodémographie. This book is dedicated to Jean-Pierre Bocquet-Appel, anthropologist and biologist, one of the founding fathers of palaeodemography in France, who died in 2018. Known and recognised worldwide, he contributed to the development of new techniques for estimating the age at death of skeletal assemblages and promoted the introduction of estimators in palaeodemography. He also participated in the emergence of spatial demography and multi- agent modelling, particularly of Neolithic farmers. We owe him a considerable advance in the understanding of demographic processes linked to the great transitions that humans have experienced in different parts of the world with the discovery of the signature of the demographic transition implied in the passage of societies from a collection economy to an agricultural economy. This book offers a journey to the heart of his life as a researcher, taking in turn, in a diachronic and multidisciplinary approach, anthropological demography from prehistory to the contemporary period. It also paints a generous portrait of this committed man who has never ceased to work for his discipline, whether through a reflective approach to the history of science and epistemology or the transmission of his knowledge to younger generations. This book invites you to an original and innovative experience on the borders of a rare discipline, paleodemography.
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- 2022
15. Palaeodemography of the foraging to farming transition: insights from the Danube Gorges Mesolithic-Neolithic transformations
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de Becdelièvre, Camille, Blagojević, Tamara, Jovanović, Jelena, Stefanović, Sofia, Hofmanová, Zuzana, and Porčić, Marko
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indice de juvénilité ,estimateurs démographiques ,agricultural demographic transition ,C summed probability distribution ,Demographic estimators ,isotopes stables ,anthropologie biologique ,paléodémographie ,stable isotopes ,health status ,Central Balkans ,strontium radiogénique ,ADN ancien ,Neolithic Demographic Transition ,Balkans centraux ,ancient DNA ,Demography ,Danube Gorges ,juvenility index ,strontium radiogenic ,Paleodemography ,biological anthropology ,Mésolithique - Néolithique ,gorges du Danube ,état de santé ,Mesolithic – Neolithic ,histoire des sciences ,SOC006000 ,Science history ,transition démographique agricole ,C distribution des probabilités cumulées ,Archaeology ,JHBD ,transition démographique néolithique - Abstract
The diffusion of the farming way-of-life into environments occupied by Mesolithic hunter-gatherers in Europe has been associated with two major demographic events: the migrations of farmers originating from the Near-East and an unprecedented population increase, the “Neolithic Demographic Transition” (NDT). The Mesolithic-Neolithic transformations in the Danube Gorges provide a context of particular importance for tackling issues of Neolithization, due to its location, temporal depth, and highly contextualized osteo-anthropological record. This chapter compares complementary palaeodemographic proxies and bioarchaeological markers in order to assess the demographic response of local foragers to the Neolithic expansion. Interpreted together, these lines of evidence confirm the predictions of the NDT, and shed light on the relationships between subsistence intensification, sedentism and population growth, between migrations, cultural transmission and adaptations, and between dietary strategies, fertility and morbidity – i.e. on some mechanisms, benefits and costs of the farming transition – in the Central Balkans. La diffusion du mode de vie agro-pastoral en Europe, notamment dans des milieux occupés par des chasseurs-cueilleurs du Mésolithique, est associée à deux événements démographiques majeurs : les migrations d’agriculteurs originaires du Proche-Orient et un accroissement sans précédent de la population, la « Transition Démographique Néolithique » (TDN). Les sites mésolithiques-néolithiques des gorges du Danube constituent un contexte particulièrement important pour aborder les questions de néolithisation, en raison de leur localisation, de leur profondeur temporelle et de la découverte d’une série ostéo-anthropologique unique. Ce chapitre compare différents marqueurs paléo-démographiques et bioarchéologiques afin d’analyser la réponse démographique des chasseurs-cueilleurs locaux à l’expansion du Néolithique dans la région. Interprétées ensembles, les diverses sources de données examinées confirment les prédictions de la TDN et informent sur les relations entre intensification du mode de subsistance, sédentarisation et croissance démographique, entre migrations, et processus de transmission et d’adaptations culturelles, et entre stratégies alimentaires, fertilité et morbidité au cours du Néolithique ancien dans les Balkans.
