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Featured researches published by Amelie Scheu.


Proceedings of the Royal Society series B : biological sciences, 2007, Vol.274(1616), pp.1377-1385 [Peer Reviewed Journal] | 2007

Mitochondrial DNA analysis shows a Near Eastern Neolithic origin for domestic cattle and no indication of domestication of European aurochs.

Ceiridwen J. Edwards; Amelie Scheu; Andrew T. Chamberlain; Anne Tresset; Jean-Denis Vigne; Jillian F Baird; Greger Larson; Simon Y. W. Ho; Tim Hermanus Heupink; Beth Shapiro; Abigail R Freeman; Mark G. Thomas; Rose-Marie Arbogast; Betty Arndt; László Bartosiewicz; Norbert Benecke; Mihael Budja; Louis Chaix; Alice M. Choyke; Eric Coqueugniot; Hans-Jürgen Döhle; Holger Göldner; Sönke Hartz; Daniel Helmer; Barabara Herzig; Hitomi Hongo; Marjan Mashkour; Mehmet Özdoğan; Erich Pucher; Georg Roth

The extinct aurochs (Bos primigenius primigenius) was a large type of cattle that ranged over almost the whole Eurasian continent. The aurochs is the wild progenitor of modern cattle, but it is unclear whether European aurochs contributed to this process. To provide new insights into the demographic history of aurochs and domestic cattle, we have generated high-confidence mitochondrial DNA sequences from 59 archaeological skeletal finds, which were attributed to wild European cattle populations based on their chronological date and/or morphology. All pre-Neolithic aurochs belonged to the previously designated P haplogroup, indicating that this represents the Late Glacial Central European signature. We also report one new and highly divergent haplotype in a Neolithic aurochs sample from Germany, which points to greater variability during the Pleistocene. Furthermore, the Neolithic and Bronze Age samples that were classified with confidence as European aurochs using morphological criteria all carry P haplotype mitochondrial DNA, suggesting continuity of Late Glacial and Early Holocene aurochs populations in Europe. Bayesian analysis indicates that recent population growth gives a significantly better fit to our data than a constant-sized population, an observation consistent with a postglacial expansion scenario, possibly from a single European refugial population. Previous work has shown that most ancient and modern European domestic cattle carry haplotypes previously designated T. This, in combination with our new finding of a T haplotype in a very Early Neolithic site in Syria, lends persuasive support to a scenario whereby gracile Near Eastern domestic populations, carrying predominantly T haplotypes, replaced P haplotype-carrying robust autochthonous aurochs populations in Europe, from the Early Neolithic onward. During the period of coexistence, it appears that domestic cattle were kept separate from wild aurochs and introgression was extremely rare.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Early farmers from across Europe directly descended from Neolithic Aegeans

Zuzana Hofmanová; Susanne Kreutzer; Garrett Hellenthal; Christian Sell; Yoan Diekmann; David Díez-del-Molino; Lucy van Dorp; Saioa López; Athanasios Kousathanas; Vivian Link; Karola Kirsanow; Lara M. Cassidy; Rui Martiniano; Melanie Strobel; Amelie Scheu; Kostas Kotsakis; Paul Halstead; Sevi Triantaphyllou; Nina Kyparissi-Apostolika; Dushka Urem-Kotsou; Christina Ziota; Fotini Adaktylou; Shyamalika Gopalan; Dean Bobo; Laura Winkelbach; Jens Blöcher; Martina Unterländer; Christoph Leuenberger; Çiler Çilingiroğlu; Barbara Horejs

Significance One of the most enduring and widely debated questions in prehistoric archaeology concerns the origins of Europe’s earliest farmers: Were they the descendants of local hunter-gatherers, or did they migrate from southwestern Asia, where farming began? We recover genome-wide DNA sequences from early farmers on both the European and Asian sides of the Aegean to reveal an unbroken chain of ancestry leading from central and southwestern Europe back to Greece and northwestern Anatolia. Our study provides the coup de grâce to the notion that farming spread into and across Europe via the dissemination of ideas but without, or with only a limited, migration of people. Farming and sedentism first appeared in southwestern Asia during the early Holocene and later spread to neighboring regions, including Europe, along multiple dispersal routes. Conspicuous uncertainties remain about the relative roles of migration, cultural diffusion, and admixture with local foragers in the early Neolithization of Europe. Here we present paleogenomic data for five Neolithic individuals from northern Greece and northwestern Turkey spanning the time and region of the earliest spread of farming into Europe. We use a novel approach to recalibrate raw reads and call genotypes from ancient DNA and observe striking genetic similarity both among Aegean early farmers and with those from across Europe. Our study demonstrates a direct genetic link between Mediterranean and Central European early farmers and those of Greece and Anatolia, extending the European Neolithic migratory chain all the way back to southwestern Asia.


Science | 2016

Early Neolithic genomes from the eastern Fertile Crescent

Farnaz Broushaki; Mark G. Thomas; Vivian Link; Saioa López; Lucy van Dorp; Karola Kirsanow; Zuzana Hofmanová; Yoan Diekmann; Lara M. Cassidy; David Díez-del-Molino; Athanasios Kousathanas; Christian Sell; Harry Kenneth Robson; Rui Martiniano; Jens Blöcher; Amelie Scheu; Susanne Kreutzer; Dean Bobo; Hossein Davoudi; Olivia Munoz; Mathias Currat; Kamyar Abdi; Fereidoun Biglari; Oliver E. Craig; Daniel G. Bradley; Stephen Shennan; Krishna R. Veeramah; Marjan Mashkour; Daniel Wegmann; Garrett Hellenthal

Near Eastern genomes from Iran The genetic composition of populations in Europe changed during the Neolithic transition from hunting and gathering to farming. To better understand the origin of modern populations, Broushaki et al. sequenced ancient DNA from four individuals from the Zagros region of present-day Iran, representing the early Neolithic Fertile Crescent. These individuals unexpectedly were not ancestral to early European farmers, and their genetic structures did not contribute significantly to those of present-day Europeans. These data indicate that a parallel Neolithic transition probably resulted from structured farming populations across southwest Asia. Science, this issue p. 499 Neolithic people from the region of modern Iran are genetically distinct from early northwestern Anatolian and European farmers. We sequenced Early Neolithic genomes from the Zagros region of Iran (eastern Fertile Crescent), where some of the earliest evidence for farming is found, and identify a previously uncharacterized population that is neither ancestral to the first European farmers nor has contributed substantially to the ancestry of modern Europeans. These people are estimated to have separated from Early Neolithic farmers in Anatolia some 46,000 to 77,000 years ago and show affinities to modern-day Pakistani and Afghan populations, but particularly to Iranian Zoroastrians. We conclude that multiple, genetically differentiated hunter-gatherer populations adopted farming in southwestern Asia, that components of pre-Neolithic population structure were preserved as farming spread into neighboring regions, and that the Zagros region was the cradle of eastward expansion.


BMC Genetics | 2015

The genetic prehistory of domesticated cattle from their origin to the spread across Europe

Amelie Scheu; Adam Powell; Jean-Denis Vigne; Anne Tresset; Canan Çakirlar; Norbert Benecke; Joachim Burger

BackgroundCattle domestication started in the 9th millennium BC in Southwest Asia. Domesticated cattle were then introduced into Europe during the Neolithic transition. However, the scarcity of palaeogenetic data from the first European domesticated cattle still inhibits the accurate reconstruction of their early demography. In this study, mitochondrial DNA from 193 ancient and 597 modern domesticated cattle (Bos taurus) from sites across Europe, Western Anatolia and Iran were analysed to provide insight into the Neolithic dispersal process and the role of the local European aurochs population during cattle domestication.ResultsUsing descriptive summary statistics and serial coalescent simulations paired with approximate Bayesian computation we find: (i) decreasing genetic diversity in a southeast to northwest direction, (ii) strong correlation of genetic and geographical distances, iii) an estimated effective size of the Near Eastern female founder population of 81, iv) that the expansion of cattle from the Near East and Anatolia into Europe does not appear to constitute a significant bottleneck, and that v) there is evidence for gene-flow between the Near Eastern/Anatolian and European cattle populations in the early phases of the European Neolithic, but that it is restricted after 5,000 BCE.ConclusionsThe most plausible scenario to explain these results is a single and regionally restricted domestication process of cattle in the Near East with subsequent migration into Europe during the Neolithic transition without significant maternal interbreeding with the endogenous wild stock. Evidence for gene-flow between cattle populations from Southwestern Asia and Europe during the earlier phases of the European Neolithic points towards intercontinental trade connections between Neolithic farmers.


