2022
DOI: 10.1101/2022.05.04.490594
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Population genomics of postglacial western eurasia

Abstract: The transitions from foraging to farming and later to pastoralism in Stone Age Eurasia (c. 11-3 thousand years before present, BP) represent some of the most dramatic lifestyle changes in human evolution. We sequenced 317 genomes of primarily Mesolithic and Neolithic individuals from across Eurasia combined with radiocarbon dates, stable isotope data, and pollen records. Genome imputation and co-analysis with previously published shotgun sequencing data resulted in >1600 complete ancient genome sequences of… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(89 citation statements)
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References 288 publications
(484 reference statements)
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“…Finally, we assessed imputation performance and compared the downstream analyses results obtained with high-coverage and imputed genotypes. Three out of the 43 ancient genomes in this study constitute a trio (mother, father and son) that was recently re-sequenced and is not yet fully public 23,30 , in contrast to the remaining 40 genomes. This dataset of 43 ancient genomes is a diverse dataset in regard to their sequencing/study, as well as epoch and continent the ancient individuals lived in, with about half of the individuals being from Europe and the other half from Africa, America and Asia (Figure 1B).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Finally, we assessed imputation performance and compared the downstream analyses results obtained with high-coverage and imputed genotypes. Three out of the 43 ancient genomes in this study constitute a trio (mother, father and son) that was recently re-sequenced and is not yet fully public 23,30 , in contrast to the remaining 40 genomes. This dataset of 43 ancient genomes is a diverse dataset in regard to their sequencing/study, as well as epoch and continent the ancient individuals lived in, with about half of the individuals being from Europe and the other half from Africa, America and Asia (Figure 1B).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The availability of an ancient trio (mother, father, son) allowed us to use an orthogonal approach based on Mendel's rules of inheritance to measure imputation and phasing quality. This trio was sampled in a Late Neolithic mass burial at Koszyce 23,30 and was re-sequenced in the context of the 9 study of Allentoft et al 23 resulting in genome coverages of 27.5x (mother, RISE1159), 18.9x (father, RISE1168), 5.4x (son, RISE1160). In this analysis, imputation errors corresponded to sites where parental and offspring genotypes disagreed with Mendel transmission rules.…”
Section: Validating Imputation and Phasing Accuracy On An Ancient Triomentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Genomic time-series data has been used to great effect to find positively selected loci in experimentally controlled studies (reviewed in [45]). There is growing interest in performing similar analyses in natural populations, as the acquisition of time-series genomic data has become feasible both in species with short generation times such as Drosophila [35,36,68,69], and in those for which ancient DNA is available, such as humans [70].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%