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Dive into the research topics where Katarzyna Skonieczna is active.

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Featured researches published by Katarzyna Skonieczna.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The history of Slavs inferred from complete mitochondrial genome sequences.

Marta Mielnik-Sikorska; Patrycja Daca; B. A. Malyarchuk; Miroslava Derenko; Katarzyna Skonieczna; Maria Perkova; Tadeusz Dobosz; Tomasz Grzybowski

To shed more light on the processes leading to crystallization of a Slavic identity, we investigated variability of complete mitochondrial genomes belonging to haplogroups H5 and H6 (63 mtDNA genomes) from the populations of Eastern and Western Slavs, including new samples of Poles, Ukrainians and Czechs presented here. Molecular dating implies formation of H5 approximately 11.5–16 thousand years ago (kya) in the areas of southern Europe. Within ancient haplogroup H6, dated at around 15–28 kya, there is a subhaplogroup H6c, which probably survived the last glaciation in Europe and has undergone expansion only 3–4 kya, together with the ancestors of some European groups, including the Slavs, because H6c has been detected in Czechs, Poles and Slovaks. Detailed analysis of complete mtDNAs allowed us to identify a number of lineages that seem specific for Central and Eastern Europe (H5a1f, H5a2, H5a1r, H5a1s, H5b4, H5e1a, H5u1, some subbranches of H5a1a and H6a1a9). Some of them could possibly be traced back to at least ∼4 kya, which indicates that some of the ancestors of todays Slavs (Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, Ukrainians and Russians) inhabited areas of Central and Eastern Europe much earlier than it was estimated on the basis of archaeological and historical data. We also sequenced entire mitochondrial genomes of several non-European lineages (A, C, D, G, L) found in contemporary populations of Poland and Ukraine. The analysis of these haplogroups confirms the presence of Siberian (C5c1, A8a1) and Ashkenazi-specific (L2a1l2a) mtDNA lineages in Slavic populations. Moreover, we were able to pinpoint some lineages which could possibly reflect the relatively recent contacts of Slavs with nomadic Altaic peoples (C4a1a, G2a, D5a2a1a1).


Forensic Science International-genetics | 2015

Complete mitochondrial genome database and standardized classification system for Canis lupus familiaris

Anna Duleba; Katarzyna Skonieczna; Wiesław Bogdanowicz; B. A. Malyarchuk; Tomasz Grzybowski

To contribute to the complete mitogenome database of the species Canis lupus familiaris and shed more light on its origin, we have sequenced mitochondrial genomes of 120 modern dogs from worldwide populations. Together with all the previously published mitogenome sequences of acceptable quality, we have reconstructed a global phylogenetic tree of 555 C. l. familiaris mitogenomes and standardized haplogroup nomenclature. The phylogenetic tree presented here and available online at http://clf.mtdna.tree.cm.umk.pl/ could be further used by forensic and evolutionary geneticists as well cynologists, for data quality control and unambiguous haplogroup classification. Our in-depth phylogeographic analysis of all C. l. familiaris mitogenomes confirmed that domestic dogs may have originated in East Asia during the Mesolithic and Upper Paleolithic time periods and started to expand to other parts of the world during Neolithic times.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

The landscape of mitochondrial DNA variation in human colorectal cancer on the background of phylogenetic knowledge

Katarzyna Skonieczna; B. A. Malyarchuk; Tomasz Grzybowski

Recently, an increasing number of studies indicate that mutations in mitochondrial genome may contribute to cancer development or metastasis. Hence, it is important to determine whether the mitochondrial DNA might be a good, clinically applicable marker of cancer. This review describes hereditary as well as somatic mutations reported in mitochondrial DNA of colorectal cancer cells. We showed here that the entire mitochondrial genome mutational spectra are different in colorectal cancer and non-tumor cells. We also placed the described mutations on the phylogenetic context, which highlighted the recurrent problem of data quality. Therefore, the most important rules for adequately assessing the quality of mitochondrial DNA sequence analysis in cancer have been summarized. As follows from this review, neither the reliable spectrum of mtDNA somatic mutations nor the association between hereditary mutations and colorectal cancer risk have been resolved. This indicates that only high resolution studies on mtDNA variability, followed by a proper data interpretation employing phylogenetic knowledge may finally verify the utility of mtDNA sequence (if any) in clinical practice.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2014

Western Eurasian ancestry in modern Siberians based on mitogenomic data

Miroslava Derenko; B. A. Malyarchuk; Galina Denisova; Maria Perkova; Andrey Litvinov; Tomasz Grzybowski; Irina Dambueva; Katarzyna Skonieczna; Urszula Rogalla; Iosif S. Tsybovsky; I. A. Zakharov