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- 2022
16. Demographic history was a formative mechanism of the genetic structure for the taste receptor TAS2R16 in human populations inhabiting Africa's Sahel/Savannah Belt
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Kulichová, Iva, primary, Mouterde, Médéric, additional, Mokhtar, Mohammed G., additional, Diallo, Issa, additional, Tříska, Petr, additional, Diallo, Yoro Mame, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, Poloni, Estella S., additional, and Černý, Viktor, additional
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- 2021
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17. Low Prevalence of Lactase Persistence in Bronze Age Europe Indicates Ongoing Strong Selection over the Last 3,000 Years
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Burger, Joachim, Link, Vivian, Blöcher, Jens, Schulz, Anna, Sell, Christian, Pochon, Zoé, Diekmann, Yoan, Žegarac, Aleksandra, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Winkelbach, Laura, Reyna-Blanco, Carlos S., Bieker, Vanessa, Orschiedt, Jörg, Brinker, Ute, Scheu, Amelie, Leuenberger, Christoph, Bertino, Thomas S., Bollongino, Ruth, Lidke, Gundula, Stefanović, Sofija, Jantzen, Detlef, Kaiser, Elke, Terberger, Thomas, Thomas, Mark G., Veeramah, Krishna R., and Wegmann, Daniel
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- 2020
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18. Sahelian pastoralism from perspective of lactase persistence associated variants
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Priehodová, Edita, Austerlitz, Frederic, Čížková, Martina, Nováčková, Jana, RICAUT, Francois-Xavier, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Schlebusch, Carina M, Cerny, Viktor, Institute of Archaeology of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Eco-Anthropologie et Ethnobiologie (EAE), Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN)-Université Paris Diderot - Paris 7 (UPD7)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Uppsala University Department of Organismal Biology
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[SDV.GEN.GPO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Genetics/Populations and Evolution [q-bio.PE] ,[SHS.ANTHRO-BIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropology ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
International audience
- Published
- 2020
19. Direct insight into dietary adaptations and the individual experience of Neolithisation: comparing subsistence, provenance and ancestry of Early Neolithic humans from the Danube Gorges c. 6200-5900 BC
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de Becdelievre, Camille, Jovanovic, Jelena, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Goude, Gwenaëlle, Stefanović, Sofija, Department of archaeology, University of Belgrade [Belgrade], Laboratoire méditerranéen de préhistoire Europe-Afrique (LAMPEA), and Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Ministère de la Culture (MC)
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[SHS.ARCHEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Archaeology and Prehistory ,[SHS.ANTHRO-BIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropology ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS - Abstract
International audience
- Published
- 2020
20. Demogenomic modeling of the timing and the processes of early European farmers differentiation
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Marchi, Nina, primary, Winkelbach, Laura, additional, Schulz, Ilektra, additional, Brami, Maxime, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, Blöcher, Jens, additional, Reyna-Blanco, Carlos S., additional, Diekmann, Yoan, additional, Thiéry, Alexandre, additional, Kapopoulou, Adamandia, additional, Link, Vivian, additional, Piuz, Valérie, additional, Kreutzer, Susanne, additional, Figarska, Sylwia M., additional, Ganiatsou, Elissavet, additional, Pukaj, Albert, additional, Struck, Travis J., additional, Gutenkunst, Ryan N., additional, Karul, Necmi, additional, Gerritsen, Fokke, additional, Pechtl, Joachim, additional, Peters, Joris, additional, Zeeb-Lanz, Andrea, additional, Lenneis, Eva, additional, Teschler-Nicola, Maria, additional, Triantaphyllou, Sevasti, additional, Stefanović, Sofija, additional, Papageorgopoulou, Christina, additional, Wegmann, Daniel, additional, Burger, Joachim, additional, and Excoffier, Laurent, additional
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- 2020
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21. Sahelian pastoralism from the perspective of variants associated with lactase persistence
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Priehodová, Edita, primary, Austerlitz, Frédéric, additional, Čížková, Martina, additional, Nováčková, Jana, additional, Ricaut, François‐Xavier, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, Schlebusch, Carina M., additional, and Černý, Viktor, additional
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- 2020
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22. Subsistence strategy was the main factor driving population differentiation in the bidirectional corridor of the African Sahel
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Nováčková, Jana, primary, Čížková, Martina, additional, Mokhtar, Mohammed G., additional, Duda, Pavel, additional, Stenzl, Vlastimil, additional, Tříska, Petr, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, and Černý, Viktor, additional
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- 2020
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23. Genomic Data from an Ancient European Battlefield Indicates On-Going Strong Selection on a Genomic Region Associated with Lactase Persistence Over the Last 3,000 Years
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Burger, Joachim, primary, Link, Vivian, additional, Blöcher, Jens, additional, Schulz, Anna, additional, Sell, Christian, additional, Pochon, Zoé, additional, Diekmann, Yoan, additional, Zegarac, Aleksandra, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, Winkelbach, Laura, additional, Reyna-Blanco, Carlos S., additional, Bieker, Vanessa, additional, Orschiedt, Jörg, additional, Brinker, Ute, additional, Scheu, Amelie, additional, Bollongino, Ruth, additional, Lidke, Gundula, additional, Stefanovic, Sofija, additional, Jantzen, Detlef, additional, Kaiser, Elke, additional, Terberger, Thomas, additional, Thomas, Mark G., additional, Veeramah, Krishna R., additional, and Wegmann, Daniel, additional
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- 2020
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24. Demographic history was a formative mechanism of the genetic structure for the taste receptor TAS2R16 in human populations inhabiting Africa's Sahel/Savannah Belt.
