GM and KM immunoglobulin allotypes in the Galician population: new insights into the peopling of the Iberian Peninsula
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Abstract
Background: The current genetic structure of Iberian populations has presumably been affected by the
complex orography of its territory, the different people and civilizations that settled there, its ancient and
complex history, the diverse and persistent sociocultural patterns in its different regions, and also by the
effects of the Iberian Peninsula representing a refugium area after the last glacial maximum. This paper
presents the first data on GM and KM immunoglobulin allotypes in the Galician population and, thus,
provides further insights into the extent of genetic diversity in populations settled in the geographic
extremes of the Cantabrian region of northern Spain. Furthermore, the genetic relationships of Galicians
with other European populations have been investigated.
Results: Galician population shows a genetic profile for GM haplotypes that is defined by the high
presence of the European Mediterranean GM*3 23 5* haplotype, and the relatively high incidence of the
African marker GM*1,17 23' 5*. Data based on comparisons between Galician and other Spanish
populations (mainly from the north of the peninsula) reveal a poor correlation between geographic and
genetic distances (r = 0.30, P = 0.105), a noticeable but variable genetic distances between Galician and
Basque subpopulations, and a rather close genetic affinity between Galicia and Valencia, populations which
are geographically separated by a long distance and have quite dissimilar cultures and histories.
Interestingly, Galicia occupies a central position in the European genetic map, despite being geographically
placed at one extreme of the European continent, while displaying a close genetic proximity to Portugal,
a finding that is consistent with their shared histories over centuries.
Conclusion: These findings suggest that the population of Galicia is the result of a relatively balanced
mixture of European populations or of the ancestral populations that gave rise to them. This would
support the importance of the migratory movements that have taken place in Europe over the course of
recent human history and their effects on the European genetic landscape.
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Calderón, R., Lodeiro, R., Varela, T.A. et al. GM and KM immunoglobulin allotypes in the Galician population: new insights into the peopling of the Iberian Peninsula. BMC Genet 8, 37 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2156-8-37
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© 2007 Calderón et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited



