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Wiley InterScience | ||
![]() Annals of Human GeneticsVolume 72 Issue 2, Pages 215 - 227 Published Online: 20 Jan 2008 Journal compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd/University College London
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 1470K) | Supporting Information | Related Articles | Citation Tracking A Perspective on the History of the Iberian Gypsies Provided by Phylogeographic Analysis of Y-Chromosome Lineages Copyright 2008 The Authors Journal compilation © 2008 University College London KEYWORDS Portuguese Gypsies • Gypsy diaspora • Roma • Y-chromosome lineages • Y-SNP haplogroups • Y-STR haplotypes ABSTRACTThe European Gypsies, commonly referred to as Roma, are represented by a vast number of groups spread across many countries. Although sharing a common origin, the Gypsy groups are highly heterogeneous as a consequence of genetic drift and different levels of admixture with surrounding populations. With this study we aimed at contributing to the knowledge of the Roma history by studying 17 Y-STR and 34 Y-SNP loci in a sample of 126 Portuguese Gypsies. Distinct genetic hallmarks of their past and migration route were detected, namely: an ancestral component, shared by all Roma groups, that reflects their origin in India (H1a-M82; ∼17%); an influence from their long permanence in the Balkans/Middle-East region (J2a1b-M67, J2a1b1-M92, I-M170, Q-M242; ∼31%); traces of contacts with European populations preceding the entrance in the Iberian Peninsula (R1b1c-M269, J2b1a-M241; ∼10%); and a high proportion of admixture with the non-Gypsy population from Iberia (R1b1c-M269, R1-M173/del.M269, J2a-M410, I1b1b-M26, E3b1b-M81; ∼37%). Among the Portuguese Gypsies the proportion of introgression from host populations is higher than observed in other groups, a fact which is somewhat unexpected since the arrival of the Roma to Portugal is documented to be more recent than in Central or East Europe.
Received: 15 October 2007 |