Nancy Díaz
University of Los Andes
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Publication
Featured researches published by Nancy Díaz.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Rafael Montiel; Eduvigis Solórzano; Nancy Díaz; Brenda A. Álvarez-Sandoval; Mercedes González-Ruiz; Mari Pau Cañadas; Nelson Simões; Albert Isidro; Assumpció Malgosa
Ancient DNA (aDNA) analysis can be a useful tool in bacterial disease diagnosis in human remains. However, while the recovery of Mycobacterium spp. has been widely successful, several authors report unsuccessful results regarding ancient treponemal DNA, casting doubts on the usefulness of this technique for the diagnosis of ancient syphilis. Here, we present results from an analysis of four newborn specimens recovered from the crypt of “La Ermita de la Soledad” (XVI–XVII centuries), located in the province of Huelva in the southwest of Spain. We extracted and analyzed aDNA in three independent laboratories, following specific procedures generally practiced in the aDNA field, including cloning of the amplified DNA fragments and sequencing of several clones. This is the most ancient case, reported to date, from which detection of DNA from T. pallidum subspecies pallidum has been successful in more than one individual, and we put forward a hypothesis to explain this result, taking into account the course of the disease in neonate individuals.
American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2011
Marc Simón; Xavier Jordana; Núria Armentano; Cristina Santos; Nancy Díaz; Eduvigis Solórzano; Joan B. López; Mercedes González-Ruiz; Assumpció Malgosa
Ancient populations have commonly been thought to have lived in small groups where extreme endogamy was the norm. To contribute to this debate, a genetic analysis has been carried out on a collective burial with eight primary inhumations from Montanissell Cave in the Catalan pre-Pyrenees. Radiocarbon dating clearly placed the burial in the Bronze Age, around 3200 BP. The composition of the group-two adults (one male, one female), one young woman, and five children from both sexes-seemed to represent the structure of a typical nuclear family. The genetic evidence proves this assumption to be wrong. In fact, at least five out of the eight mitochondrial haplotypes were different, denying the possibility of a common maternal ancestor for all of them. Nevertheless, 50% of the inhumations shared haplogroup J, so the possibility of a maternal relationship cannot be ruled out. Actually, combining different analyses performed using ancient and living populations, the probability of having four related J individuals in Montanissell Cave would range from 0.9884 to 0.9999. Owing to the particularities of this singular collective burial (small number of bodies placed altogether in a hidden cave, the evidence of non-simultaneous interments, close dating and unusual grave goods), we suggest that it might represent a small group with a patrilocal mating system.
American Journal of Human Biology | 2016
Marc Simón; Nancy Díaz; Eduvigis Solórzano; Rafael Montiel; Paolo Francalacci; Assumpció Malgosa
To determine ancient population influences on ancient and current Balearic populations and to reconstruct their mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) gene pool evolution.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014
Marc Simón; Rafael Montiel; Andrea Smerling; Eduvigis Solórzano; Nancy Díaz; Brenda A. Álvarez-Sandoval; Andrea R. Jiménez-Marín; Assumpció Malgosa
An 84 base pair sequence of the Streptococcus mutans virulence factor, known as dextranase, has been obtained from 10 individuals from the Bronze Age to the Modern Era in Europe and from before and after the colonization in America. Modern samples show four polymorphic sites that have not been found in the ancient samples studied so far. The nucleotide and haplotype diversity of this region have increased over time, which could be reflecting the footprint of a population expansion. While this segment has apparently evolved according to neutral evolution, we have been able to detect one site that is under positive selection pressure both in present and past populations. This study is a first step to study the evolution of this microorganism, analysed using direct evidence obtained from ancient remains.
Cypsela: revista de prehistòria i protohistòria | 2002
C. Yáñez; Assumpció Malgosa Morera; Francesc Burjachs i Casas; Nancy Díaz; C. García; Albert Isidro; Jordi Tresserras Juan; J. Matamala
Anthropologie | 2004
Nancy Díaz; E. Solórzano; Rafael Montiel; C. García; C. Yáñez; Assumpció Malgosa Morera
Acta odontol. venez | 2011
Eduvigis Solórzano; Nancy Díaz; Andrea Smerling; Rafael Montiel; Assumpció Malgosa
Archive | 2017
Marc Simón; Nancy Díaz; Eduvigis Solórzano; Rafael Montiel; Paolo Francalacci; Assumpció Malgosa
Acta Bioclínica | 2016
Carla David; Yimaira Gamboa González; Nancy Díaz
Universitas Odontológica | 2014
Daniela Olávez; Siham Salmen; Karla Padrón; Carmine Lobo; Nancy Díaz; Lisbeth Berrueta; Eduvigis Solórzano