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Research Publication

Fifteen millennia of human mitogenome evolution in Sicily.

Anna Tommasi, Rajiv Boscolo Agostini, Giacomo Villani et al.

41237225 PubMed ID
21 Authors
2025-11-14 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

AT
Anna Tommasi
RB
Rajiv Boscolo Agostini
GV
Giacomo Villani
NR
Nicola Rambaldi Migliore
MT
Maria T Vizzari
IC
Irene Cardinali
RD
Rosalinda Di Gerlando
VN
Valeria Nicolini
GS
Gary Sorasio
PS
Patrícia Santos
AO
Anna Olivieri
UA
Ugo A Perego
GC
Giulio Catalano
NV
Nicoletta Volante
LS
Lucia Sarti
DC
David Caramelli
LS
Luca Sineo
HL
Hovirag Lancioni
AM
Alessandra Modi
SG
Silvia Ghirotto
AA
Alessandro Achilli
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Sicily, situated at the heart of the Mediterranean Sea, has been a crossroads of people of different origins since the Paleolithic. To gain further insight into the genetic history of this island from a matrilineal viewpoint, we investigated 15 millennia of human mitogenome evolution. A unique Sicilian mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) dataset, represented by 116 ancient mitogenomes (including two newly sequenced) collected from 16 archeological sites dating from 14,700 to 545 years ago, was compared with a collection of 236 modern mitogenomes covering all districts of the island. By integrating demographic modeling with phylogeographic analyses, we identified a statistically supported genetic discontinuity between the Paleolithic/Late Mesolithic and Early Neolithic periods and two mtDNA lineages (U5b and U8b/K) that specifically mark this transition. The extensive variation and lack of genetic structure among modern mitogenomes suggest the presence of a continuous, maternally inherited gene flow from different regions of Western Eurasia (since the Paleolithic) and Africa (since the Bronze Age).

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment