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Dive into the research topics where Antonella Useli is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonella Useli.


Science | 2013

Low-Pass DNA Sequencing of 1200 Sardinians Reconstructs European Y-Chromosome Phylogeny

Paolo Francalacci; Laura Cornelia Clotilde Morelli; Andrea Angius; Riccardo Berutti; Frederic Reinier; Rossano Atzeni; Rosella Pilu; Fabio Busonero; Andrea Maschio; Ilenia Zara; Daria Sanna; Antonella Useli; Maria Francesca Urru; Marco Marcelli; Roberto Cusano; Manuela Oppo; Magdalena Zoledziewska; Maristella Pitzalis; Francesca Deidda; Eleonora Porcu; Fausto Pier'Angelo Poddie; Hyun Min Kang; Robert H. Lyons; Brendan Tarrier; Jennifer Bragg Gresham; Bingshan Li; Sergio Tofanelli; Santos Alonso; Mariano Dei; Sandra Lai

Examining Y The evolution of human populations has long been studied with unique sequences from the nonrecombining, male-specific Y chromosome (see the Perspective by Cann). Poznik et al. (p. 562) examined 9.9 Mb of the Y chromosome from 69 men from nine globally divergent populations—identifying population and individual specific sequence variants that elucidate the evolution of the Y chromosome. Sequencing of maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA allowed comparison between the relative rates of evolution, which suggested that the coalescence, or origin, of the human Y chromosome and mitochondria both occurred approximately 120 thousand years ago. Francalacci et al. (p. 565) investigated the sequence divergence of 1204 Y chromosomes that were sampled within the isolated and genetically informative Sardinian population. The sequence analyses, along with archaeological records, were used to calibrate and increase the resolution of the human phylogenetic tree. Local human demographic history is inferred from in-depth DNA sequence analysis of Sardinian mens Y chromosomes. [Also see Perspective by Cann] Genetic variation within the male-specific portion of the Y chromosome (MSY) can clarify the origins of contemporary populations, but previous studies were hampered by partial genetic information. Population sequencing of 1204 Sardinian males identified 11,763 MSY single-nucleotide polymorphisms, 6751 of which have not previously been observed. We constructed a MSY phylogenetic tree containing all main haplogroups found in Europe, along with many Sardinian-specific lineage clusters within each haplogroup. The tree was calibrated with archaeological data from the initial expansion of the Sardinian population ~7700 years ago. The ages of nodes highlight different genetic strata in Sardinia and reveal the presumptive timing of coalescence with other human populations. We calculate a putative age for coalescence of ~180,000 to 200,000 years ago, which is consistent with previous mitochondrial DNA–based estimates.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Uniparental markers in Italy reveal a sex-biased genetic structure and different historical strata

Alessio Boattini; Begoña Martínez-Cruz; Stefania Sarno; Christine Harmant; Antonella Useli; Paula Sanz; Daniele Yang-Yao; Jérémy Manry; Graziella Ciani; Donata Luiselli; Lluis Quintana-Murci; David Comas; Davide Pettener

Located in the center of the Mediterranean landscape and with an extensive coastal line, the territory of what is today Italy has played an important role in the history of human settlements and movements of Southern Europe and the Mediterranean Basin. Populated since Paleolithic times, the complexity of human movements during the Neolithic, the Metal Ages and the most recent history of the two last millennia (involving the overlapping of different cultural and demic strata) has shaped the pattern of the modern Italian genetic structure. With the aim of disentangling this pattern and understanding which processes more importantly shaped the distribution of diversity, we have analyzed the uniparentally-inherited markers in ∼900 individuals from an extensive sampling across the Italian peninsula, Sardinia and Sicily. Spatial PCAs and DAPCs revealed a sex-biased pattern indicating different demographic histories for males and females. Besides the genetic outlier position of Sardinians, a North West–South East Y-chromosome structure is found in continental Italy. Such structure is in agreement with recent archeological syntheses indicating two independent and parallel processes of Neolithisation. In addition, date estimates pinpoint the importance of the cultural and demographic events during the late Neolithic and Metal Ages. On the other hand, mitochondrial diversity is distributed more homogeneously in agreement with older population events that might be related to the presence of an Italian Refugium during the last glacial period in Europe.