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Kulichová, Iva, Mouterde, Médéric, Mokhtar, Mohammed G., Diallo, Issa, Tříska, Petr, Diallo, Yoro Mame, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Poloni, Estella S., and Černý, Viktor
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SUBSISTENCE farming ,CELLULAR signal transduction ,AGRICULTURE ,SUBSISTENCE economy ,GENETIC drift - Abstract
Objectives: Mode of subsistence is an important factor influencing dietary habits and the genetic structure of various populations through differential intensity of gene flow and selection pressures. Previous studies suggest that in Africa Taste 2 Receptor Member 16 (TAS2R16), which encodes the 7‐transmembrane receptor protein for bitterness, might also be under positive selection pressure. Methods: However, since sampling coverage of populations was limited, we created a new TAS2R16 population dataset from across the African Sahel/Savannah belt representing various local populations of differing subsistence modes, linguistic affiliations, and geographic provenience. We sequenced the TAS2R16 exon gene and analyzed 2250 haplotypes among 19 populations. Results: We found no evidence for selection as a driving force of genetic variation at this locus; instead, we discovered a highly significant correlation between TAS2R16 genetic and geographical distances based on provenience of the sampled populations, strongly suggesting that genetic drift most likely prevailed over positive selection at this specific locus. We also found significant correlations with other independent loci, mainly in sedentary farmers. Discussion: Our results do not support the notion that the genetic diversity of TAS2R16 in Sahelian populations was shaped by selective pressures. This could result from several alternative and not mutually exclusive mechanisms, of which the possibility that, due to the pleiotropic nature of TAS2R16, selective pressures on other traits could counterbalance those acting on bitter taste perception, or that the change of diet in the Neolithic generally relaxed selective pressure on this gene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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25. NOVÝ ANCIENT DNA RESEARCH TEAM NA ÚSTAVU ARCHEOLOGIE A MUZEOLOGIE FILOZOFICKÉ FAKULTY MASARYKOVY UNIVERZITY.
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Ingrová, Pavlína, Zlámalová, Denisa, Macháček, Jiří, and Hofmanová, Zuzana
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- 2021
26. Novel statistical tools bring to light complex interactions during prehistoric demographic turnovers: The case of Lepenski Vir
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Hofmanová, Zuzana, Link, Vivian, Schulz, Ilektra, Bloecher, Jens, Winkelbach, Laura, Stefanović, Sofija, Burger, Joachim, and Wegmann, Daniel
- Abstract
Availability of palaeogenomic information depends on the survival of ancient DNA (aDNA) in human remains. Therefore, studies often include only a limited number of individuals or rely on pre-selected genomic sites that restrict further analysis and do not utilize full information potential of the samples despite destructive aDNA sampling. While this is changing with the availability of whole genome sequencing, aDNA analysis is still easily influenced by contamination, poor DNA preservation, sequencing errors and reference bias. Incorporating these uncertainties directly to the analysis through genotype likelihoods results in increased power and accuracy for population genetic inferences. Our suite of statistical tools, ATLAS, enables users to build complete customised analysis pipelines, takes into account diverse sources of error and accurately estimates genotype likelihoods and allele frequency spectra to be further used in explicit modelling.It also provides several standalone inference methods that - among others - include reference-free determination of genetic diversity within and between individuals and populations. These genetic measures can be, together with individual ancestral affinities, directly compared to archaeological distance measures and interpreted in relation to archaeologically associated cultural markers. We demonstrate the utility of these approaches on palaeogenomic data obtained from up to 9,000 years old samples from sites associated with Lepenski Vir culture, including the settlement at the eponymous site. Genetic and cultural affinities of individuals from Mesolithic, Transition and Neolithic periods provide insights into an active role of these fisher-hunter-gatherers during the Neolithisation of the area of Central Balkans and the structure of their sedentary society.
