Genome of Pesxtera Muierii skull shows high diversity and low mutational load in pre-glacial Europe
View/ Open
Date
2021-07-26Author
Svensson, Emma
Günther, Torsten
Hoischen, Alexander
Munters, Arielle R.
Ioana, Mihai
Ridiche, Florin
Edlund, Hanna
Van Deuren, Rosanne C.
Soficaru, Andrei
Netea, Mihai G.
Jakobsson, Mattias
Metadata
Show full item record
Current Biology 31(14) : 2973-2983 (2021)
Abstract
Few complete human genomes from the European Early Upper Palaeolithic (EUP) have been sequenced. Using novel sampling and DNA extraction approaches, we sequenced the genome of a woman from "Pesxtera Muierii,"Romania who lived similar to 34,000 years ago to 13.5x coverage. The genome shows similarities to modern-day Europeans, but she is not a direct ancestor. Although her cranium exhibits both modern human and Neanderthal features, the genome shows similar levels of Neanderthal admixture (similar to 3.1%) to most EUP humans but only half compared to the similar to 40,000-year-old Pesxtera Oase 1. All EUP European hunter-gatherers display high genetic diversity, demonstrating that the severe loss of diversity occurred during and after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) rather than just during the out-of-Africa migration. The prevalence of genetic diseases is expected to increase with low diversity; however, pathogenic variant load was relatively constant from EUP to modern times, despite post-LGM hunter-gatherers having the lowest diversity ever observed among Europeans.