Human Biology | 2012

The Family Name as Socio-Cultural Feature and Genetic Metaphor: From Concepts to Methods

Pierre Darlu; Gerrit Bloothooft; Alessio Boattini; Leendert Brouwer; Matthijs Brouwer; Guy Brunet; Pascal Chareille; James Cheshire; Richard Coates; Kathrin Dräger; Bertrand Desjardins; Patrick Hanks; Pa Longley; Kees Mandemakers; Pablo Mateos; Davide Pettener; Antonella Useli; Franz Manni

Abstract A recent workshop entitled “The Family Name as Socio-Cultural Feature and Genetic Metaphor: From Concepts to Methods” was held in Paris in December 2010, sponsored by the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) and by the journal Human Biology. This workshop was intended to foster a debate on questions related to the family names and to compare different multidisciplinary approaches involving geneticists, historians, geographers, sociologists and social anthropologists. This collective paper presents a collection of selected communications.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2013

mtDNA variation in East Africa unravels the history of Afro-Asiatic groups.

Alessio Boattini; Loredana Castrì; Stefania Sarno; Antonella Useli; Manuela Cioffi; Marco Sazzini; Paolo Garagnani; Sara De Fanti; Davide Pettener; Donata Luiselli

East Africa (EA) has witnessed pivotal steps in the history of human evolution. Due to its high environmental and cultural variability, and to the long-term human presence there, the genetic structure of modern EA populations is one of the most complicated puzzles in human diversity worldwide. Similarly, the widespread Afro-Asiatic (AA) linguistic phylum reaches its highest levels of internal differentiation in EA. To disentangle this complex ethno-linguistic pattern, we studied mtDNA variability in 1,671 individuals (452 of which were newly typed) from 30 EA populations and compared our data with those from 40 populations (2970 individuals) from Central and Northern Africa and the Levant, affiliated to the AA phylum. The genetic structure of the studied populations--explored using spatial Principal Component Analysis and Model-based clustering--turned out to be composed of four clusters, each with different geographic distribution and/or linguistic affiliation, and signaling different population events in the history of the region. One cluster is widespread in Ethiopia, where it is associated with different AA-speaking populations, and shows shared ancestry with Semitic-speaking groups from Yemen and Egypt and AA-Chadic-speaking groups from Central Africa. Two clusters included populations from Southern Ethiopia, Kenya and Tanzania. Despite high and recent gene-flow (Bantu, Nilo-Saharan pastoralists), one of them is associated with a more ancient AA-Cushitic stratum. Most North-African and Levantine populations (AA-Berber, AA-Semitic) were grouped in a fourth and more differentiated cluster. We therefore conclude that EA genetic variability, although heavily influenced by migration processes, conserves traces of more ancient strata.


Annals of Human Biology | 2011

Linking Italy and the Balkans. A Y-chromosome perspective from the Arbereshe of Calabria

Alessio Boattini; Donata Luiselli; Marco Sazzini; Antonella Useli; Giuseppe Tagarelli; Davide Pettener

Background: The Arbereshe are an Albanian-speaking ethno-linguistic minority who settled in Calabria (southern Italy) about five centuries ago. Aim: This study aims to clarify the genetic relationships between Italy and the Balkans through analysis of Y-chromosome variability in a peculiar case study, the Arbereshe. Subject and methods: Founder surnames were used as a means to identify a sample of individuals that might trace back to the Albanians at the time of their establishment in Italy. These results were compared with data of more than 1000 individuals from Italy and the Balkans. Results: The distributions of haplogroups (defined using 31 UEPs) and haplotypes (12 STRs) show that the Italian and Balkan populations are clearly divergent from each other. Within this genetic landscape, the Arbereshe are characterized by two peculiarities: (a) they are a clear outlier in the Italian genetic background, showing a strong genetic affinity with southern Balkans populations; and (b) they retain a high degree of genetic diversity. Conclusion: These results support the hypothesis that the surname-chosen Arbereshe are representative of the Y-chromosome genetic variability of the Albanian founder population. Accordingly, the Arbereshe genetic structure can contribute to the interpretation of the recent biological history of the southern Balkans. Intra-haplogroup analyses suggest that this area may have experienced important changes in the last five centuries, resulting in a marked increase in the frequency of haplogroups I2a and J2.


