Linguistic, geographic and genetic isolation: a collaborative study of Italian populations.

Marco Capocasa, Paolo Anagnostou, Valeria Bachis, Cinzia Battaggia, Stefania Bertoncini, Gianfranco Biondi, Alessio Boattini, Ilaria Boschi, Francesca Brisighelli, Carla Maria Caló, Marilisa Carta, Valentina Coia, Laura Corrias, Federica Crivellaro, Sara De Fanti, Valentina Dominici, Gianmarco Ferri, Paolo Francalacci, Zelda Alice Franceschi, Donata Luiselli, Laura Morelli, Giorgio Paoli, Olga Rickards, Renato Robledo, Daria Sanna, Emanuele Sanna, Stefania Sarno, Luca Sineo, Luca Taglioli, Giuseppe Tagarelli, Sergio Tofanelli, Giuseppe Vona, Davide Pettener, Giovanni Destro Bisol
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引用次数: 48

Abstract

The animal and plant biodiversity of the Italian territory is known to be one of the richest in the Mediterranean basin and Europe as a whole, but does the genetic diversity of extant human populations show a comparable pattern? According to a number of studies, the genetic structure of Italian populations retains the signatures of complex peopling processes which took place from the Paleolithic to modern era. Although the observed patterns highlight a remarkable degree of genetic heterogeneity, they do not, however, take into account an important source of variation. In fact, Italy is home to numerous ethnolinguistic minorities which have yet to be studied systematically. Due to their difference in geographical origin and demographic history, such groups not only signal the cultural and social diversity of our country, but they are also potential contributors to its bio-anthropological heterogeneity. To fill this gap, research groups from four Italian Universities (Bologna, Cagliari, Pisa and Roma Sapienza) started a collaborative study in 2007, which was funded by the Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research and received partial support by the Istituto Italiano di Antropologia. In this paper, we present an account of the results obtained in the course of this initiative. Four case-studies relative to linguistic minorities from the Eastern Alps, Sardinia, Apennines and Southern Italy are first described and discussed, focusing on their micro-evolutionary and anthropological implications. Thereafter, we present the results of a systematic analysis of the relations between linguistic, geographic and genetic isolation. Integrating the data obtained in the course of the long-term study with literature and unpublished results on Italian populations, we show that a combination of linguistic and geographic factors is probably responsible for the presence of the most robust signatures of genetic isolation. Finally, we evaluate the magnitude of the diversity of Italian populations in the European context. The human genetic diversity of our country was found to be greater than observed throughout the continent at short (0-200 km) and intermediate (700-800km) distances, and accounted for most of the highest values of genetic distances observed at all geographic ranges. Interestingly, an important contribution to this pattern comes from the "linguistic islands"( e.g. German speaking groups of Sappada and Luserna from the Eastern Italian Alps), further proof of the importance of considering social and cultural factors when studying human genetic variation.

语言、地理和基因隔离:意大利人口的合作研究。
众所周知,意大利境内的动植物多样性是地中海盆地和整个欧洲最丰富的地区之一,但现存人类种群的遗传多样性是否也显示出类似的模式?根据多项研究,意大利人口的遗传结构保留了从旧石器时代到现代发生的复杂人口迁移过程的特征。尽管观察到的模式突出了显著程度的遗传异质性,但它们并没有考虑到变异的一个重要来源。事实上,意大利是许多少数民族的家园,这些少数民族尚未得到系统的研究。由于他们在地理起源和人口历史上的差异,这些群体不仅标志着我国文化和社会的多样性,而且也是其生物人类学异质性的潜在贡献者。为了填补这一空白,来自意大利四所大学(博洛尼亚、卡利亚里、比萨和罗马萨皮恩扎)的研究小组于2007年开始了一项合作研究,该研究由意大利教育、大学和研究部资助,并得到了意大利人类学研究所的部分支持。在本文中,我们介绍了在这一倡议的过程中所取得的成果。本文首先描述和讨论了来自东阿尔卑斯山、撒丁岛、亚平宁和意大利南部的四个与语言少数民族有关的案例研究,重点讨论了它们的微观进化和人类学含义。随后,我们提出了对语言、地理和遗传隔离之间关系的系统分析结果。综合长期研究过程中获得的数据与文献和未发表的意大利人口结果,我们表明,语言和地理因素的结合可能是造成遗传隔离最强大特征的原因。最后,我们评估了意大利人口在欧洲背景下的多样性程度。我国的人类遗传多样性在短距离(0 ~ 200公里)和中距离(700 ~ 800公里)范围内高于整个大陆,并占所有地理范围内观测到的遗传距离最高值的大部分。有趣的是,这种模式的一个重要贡献来自“语言岛屿”(例如,来自意大利东部阿尔卑斯山的讲德语的Sappada和Luserna群体),进一步证明了在研究人类遗传变异时考虑社会和文化因素的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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