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- 2018
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27. Representation of Homosexuality in American Sitcom, as exemplified by Will & Grace and Modern Family
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Hofmanová, Zuzana, Kruml, Milan, and Štoll, Martin
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analýza ,television ,americké ,diskurzivní ,series ,seriály ,televize ,sitcom ,analysis ,discourse ,American ,homosexuality ,homosexualita - Abstract
The diploma theses "Representation of Homosexuality in American Sitcom, as exemplified by Will & Grace and Modern Family" examines the portrayal of minority groups on television. Initially vilified as perverts and abominations, homosexual individuals are now seen as complex characters that buck older stigmatization and stereotypes. These changes can be exemplified and documented across different popular genres currently on television. However, a sitcom is a genre defined by specific rules. Thanks to its simple, recognizable formula, a sitcom is easily adaptable abroad. It has the ability to quickly respond to current social issues. It is also defined by a specific relationship with humor which largely consists of generalizations and simplifications. In sitcoms, stereotyping is readily applied to all minority groups, homosexuals being no exception. Considering the recent development in the representation of homosexuality on television, the question is: how does the conversation about homosexuality transfer to the sitcom? Does the change in conversation go hand-in-hand with changing the existing stereotypes that are specific to the genre? How does contemporary context affect the representation of homosexuality in sitcoms? This thesis aims to answer these questions by analyzing two sitcoms: Will &...
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- 2017
28. Alu insertion polymorphisms in the African Sahel and the origin of Fulani pastoralists
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Čížková, Martina, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Mokhtar, Mohammed G., Janoušek, Václav, Diallo, Issa, Munclinger, Pavel, and Černý, Viktor
- Abstract
Background: The origin of Western African pastoralism, represented today by the Fulani nomads, has been a highly debated issue for the past decades, and has not yet been conclusively resolved. Aim: This study focused on Alu polymorphisms in sedentary and nomadic populations across the African Sahel to investigate patterns of diversity that can complement the existing results and contribute to resolving issues concerning the origin of West African pastoralism. Subjects and methods: A new dataset of 21 Alu biallelic markers covering a substantial part of the African Sahel has been analysed jointly with several published North African populations. Results: Interestingly, with regard to Alu variation, the relationship of Fulani pastoralists to North Africans is not as evident as was earlier revealed by studies of uniparental loci such as mtDNA and NRY. Alu insertions point rather to an affinity of Fulani pastoralists to Eastern Africans also leading a pastoral lifestyle. Conclusions: It is suggested that contemporary Fulani pastoralists might be descendants of an ancestral Eastern African population that, while crossing the Sahara in the Holocene, admixed slightly with a population of Eurasian (as evidenced by uniparental polymorphisms) ancestry. It seems that, in the Fulani pastoralists, Alu elements reflect more ancient genetic relationships than do uniparental genetic systems.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Synopse populační genetiky evropského pravěku
- Author
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Černý, Viktor, primary, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, and Květina, Petr, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Aluinsertion polymorphisms in the African Sahel and the origin of Fulani pastoralists
- Author
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Čížková, Martina, primary, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, Mokhtar, Mohammed G., additional, Janoušek, Václav, additional, Diallo, Issa, additional, Munclinger, Pavel, additional, and Černý, Viktor, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Ancestry and demography and descendants of Iron Age nomads of the Eurasian Steppe
- Author
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Unterländer, Martina, primary, Palstra, Friso, additional, Lazaridis, Iosif, additional, Pilipenko, Aleksandr, additional, Hofmanová, Zuzana, additional, Groß, Melanie, additional, Sell, Christian, additional, Blöcher, Jens, additional, Kirsanow, Karola, additional, Rohland, Nadin, additional, Rieger, Benjamin, additional, Kaiser, Elke, additional, Schier, Wolfram, additional, Pozdniakov, Dimitri, additional, Khokhlov, Aleksandr, additional, Georges, Myriam, additional, Wilde, Sandra, additional, Powell, Adam, additional, Heyer, Evelyne, additional, Currat, Mathias, additional, Reich, David, additional, Samashev, Zainolla, additional, Parzinger, Hermann, additional, Molodin, Vyacheslav I., additional, and Burger, Joachim, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The Current State of Maternity Leave and the Labour Market in the United States: Goals and Reality
- Author
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Hofmanová, Zuzana, Anděl, Petr, and Sehnálková, Jana
- Subjects
USA ,sociální politika ,social policy ,Rodičovská dovolená ,FMLA ,Parental leave ,family leave - Abstract
The bachelor's thesis "The Current State of Maternity Leave and the Labour Market in the United States: Goals and Reality" deals with a model of maternity leave in the United States. This model can be seen as very unique in many ways, especially due to its form and problematic historical development. The United States was one of the last industrialized countries codifying a certain form of maternity leave. The result was defined as an unpaid gender neutral maternity leave, a part of a broader policy concept called a family leave. The thesis explores the formation of the current state of maternity leave in the United States and its goals which compares to the actual reality of the present labour market situation. The thesis discovers that the initially declared objectives weren't met. The current state of maternity leave is very exclusive. It also reinforces inequality based on race, gender and family income in relation to the labour market.
