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Old wild wolves: ancient DNA survey unveils population dynamics in Late Pleistocene and Holocene Italian remains.

Marta Maria CiucaniDavide PalumboMarco GalaverniPatrizia ServentiElena FabbriGloria RavegniniSabrina AngeliniElena MainiDavide PersicoRomolo CanigliaElisabetta Cilli
Published in: PeerJ (2019)
In this study we describe the genetic variability of the most ancient wolf specimens from Italy analyzed so far, providing a preliminary overview of the genetic make-up of the population that inhabited this area from the last glacial maximum to the Middle Age period. Our results endorsed that the genetic diversity carried by the Pleistocene wolves here analyzed showed a strong continuity with other northern Eurasian wolf specimens from the same chronological period. Contrarily, the Holocene samples showed a greater similarity only with modern sequences from Europe and Asia, and the occurrence of an haplogroup 1 haplotype allowed to date back previous finding about its presence in this area. Moreover, the unexpected discovery of a 24,700-year-old sample carrying a haplotype that, from the fragment here obtained, falls within the canine clade A, could represent the oldest evidence in Europe of such dog-rich clade. All these findings suggest complex population dynamics that deserve to be further investigated based on mitochondrial or whole genome sequencing.
Keyphrases
  • genetic diversity
  • small molecule
  • genome wide
  • mitochondrial dna
  • oxidative stress
  • copy number
  • cross sectional
  • high throughput
  • circulating tumor
  • dna methylation
  • circulating tumor cells