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The Peopling of Modern Bosnia-Herzegovina: Y-chromosome Haplogroups in the Three Main Ethnic Groups (CROSBI ID 130835)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Marjanović, Damir ; Fornarino, S. ; Montagna, S. ; Primorac, Dragan ; Hadžiselimović, Rifat ; Vidović , S. ; Pojskić, Naris ; Battaglia, V. ; Achilli, A. ; Drobnić, Katja et al. The Peopling of Modern Bosnia-Herzegovina: Y-chromosome Haplogroups in the Three Main Ethnic Groups // Annals of human genetics, 69 (2005), 6; 757-763

Podaci o odgovornosti

Marjanović, Damir ; Fornarino, S. ; Montagna, S. ; Primorac, Dragan ; Hadžiselimović, Rifat ; Vidović , S. ; Pojskić, Naris ; Battaglia, V. ; Achilli, A. ; Drobnić, Katja ; Anđelinović, Šimun ; Torroni, A. ; Santachiara-Benerecetti, AS. ; Semino, O.

engleski

The Peopling of Modern Bosnia-Herzegovina: Y-chromosome Haplogroups in the Three Main Ethnic Groups

The variation at 28 Y-chromosome biallelic markers was analysed in 256 males (90 Croats, 81 Serbs and 85 Bosniacs) from Bosnia-Herzegovina. An important shared feature between the three ethnic groups is the high frequency of the "Palaeolithic" European-specific haplogroup (Hg) I, a likely signature of a Balkan population re-expansion after the Last Glacial Maximum. This haplogroup is almost completely represented by the sub-haplogroup I-P37 whose frequency is, however, higher in the Croats (similar to 71%) than in Bosniacs (similar to 44%) and Serbs (similar to 31%). Other rather frequent haplogroups are E (similar to 15%) and J (similar to 7%), which are considered to have arrived from the Middle East in Neolithic and post-Neolithic times, and R-M17 (similar to 14%), which probably marked several arrivals, at different times, from eastern Eurasia. Hg E, almost exclusively represented by its subclade E-M78, is more common in the Serbs (similar to 20%) than in Bosniacs (similar to 13%) and Croats (similar to 9%), and Hg J, observed in only one Croat, encompasses similar to 9% of the Serbs and similar to 12% of the Bosniacs, where it shows its highest diversification. By contrast, Hg R-M17 displays similar frequencies in all three groups. On the whole, the three main groups of Bosnia-Herzegovina, in spite of some quantitative differences, share a large fraction of the same ancient gene pool distinctive for the Balkan area.

Y-Chromosome haplogroups; Polymorphisms; Bosnia-Herzegovina; Balkans

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Podaci o izdanju

69 (6)

2005.

757-763

objavljeno

0003-4800

Povezanost rada

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