BMC Research Notes | 2015

Detection of phylogenetically informative polymorphisms in the entire euchromatic portion of human Y chromosome from a Sardinian sample

Paolo Francalacci; Daria Sanna; Antonella Useli; Riccardo Berutti; Mario Barbato; Michael B. Whalen; Andrea Angius; Carlo Sidore; Santos Alonso; Sergio Tofanelli; Francesco Cucca

BackgroundNext-Generation Sequencing methods have led to a great increase in phylogenetically useful markers within the male specific portion of the Y chromosome, but previous studies have limited themselves to the study of the X-degenerate regions.MethodsDNA was extracted from peripheral blood samples of adult males whose paternal grandfathers were born in Sardinia. The DNA samples were sequenced, genotyped and subsequently analysed for variant calling for approximately 23.1 Mbp of the Y chromosome. A phylogenetic tree was built using Network 4.6 software.ResultsFrom low coverage whole genome sequencing of 1,194 Sardinian males, we extracted 20,155 phylogenetically informative single nucleotide polymorphisms from the whole euchromatic region, including the X-degenerate, X-transposed, and Ampliconic regions, along with variants in other unclassified chromosome intervals and in the readable sequences of the heterochromatic region.ConclusionsThe non X-degenerate classes contain a significant portion of the phylogenetic variation of the whole chromosome and their inclusion in the analysis, almost doubling the number of informative polymorphisms, refining the known molecular phylogeny of the human Y chromosome.


Current Anthropology | 2015

Human Microevolution and the Atlantic Slave Trade

Margarida Coelho; Cíntia Alves Valentina Coia; Donata Luiselli; Antonella Useli; Tjerk Hagemeijer; António Amorim; Giovanni Destro-Bisol; Jorge Rocha

Populations derived from the Atlantic slaving process provide unique opportunities for studying key evolutionary determinants of current patterns of human cultural and biological variation. Examination of the genetic patterning of the small plantation island of São Tomé (Gulf of Guinea) using a study design that avoids the use of preconceived ethno‐linguistic labels to define genetic sampling units reveals that, despite the fact that maximum distance between any two sampled sites is less than 50 km, the island has an unusual level of genetic structure that is mainly caused by the grouping of Angolar Creole‐speakers in a separate cluster carrying a distinctive imprint of genetic drift. This pattern may have been shaped by a kin‐structured founder effect associated with the flight of a patrilineal clan of rebel slaves who established a remarkably successful maroon community in the vicinity of the plantation complex. The observation that population‐discontinuous jumps may occur even under social conditions of massive coercive amalgamation provides an illustration of the way in which human clusters emerge and eventually shape the genetic background of human populations.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2003

Peopling of three Mediterranean Islands (Corsica, Sardinia, and Sicily) inferred by Y-chromosome biallelic variability

Paolo Francalacci; Laura Cornelia Clotilde Morelli; Peter A. Underhill; Anita S. Lillie; Giuseppe Passarino; Antonella Useli; Roberto Madeddu; Giorgio Paoli; Sergio Tofanelli; Carla Maria Calò; Maria Elena Ghiani; Laurent Varesi; Marc Memmi; Giuseppe Vona; Alice A. Lin; Peter J. Oefner; Luca Cavalli-Sforza


Journal of Anthropological Sciences | 2008

Italian isolates today: geographic and linguistic factors shaping human biodiversity.

Destro Bisol G; Paolo Anagnostou; Chiara Batini; Cinzia Battaggia; Stefania Bertoncini; Alessio Boattini; Caciagli L; Caló Mc; Cristian Capelli; Marco Capocasa; Loredana Castrì; Ciani G; Coia; Corrias L; Crivellaro F; Maria Elena Ghiani; Donata Luiselli; Mela C; Alessandra Melis; Montano; Giorgio Paoli; Sanna E; Rufo F; Marco Sazzini; Luca Taglioli; Sergio Tofanelli; Antonella Useli; Giuseppe Vona; Davide Pettener


Journal of Anthropological Sciences | 2008

Kenyan crossroads: migration and gene flow in six ethnic groups from Eastern Africa.

Loredana Castrì; Paolo Garagnani; Antonella Useli; Davide Pettener; Donata Luiselli

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