- Published
- 2015
33. Early farmers from across Europe directly descended from Neolithic Aegeans
- Author
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Hofmanová, Zuzana, primary, Kreutzer, Susanne, additional, Hellenthal, Garrett, additional, Sell, Christian, additional, Diekmann, Yoan, additional, Díez del Molino, David, additional, van Dorp, Lucy, additional, López, Saioa, additional, Kousathanas, Athanasios, additional, Link, Vivian, additional, Kirsanow, Karola, additional, Cassidy, Lara M, additional, Martiniano, Rui, additional, Strobel, Melanie, additional, Scheu, Amelie, additional, Kotsakis, Kostas, additional, Halstead, Paul, additional, Triantaphyllou, Sevi, additional, Kyparissi-Apostolika, Nina, additional, Urem-Kotsou, Dushanka-Christina, additional, Ziota, Christina, additional, Adaktylou, Fotini, additional, Gopalan, Shyamalika, additional, Bobo, Dean M, additional, Winkelbach, Laura, additional, Blöcher, Jens, additional, Unterländer, Martina, additional, Leuenberger, Christoph, additional, Çilingiroğlu, Çiler, additional, Horejs, Barbara, additional, Gerritsen, Fokke, additional, Shennan, Stephen, additional, Bradley, Daniel G, additional, Currat, Mathias, additional, Veeramah, Krishna, additional, Wegmann, Daniel, additional, Thomas, Mark G, additional, Papageorgopoulou, Christina, additional, and Burger, Joachim, additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Ancestry and demography and descendants of Iron Age nomads of the Eurasian Steppe
- Author
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Unterländer, Martina, Palstra, Friso, Lazaridis, Iosif, Pilipenko, Aleksandr, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Groß, Melanie, Sell, Christian, Blöcher, Jens, Kirsanow, Karola, Rohland, Nadin, Rieger, Benjamin, Kaiser, Elke, Schier, Wolfram, Pozdniakov, Dimitri, Khokhlov, Aleksandr, Georges, Myriam, Wilde, Sandra, Powell, Adam, Heyer, Evelyne, Currat, Mathias, Reich, David, Samashev, Zainolla, Parzinger, Hermann, Molodin, Vyacheslav I., and Burger, Joachim
- Abstract
During the 1st millennium before the Common Era (BCE), nomadic tribes associated with the Iron Age Scythian culture spread over the Eurasian Steppe, covering a territory of more than 3,500 km in breadth. To understand the demographic processes behind the spread of the Scythian culture, we analysed genomic data from eight individuals and a mitochondrial dataset of 96 individuals originating in eastern and western parts of the Eurasian Steppe. Genomic inference reveals that Scythians in the east and the west of the steppe zone can best be described as a mixture of Yamnaya-related ancestry and an East Asian component. Demographic modelling suggests independent origins for eastern and western groups with ongoing gene-flow between them, plausibly explaining the striking uniformity of their material culture. We also find evidence that significant gene-flow from east to west Eurasia must have occurred early during the Iron Age.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. INJURY PATTERNS IN AN AVAR PERIOD CEMETERY FROM LEOBERSDORF, AUSTRIA.