Nature Communications | 2017

Ancient European dog genomes reveal continuity since the Early Neolithic

Laura R. Botigué; Shiya Song; Amelie Scheu; Shyamalika Gopalan; Amanda L. Pendleton; Matthew T. Oetjens; Angela M. Taravella; Timo Seregély; Andrea Zeeb-Lanz; Rose Marie Arbogast; Dean Bobo; Kevin G. Daly; Martina Unterländer; Joachim Burger; Jeffrey M. Kidd; Krishna R. Veeramah

Europe has played a major role in dog evolution, harbouring the oldest uncontested Palaeolithic remains and having been the centre of modern dog breed creation. Here we sequence the genomes of an Early and End Neolithic dog from Germany, including a sample associated with an early European farming community. Both dogs demonstrate continuity with each other and predominantly share ancestry with modern European dogs, contradicting a previously suggested Late Neolithic population replacement. We find no genetic evidence to support the recent hypothesis proposing dual origins of dog domestication. By calibrating the mutation rate using our oldest dog, we narrow the timing of dog domestication to 20,000–40,000 years ago. Interestingly, we do not observe the extreme copy number expansion of the AMY2B gene characteristic of modern dogs that has previously been proposed as an adaptation to a starch-rich diet driven by the widespread adoption of agriculture in the Neolithic.


Nature Communications | 2016

Early cave art and ancient DNA record the origin of European bison

Julien Soubrier; Graham Gower; Kefei Chen; Stephen M. Richards; Bastien Llamas; Kieren J. Mitchell; Simon Y. W. Ho; Pavel A. Kosintsev; Michael S. Y. Lee; Gennady F. Baryshnikov; Pere Bover; Joachim Burger; David Chivall; Evelyne Crégut-Bonnoure; Jared E. Decker; Vladimir B. Doronichev; Katerina Douka; Damien A. Fordham; Federica Fontana; Carole Fritz; Jan Glimmerveen; Liubov V. Golovanova; Colin P. Groves; Antonio Guerreschi; Wolfgang Haak; Thomas Higham; Emilia Hofman-Kamińska; Alexander Immel; Marie-Anne Julien; Johannes Krause

The two living species of bison (European and American) are among the few terrestrial megafauna to have survived the late Pleistocene extinctions. Despite the extensive bovid fossil record in Eurasia, the evolutionary history of the European bison (or wisent, Bison bonasus) before the Holocene (<11.7 thousand years ago (kya)) remains a mystery. We use complete ancient mitochondrial genomes and genome-wide nuclear DNA surveys to reveal that the wisent is the product of hybridization between the extinct steppe bison (Bison priscus) and ancestors of modern cattle (aurochs, Bos primigenius) before 120 kya, and contains up to 10% aurochs genomic ancestry. Although undetected within the fossil record, ancestors of the wisent have alternated ecological dominance with steppe bison in association with major environmental shifts since at least 55 kya. Early cave artists recorded distinct morphological forms consistent with these replacement events, around the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM, ∼21–18 kya).


Molecular Ecology Resources | 2017

Experimental conditions improving in solution target enrichment for ancient DNA

Diana I. Cruz-Dávalos; Bastien Llamas; Charleen Gaunitz; Antoine Fages; Cristina Gamba; Julien Soubrier; Pablo Librado; Andaine Seguin-Orlando; Mélanie Pruvost; Ahmed H. Alfarhan; Saleh A. Alquraishi; Khaled A. S. Al-Rasheid; Amelie Scheu; Norbert Beneke; Arne Ludwig; Alan Cooper; Ludovic Orlando

High‐throughput sequencing has dramatically fostered ancient DNA research in recent years. Shotgun sequencing, however, does not necessarily appear as the best‐suited approach due to the extensive contamination of samples with exogenous environmental microbial DNA. DNA capture‐enrichment methods represent cost‐effective alternatives that increase the sequencing focus on the endogenous fraction, whether it is from mitochondrial or nuclear genomes, or parts thereof. Here, we explored experimental parameters that could impact the efficacy of MYbaits in‐solution capture assays of ~5000 nuclear loci or the whole genome. We found that varying quantities of the starting probes had only moderate effect on capture outcomes. Starting DNA, probe tiling, the hybridization temperature and the proportion of endogenous DNA all affected the assay, however. Additionally, probe features such as their GC content, number of CpG dinucleotides, sequence complexity and entropy and self‐annealing properties need to be carefully addressed during the design stage of the capture assay. The experimental conditions and probe molecular features identified in this study will improve the recovery of genetic information extracted from degraded and ancient remains.


