Indian Signatures in the Westernmost Edge of the European Romani Diaspora: New Insight from Mitogenomes
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Abstract
In agreement with historical documentation, several genetic studies have revealed ancestral links between the European
Romani and India. The entire mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) of 27 Spanish Romani was sequenced in order to shed further
light on the origins of this population. The data were analyzed together with a large published dataset (mainly
hypervariable region I [HVS-I] haplotypes) of Romani (N = 1,353) and non-Romani worldwide populations (N.150,000).
Analysis of mitogenomes allowed the characterization of various Romani-specific clades. M5a1b1a1 is the most distinctive
European Romani haplogroup; it is present in all Romani groups at variable frequencies (with only sporadic findings in nonRomani) and represents 18% of their mtDNA pool. Its phylogeographic features indicate that M5a1b1a1 originated 1.5
thousand years ago (kya; 95% CI: 1.3–1.8) in a proto-Romani population living in Northwest India. U3 represents the most
characteristic Romani haplogroup of European/Near Eastern origin (12.4%); it appears at dissimilar frequencies across the
continent (Iberia: ,31%; Eastern/Central Europe: ,13%). All U3 mitogenomes of our Iberian Romani sample fall within a
new sub-clade, U3b1c, which can be dated to 0.5 kya (95% CI: 0.3–0.7); therefore, signaling a lower bound for the founder
event that followed admixture in Europe/Near East. Other minor European/Near Eastern haplogroups (e.g. H24, H88a) were
also assimilated into the Romani by introgression with neighboring populations during their diaspora into Europe; yet some
show a differentiation from the phylogenetically closest non-Romani counterpart. The phylogeny of Romani mitogenomes
shows clear signatures of low effective population sizes and founder effects. Overall, these results are in good agreement
with historical documentation, suggesting that cultural identity and relative isolation have allowed the Romani to preserve a
distinctive mtDNA heritage, with some features linking them unequivocally to their ancestral Indian homeland.
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Gómez-Carballa A, Pardo-Seco J, Fachal L, Vega A, Cebey M, et al. (2013) Indian Signatures in the Westernmost Edge of the European Romani Diaspora: New Insight from Mitogenomes. PLoS ONE 8(10): e75397
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https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075397Sponsors
The research leading to these results has received funding from the “Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación” (SAF2008-02971) and from the Plan Galego IDT, Xunta de Galicia (EM 2012/045) (A.S.) and Consellería de Sanidade/Xunta de Galicia (RHI07/2-intensificación actividad investigadora and 10PXIB918184PR), Instituto Carlos III (Intensificación de la actividad investigadora) and Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria (FIS; PI070069 and PI1000540) del plan nacional de I+D+I and ‘fondos FEDER’ (F.M.T.)
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Copyright: © 2013 Gómez-Carballa et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited