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Pany-Kucera, Doris, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Klostermann, Paul, Koger, Robin, Mühlburger, Miriam, Reiter, Nina, Tobias, Bendeguz, Strondl, Liesa, Ke Wang, Eggers, Sabine, and Berner, Margit
- Subjects
CEMETERIES ,HUMAN skeleton ,MIDDLE age ,BONE fractures - Abstract
The skeletons from the cemetery of Leobersdorf, Austria are re-analyzed within the international ERC project HistoGenes. The goal is to investigate the biohistorical background of several communities from the Early Middle Ages (7
th to the 9th century AD) in Eastern Central Europe by means of analyses of cemeteries from the Carpathian Basin from historical, genetic, anthropological, and archaeological perspectives. In the anthropological part, we assess demographic, traumatic and disease patterns to examine the living conditions of the communities. In our pilot study on Leobersdorf we analyzed 164 skeletons in detail. The focus is on physical burdens in individuals from the age of 14 years onwards (56 males and 60 females, anthropologically and genetically sexed), especially on fracture and trauma patterns. The highest percentage of healed fractures is seen in ribs of males (c. 21 %), and females (c. 13 %), and left upper limbs of males (13 %). One male and one female are affected from a minor skull trauma, while one male suffered from a severe healed facial fracture and involvement of the shoulder. We found no case of decapitation, and no cases of lower limb fractures. Only one male shows a probable perimortem penetrating injury at the left scapula. In general, fracture frequencies are low, especially among females and there are only few indicators for interpersonal violence. The severe facial fracture might rather be related to a horse kick incident as well. Moreover, most of the fractures are well-healed, pointing to a good support network in the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
36. The mixed genetic origin of the first farmers of Europe
- Author
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Marchi, Nina, Winkelbach, Laura, Schulz, Ilektra, Brami, Maxime, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Blöcher, Jens, Reyna-Blanco, Carlos S., Diekmann, Yoan, Thiéry, Alexandre, Kapopoulou, Adamandia, Link, Vivian, Piuz, Valérie, Kreutzer, Susanne, Figarska, Sylwia M., Ganiatsou, Elissavet, Pukaj, Albert, Karul, Necmi, Gerritsen, Fokke, Pechtl, Joachim, Peters, Joris, Zeeb-Lanz, Andrea, Lenneis, Eva, Teschler-Nicola, Maria, Triantaphyllou, Sevasti, Stefanović, Sofija, Papageorgopoulou, Christina, Wegmann, Daniel, Burger, Joachim, and Excoffier, Laurent
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Low prevalence of lactase persistence in bronze age europe indicates ongoing strong selection over the last 3,000 years
- Author
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Burger, Joachim, Link, Vivian, Blöcher, Jens, Schulz, Anna, Sell, Christian, Pochon, Zoé, Diekmann, Yoan, Žegarac, Aleksandra, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Winkelbach, Laura, Reyna-Blanco, Carlos S., Bieker, Vanessa, Orschiedt, Jörg, Brinker, Ute, Scheu, Amelie, Leuenberger, Christoph, Bertino, Thomas S., Bollongino, Ruth, Lidke, Gundula, Stefanović, Sofija, Jantzen, Detlef, Kaiser, Elke, Terberger, Thomas, Thomas, Mark G., Veeramah, Krishna R., Wegmann, Daniel, Burger, Joachim, Link, Vivian, Blöcher, Jens, Schulz, Anna, Sell, Christian, Pochon, Zoé, Diekmann, Yoan, Žegarac, Aleksandra, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Winkelbach, Laura, Reyna-Blanco, Carlos S., Bieker, Vanessa, Orschiedt, Jörg, Brinker, Ute, Scheu, Amelie, Leuenberger, Christoph, Bertino, Thomas S., Bollongino, Ruth, Lidke, Gundula, Stefanović, Sofija, Jantzen, Detlef, Kaiser, Elke, Terberger, Thomas, Thomas, Mark G., Veeramah, Krishna R., and Wegmann, Daniel
- Abstract
Lactase persistence (LP), the continued expression of lactase into adulthood, is the most strongly selected single gene trait over the last 10,000 years in multiple human populations. It has been posited that the primary allele causing LP among Eurasians, rs4988235-A [1], only rose to appreciable frequencies during the Bronze and Iron Ages [2, 3], long after humans started consuming milk from domesticated animals. This rapid rise has been attributed to an influx of people from the Pontic-Caspian steppe that began around 5,000 years ago [4, 5]. We investigate the spatiotemporal spread of LP through an analysis of 14 warriors from the Tollense Bronze Age battlefield in northern Germany (∼3,200 before present, BP), the oldest large-scale conflict site north of the Alps. Genetic data indicate that these individuals represent a single unstructured Central/Northern European population. We complemented these data with genotypes of 18 individuals from the Bronze Age site Mokrin in Serbia (∼4,100 to ∼3,700 BP) and 37 individuals from Eastern Europe and the Pontic- Caspian Steppe region, predating both Bronze Age sites (∼5,980 to ∼3,980 BP). We infer low LP in all three regions, i.e., in northern Germany and South-eastern and Eastern Europe, suggesting that the surge of rs4988235 in Central and Northern Europe was unlikely caused by Steppe expansions. We estimate a selection coefficient of 0.06 and conclude that the selection was ongoing in various parts of Europe over the last 3,000 years.