Science | 2018

Ancient goat genomes reveal mosaic domestication in the Fertile Crescent

Kevin G. Daly; Pierpaolo Maisano Delser; Victoria Mullin; Amelie Scheu; Valeria Mattiangeli; Matthew D. Teasdale; Andrew J. Hare; Joachim Burger; Marta Pereira Verdugo; Matthew J. Collins; Ron Kehati; Cevdet Merih Erek; Guy Bar-Oz; François Pompanon; Tristan Cumer; Canan Çakirlar; Azadeh Fatemeh Mohaseb; Delphine Decruyenaere; Hossein Davoudi; Özlem Çevik; Gary O. Rollefson; Jean-Denis Vigne; Roya Khazaeli; Homa Fathi; Sanaz Beizaee Doost; Roghayeh Rahimi Sorkhani; Ali Akbar Vahdati; Eberhard Sauer; Hossein Azizi Kharanaghi; Sepideh Maziar

How humans got their goats Little is known regarding the location and mode of the early domestication of animals such as goats for husbandry. To investigate the history of the goat, Daly et al. sequenced mitochondrial and nuclear sequences from ancient specimens ranging from hundreds to thousands of years in age. Multiple wild populations contributed to the origin of modern goats during the Neolithic. Over time, one mitochondrial type spread and became dominant worldwide. However, at the whole-genome level, modern goat populations are a mix of goats from different sources and provide evidence for a multilocus process of domestication in the Near East. Furthermore, the patterns described support the idea of multiple dispersal routes out of the Fertile Crescent region by domesticated animals and their human counterparts. Science, this issue p. 85 Ancient goat genomes elucidate a dispersed domestication process across the Near East. Current genetic data are equivocal as to whether goat domestication occurred multiple times or was a singular process. We generated genomic data from 83 ancient goats (51 with genome-wide coverage) from Paleolithic to Medieval contexts throughout the Near East. Our findings demonstrate that multiple divergent ancient wild goat sources were domesticated in a dispersed process that resulted in genetically and geographically distinct Neolithic goat populations, echoing contemporaneous human divergence across the region. These early goat populations contributed differently to modern goats in Asia, Africa, and Europe. We also detect early selection for pigmentation, stature, reproduction, milking, and response to dietary change, providing 8000-year-old evidence for human agency in molding genome variation within a partner species.


bioRxiv | 2017

ATLAS: Analysis Tools for Low-depth and Ancient Samples

Vivian Link; Athanasios Kousathanas; Krishna R. Veeramah; Christian Sell; Amelie Scheu; Daniel Wegmann

Summary Post-mortem damage (PMD) obstructs the proper analysis of ancient DNA samples. Currently, PMD can only be addressed by adjusting sequencing quality scores or by removing potentially damaged data. Here we present ATLAS, a suite of methods to analyze ancient samples that properly account for PMD. It works directly from raw BAM files and contains all necessary methods to infer patterns of PMD, recalibrate base quality scores and accurately genotype ancient DNA, along with many other useful tools. ATLAS enables the building of complete and customized pipelines for the analysis of ancient and low-depth samples in a very user-friendly way. Using simulations we show that, in the presence of PMD, a dedicated pipeline of ATLAS calls genotypes more accurately than the state of the art pipeline of GATK combined with mapDamage 2.0. Availability ATLAS is an open-source C++ program freely available at https://bitbucket.org/phaentu/atlas. Contact [email protected] Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2008

Ancient DNA provides no evidence for independent domestication of cattle in Mesolithic Rosenhof, Northern Germany

Amelie Scheu; Sönke Hartz; Ulrich Schmölcke; Anne Tresset; Joachim Burger

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Anne Tresset

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Vivian Link

University of Fribourg

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Dean Bobo

Stony Brook University

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Marjan Mashkour

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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