BackgroundAlthough the genetic heritage of aboriginal Siberians is mostly of eastern Asian ancestry, a substantial western Eurasian component is observed in the majority of northern Asian populations. Traces of at least two migrations into southern Siberia, one from eastern Europe and the other from western Asia/the Caucasus have been detected previously in mitochondrial gene pools of modern Siberians.ResultsWe report here 166 new complete mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences that allow us to expand and re-analyze the available data sets of western Eurasian lineages found in northern Asian populations, define the phylogenetic status of Siberian-specific subclades and search for links between mtDNA haplotypes/subclades and events of human migrations. From a survey of 158 western Eurasian mtDNA genomes found in Siberia we estimate that nearly 40% of them most likely have western Asian and another 29% European ancestry. It is striking that 65 of northern Asian mitogenomes, i.e. ~41%, fall into 19 branches and subclades which can be considered as Siberian-specific being found so far only in Siberian populations. From the coalescence analysis it is evident that the sequence divergence of Siberian-specific subclades was relatively small, corresponding to only 0.6-9.5 kya (using the complete mtDNA rate) and 1-6 kya (coding region rate).ConclusionsThe phylogeographic analysis implies that the western Eurasian founders, giving rise to Siberian specific subclades, may trace their ancestry only to the early and mid-Holocene, though some of genetic lineages may trace their ancestry back to the end of Last Glacial Maximum (LGM). We have not found the modern northern Asians to have western Eurasian genetic components of sufficient antiquity to indicate traces of pre-LGM expansions.


Forensic Science International-genetics | 2015

Heteroplasmic substitutions in the entire mitochondrial genomes of human colon cells detected by ultra-deep 454 sequencing

Katarzyna Skonieczna; B. A. Malyarchuk; Arkadiusz Jawień; Andrzej Marszałek; Zbigniew Banaszkiewicz; Paweł Jarmocik; Marcelina Borcz; Piotr Bała; Tomasz Grzybowski

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) heteroplasmy has been widely described from clinical, evolutionary and analytical points of view. Historically, the majority of studies have been based on Sanger sequencing. However, next-generation sequencing technologies are now being used for heteroplasmy analysis. Ultra-deep sequencing approaches provide increased sensitivity for detecting minority variants. However, a phylogenetic a posteriori analysis revealed that most of the next-generation sequencing data published to date suffers from shortcomings. Because implementation of new technologies in clinical, population, or forensic studies requires proper verification, in this paper we present a direct comparison of ultra-deep 454 and Sanger sequencing for the detection of heteroplasmy in complete mitochondrial genomes of normal colon cells. The spectrum of heteroplasmic mutations is discussed against the background of mitochondrial DNA variability in human populations.


Annals of Human Genetics | 2015

Mitochondrial DNA Polymerase γ Mutations and Their Implications in mtDNA Alterations in Colorectal Cancer

Katarzyna Linkowska; Arkadiusz Jawień; Andrzej Marszałek; B. A. Malyarchuk; Katarzyna Tońska; Ewa Bartnik; Katarzyna Skonieczna; Tomasz Grzybowski

Mitochondrial DNA was found to be highly mutated in colorectal cancer cells. One of the key molecules involved in the maintenance of the mitochondrial genome is the nuclear‐encoded polymerase gamma. The aim of our study was to determine if there is a link between polymorphisms within the polymerase gamma gene (POLG) and somatic mutations within the mitochondrial genome in cancer cells. We investigated POLG sequence variability in 50 colorectal cancer patients whose complete mitochondrial genome sequences were determined. Relative mtDNA copy number was also determined. We identified 251 sequence variants in the POLG gene. Most of them were germline‐specific (∼92%). Twenty‐one somatic changes in POLG were found in 10 colorectal cancer patients. We have found no association between the occurrence of mtDNA somatic mutations and the somatically occurring variants in POLG. MtDNA content was reduced in patients carrying somatic variants in POLG or germline nucleotide variants located in the region encoding the POLG polymerase domain, but the difference did not reach statistical significance. Our findings suggest that somatic mtDNA mutations occurring in colorectal cancer are not a consequence of somatic mutations in POLG. Nevertheless, POLG nucleotide variants may lead to a decrease in mtDNA content, and consequently result in mitochondrial dysfunction.


international conference on parallel processing | 2012

Processing the biomedical data on the grid using the UNICORE workflow system

Marcelina Borcz; Rafał Kluszczyński; Katarzyna Skonieczna; Tomasz Grzybowski; Piotr Bała

The huge amount of the biological and biomedical data increases demand for significant disk space and computer power to store and process them. From its beginning the Grid has been considered as possibility to provide such resources for the life sciences community. In this paper authors focus on the UNICORE system which enables scientists to access Grid resources in a seamless and secure way. Authors have used the UNICORE middleware to automate experimental and computational procedure to determine the spectrum of mutations in mitochondrial genomes of normal and colorectal cancer cells. The computational and storage resources have been provided by Polish National Grid Infrastructure PL-Grid.