38. Population genomic analysis of elongated skulls reveals extensive female-biased immigration in Early Medieval Bavaria
- Author
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Veeramah, Krishna R., Rott, Andreas, Groß, Melanie, Dorp, Lucy van, López, Saioa, Kirsanow, Karola, Sell, Christian, Blöcher, Jens, Wegmann, Daniel, Link, Vivian, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Peters, Joris, Trautmann, Bernd, Gairhos, Anja, Haberstroh, Jochen, Päffgen, Bernd, Hellenthal, Garrett, Haas-Gebhard, Brigitte, Harbeck, Michaela, Burger, Joachim, Veeramah, Krishna R., Rott, Andreas, Groß, Melanie, Dorp, Lucy van, López, Saioa, Kirsanow, Karola, Sell, Christian, Blöcher, Jens, Wegmann, Daniel, Link, Vivian, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Peters, Joris, Trautmann, Bernd, Gairhos, Anja, Haberstroh, Jochen, Päffgen, Bernd, Hellenthal, Garrett, Haas-Gebhard, Brigitte, Harbeck, Michaela, and Burger, Joachim
- Abstract
Modern European genetic structure demonstrates strong correlations with geography, while genetic analysis of prehistoric humans has indicated at least two major waves of immigration from outside the continent during periods of cultural change. However, population-level genome data that could shed light on the demographic processes occurring during the intervening periods have been absent. Therefore, we generated genomic data from 41 individuals dating mostly to the late 5th/early 6th century AD from present-day Bavaria in southern Germany, including 11 whole genomes (mean depth 5.56×). In addition we developed a capture array to sequence neutral regions spanning a total of 5 Mb and 486 functional polymorphic sites to high depth (mean 72×) in all individuals. Our data indicate that while men generally had ancestry that closely resembles modern northern and central Europeans, women exhibit a very high genetic heterogeneity; this includes signals of genetic ancestry ranging from western Europe to East Asia. Particularly striking are women with artificial skull deformations; the analysis of their collective genetic ancestry suggests an origin in southeastern Europe. In addition, functional variants indicate that they also differed in visible characteristics. This example of female-biased migration indicates that complex demographic processes during the Early Medieval period may have contributed in an unexpected way to shape the modern European genetic landscape. Examination of the panel of functional loci also revealed that many alleles associated with recent positive selection were already at modern-like frequencies in European populations ∼1,500 years ago.
39. Early farmers from across Europe directly descended from Neolithic Aegeans
- Author
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Hofmanová, Zuzana, Kreutzer, Susanne, Hellenthal, Garrett, Sell, Christian, Diekmann, Yoan, Díez-del-Molino, David, Dorp, Lucy van, López, Saioa, Kousathanas, Athanasios, Link, Vivian, Kirsanow, Karola, Cassidy, Lara M., Martiniano, Rui, Strobel, Melanie, Scheu, Amelie, Kotsakis, Kostas, Halstead, Paul, Triantaphyllou, Sevi, Kyparissi-Apostolika, Nina, Urem-Kotsou, Dushka, Ziota, Christina, Adaktylou, Fotini, Gopalan, Shyamalika, Bobo, Dean M., Winkelbach, Laura, Blöcher, Jens, Unterländer, Martina, Leuenberger, Christoph, Çilingiroğlu, Çiler, Horejs, Barbara, Gerritsen, Fokke, Shennan, Stephen J., Bradley, Daniel G., Currat, Mathias, Veeramah, Krishna R., Wegmann, Daniel, Thomas, Mark G., Papageorgopoulou, Christina, Burger, Joachim, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Kreutzer, Susanne, Hellenthal, Garrett, Sell, Christian, Diekmann, Yoan, Díez-del-Molino, David, Dorp, Lucy van, López, Saioa, Kousathanas, Athanasios, Link, Vivian, Kirsanow, Karola, Cassidy, Lara M., Martiniano, Rui, Strobel, Melanie, Scheu, Amelie, Kotsakis, Kostas, Halstead, Paul, Triantaphyllou, Sevi, Kyparissi-Apostolika, Nina, Urem-Kotsou, Dushka, Ziota, Christina, Adaktylou, Fotini, Gopalan, Shyamalika, Bobo, Dean M., Winkelbach, Laura, Blöcher, Jens, Unterländer, Martina, Leuenberger, Christoph, Çilingiroğlu, Çiler, Horejs, Barbara, Gerritsen, Fokke, Shennan, Stephen J., Bradley, Daniel G., Currat, Mathias, Veeramah, Krishna R., Wegmann, Daniel, Thomas, Mark G., Papageorgopoulou, Christina, and Burger, Joachim
- Abstract
Farming and sedentism first appeared in southwestern Asia during the early Holocene and later spread to neighboring regions, including Europe, along multiple dispersal routes. Conspicuous uncertainties remain about the relative roles of migration, cultural diffusion, and admixture with local foragers in the early Neolithization of Europe. Here we present paleogenomic data for five Neolithic individuals from northern Greece and northwestern Turkey spanning the time and region of the earliest spread of farming into Europe. We use a novel approach to recalibrate raw reads and call genotypes from ancient DNA and observe striking genetic similarity both among Aegean early farmers and with those from across Europe. Our study demonstrates a direct genetic link between Mediterranean and Central European early farmers and those of Greece and Anatolia, extending the European Neolithic migratory chain all the way back to southwestern Asia.
