2011
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msr126
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Parallel Evolution of Genes and Languages in the Caucasus Region

Abstract: We analyzed 40 single nucleotide polymorphism and 19 short tandem repeat Y-chromosomal markers in a large sample of 1,525 indigenous individuals from 14 populations in the Caucasus and 254 additional individuals representing potential source populations. We also employed a lexicostatistical approach to reconstruct the history of the languages of the North Caucasian family spoken by the Caucasus populations. We found a different major haplogroup to be prevalent in each of four sets of populations that occupy di… Show more

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Cited by 160 publications
(141 citation statements)
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“…In addition, all these rates are an order of magnitude higher than Zhivotovsky et al (2004) evolutionary rate. Following another line of evidence, Balanovsky et al (2011) observed that time estimates based on germline rates have a good fit with dates obtained from linguistic and archaeological evidence, while dates based on evolutionary rates tend to be older. These facts suggest that Y-STR diversity is generally distributed in pedigrees following the germline rate, while evolutionary rate is much slower.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…In addition, all these rates are an order of magnitude higher than Zhivotovsky et al (2004) evolutionary rate. Following another line of evidence, Balanovsky et al (2011) observed that time estimates based on germline rates have a good fit with dates obtained from linguistic and archaeological evidence, while dates based on evolutionary rates tend to be older. These facts suggest that Y-STR diversity is generally distributed in pedigrees following the germline rate, while evolutionary rate is much slower.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…This might reflect genetic drift, caused by isolation and small effective population size after a direct gene flow from the Near East, which led to a fixation of this haplogroup [54]. Intriguingly, populations of the northeast Caucasus show greater distances to the STA-LBK samples due to lower abundance of haplogroup G/G2a [55].…”
Section: (B) Y Chromosomal Dnamentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The detection of four phylogenetically equivalent SNPs 15 and an independent verification of the rs2032636 (M201) SNP by Sanger sequencing of a PCR amplicon obtained using genomic DNA isolated from a 2007 muscle biopsy unequivocally assigns the Iceman to haplogroup G, specifically subgroup G2a (Supplementary Table S7). While haplogroup G displays its highest frequency in the Caucasus 16 , it is also present at ~11% in present day Italy 17 . Genetic analysis of ancient DNA from 5,000-year-old skeletons from a burial cave site in southern France were mostly assigned to haplogroup G2a-P15 (ref.…”
Section: Snp Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%