Amphibia-reptilia | 2013

Population differentiation of the European pond turtle (Emys orbicularis) in Poland inferred by the analysis of mitochondrial and microsatellite DNA: implications for conservation

Beata Prusak; Sławomir Mitrus; Bartłomiej Najbar; Alicja Pacholewska; Adrian Deas; Katarzyna Skonieczna; Grzegorz Górecki; Grzegorz Grzybowski; Adam Hryniewicz; Robert Wróblewski; Tomasz Grzybowski

We investigated the genetic diversity of Polish populations of the European pond turtle (Emys orbicularis) using complete sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene and allelic variation at thirteen microsatellite loci. We collected data from 146 turtles from 28 locations covering most of the species’ range in Poland. Our results showed a low haplotype diversity and high levels of microsatellite diversity in all populations. We applied two Bayesian approaches using the multilocus data and determined relationships of mtDNA haplotypes by constructing a parsimony network. We observed relatively consistent results of the two Bayesian clustering methods and largely concordant differentiation patterns between mitochondrial and microsatellite markers. All eastern Polish populations were assigned in a highly supported eastern group, while the majority of turtles from western Poland were joined in a distinct western group. The most probable number of population clusters corresponded to the number of native mtDNA lineages. Additionally, we detected a hierarchical structure within the eastern lineage splitting the populations into two subgroups. Polish populations generally constitute genetically homogenous groups, characterized by a low population admixture, with only negligible impact from allochthonous turtles.


Forensic Science International-genetics | 2017

Mitogenomic diversity in Russians and Poles

B. A. Malyarchuk; Andrey Litvinov; Miroslava Derenko; Katarzyna Skonieczna; Tomasz Grzybowski; Aleksandra Grosheva; Yuri Shneider; Sergei Rychkov; O. V. Zhukova

Complete mtDNA genome sequencing improves molecular resolution for distinguishing variation between individuals and populations, but there is still deficiency of mitogenomic population data. To overcome this limitation, we used Sanger-based protocol to generate complete mtDNA sequences of 376 Russian individuals from six populations of European part of Russia and 100 Polish individuals from northern Poland. Nearly complete resolution of mtDNA haplotypes was achieved - about 97% of haplotypes were unique both in Russians and Poles, and no haplotypes overlapped between them when indels were considered. While European populations showed a low, but statistically significant level of between-population differentiation (Fst=0.66%, p=0), Russians demonstrate lack of between-population differences (Fst=0.22%, p=0.15). Results of the Bayesian skyline analysis of Russian mitogenomes demonstrate not only post-Last Glacial Maximum expansion, but also rapid population growth starting from about 4.3kya (95% CI: 2.9-5.8kya), i.e. in the Bronze Age. This expansion strongly correlates with the Kurgan model established by archaeologists and confirmed by paleogeneticists.


Annals of Human Biology | 2017

Mitochondrial super-haplogroup U diversity in Serbians

Slobodan Davidovic; B. A. Malyarchuk; Jelena M. Aleksić; Miroslava Derenko; Vladanka Topalovic; Andrey Litvinov; Katarzyna Skonieczna; Urszula Rogalla; Tomasz Grzybowski; Milena Stevanovic; Natasa Kovacevic-Grujicic

Abstract Background: Available mitochondrial (mtDNA) data demonstrate genetic differentiation among South Slavs inhabiting the Balkan Peninsula. However, their resolution is insufficient to elucidate the female-specific aspects of the genetic history of South Slavs, including the genetic impact of various migrations which were rather common within the Balkans, a region having a turbulent demographic history. Aim: The aim was to thoroughly study complete mitogenomes of Serbians, a population linking westward and eastward South Slavs. Subjects and methods: Forty-six predominantly Serbian super-haplogroup U complete mitogenomes were analysed phylogenetically against ∼4000 available complete mtDNAs of modern and ancient Western Eurasians. Results: Serbians share a number of U mtDNA lineages with Southern, Eastern-Central and North-Western Europeans. Putative Balkan-specific lineages (e.g. U1a1c2, U4c1b1, U5b3j, K1a4l and K1a13a1) and lineages shared among Serbians (South Slavs) and West and East Slavs were detected (e.g. U2e1b1, U2e2a1d, U4a2a, U4a2c, U4a2g1, U4d2b and U5b1a1). Conclusion: The exceptional diversity of maternal lineages found in Serbians may be associated with the genetic impact of both autochthonous pre-Slavic Balkan populations whose mtDNA gene pool was affected by migrations of various populations over time (e.g. Bronze Age pastoralists) and Slavic and Germanic newcomers in the early Middle Ages.

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Tomasz Grzybowski

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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B. A. Malyarchuk

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Miroslava Derenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Andrzej Marszałek

Poznan University of Medical Sciences

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Arkadiusz Jawień

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Andrey Litvinov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Anna Krenska

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Jan Styczynski

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Marcelina Borcz

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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Mariusz Wysocki

Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń

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