40. Demographic history was a formative mechanism of the genetic structure for the taste receptor TAS2R16 in human populations inhabiting Africa's Sahel/Savannah Belt.
- Author
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Kulichová, Iva, Mouterde, Médéric, Mokhtar, Mohammed G., Diallo, Issa, Tříska, Petr, Diallo, Yoro Mame, Hofmanová, Zuzana, Poloni, Estella S., and Černý, Viktor
- Abstract
Objectives Methods Results Discussion Mode of subsistence is an important factor influencing dietary habits and the genetic structure of various populations through differential intensity of gene flow and selection pressures. Previous studies suggest that in Africa Taste 2 Receptor Member 16 (TAS2R16), which encodes the 7‐transmembrane receptor protein for bitterness, might also be under positive selection pressure.However, since sampling coverage of populations was limited, we created a new TAS2R16 population dataset from across the African Sahel/Savannah belt representing various local populations of differing subsistence modes, linguistic affiliations, and geographic provenience. We sequenced the TAS2R16 exon gene and analyzed 2250 haplotypes among 19 populations.We found no evidence for selection as a driving force of genetic variation at this locus; instead, we discovered a highly significant correlation between TAS2R16 genetic and geographical distances based on provenience of the sampled populations, strongly suggesting that genetic drift most likely prevailed over positive selection at this specific locus. We also found significant correlations with other independent loci, mainly in sedentary farmers.Our results do not support the notion that the genetic diversity of TAS2R16 in Sahelian populations was shaped by selective pressures. This could result from several alternative and not mutually exclusive mechanisms, of which the possibility that, due to the pleiotropic nature of TAS2R16, selective pressures on other traits could counterbalance those acting on bitter taste perception, or that the change of diet in the Neolithic generally relaxed selective pressure on this gene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Alu insertion polymorphisms in the African Sahel and the origin of Fulani pastoralists.
- Author
-
Čížková M, Hofmanová Z, Mokhtar MG, Janoušek V, Diallo I, Munclinger P, and Černý V
- Subjects
- Africa South of the Sahara, Humans, Alu Elements genetics, Polymorphism, Genetic genetics, Transients and Migrants
- Abstract
Background: The origin of Western African pastoralism, represented today by the Fulani nomads, has been a highly debated issue for the past decades, and has not yet been conclusively resolved., Aim: This study focused on Alu polymorphisms in sedentary and nomadic populations across the African Sahel to investigate patterns of diversity that can complement the existing results and contribute to resolving issues concerning the origin of West African pastoralism., Subjects and Methods: A new dataset of 21 Alu biallelic markers covering a substantial part of the African Sahel has been analysed jointly with several published North African populations., Results: Interestingly, with regard to Alu variation, the relationship of Fulani pastoralists to North Africans is not as evident as was earlier revealed by studies of uniparental loci such as mtDNA and NRY. Alu insertions point rather to an affinity of Fulani pastoralists to Eastern Africans also leading a pastoral lifestyle., Conclusions: It is suggested that contemporary Fulani pastoralists might be descendants of an ancestral Eastern African population that, while crossing the Sahara in the Holocene, admixed slightly with a population of Eurasian (as evidenced by uniparental polymorphisms) ancestry. It seems that, in the Fulani pastoralists, Alu elements reflect more ancient genetic relationships than do uniparental genetic systems.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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