ASPECTS OF ANCIENT MITOCHONDRIAL DNA ANALYSIS IN DIFFERENT POPULATIONS FOR UNDERSTANDING HUMAN EVOLUTION
Nesheva DV
*Corresponding Author: Desislava V. Nesheva, Department of Medical Genetics, Medical Faculty, Medical University, 2 Zdrave str., fl. 6, 1431 Sofia, Bulgaria. Tel.: +35-92-917-2735; E-mail: desislava.nesheva@gmail.com
page: 5

CONCLUSIONS

In recent years, anthropologists and geneticists joined to create a map of possible prehistoric human migration routes and time scales for a detailed reconstruction of prehistoric and historic events. They used ancient and modern data and combined the information to create a picture of our history since the appearance of modern humans 200,000 years ago in East Africa. There are still only small amounts of data for the genetic makeup of the ancient populations. The available data are scarce and there is a necessity of more research in this field in order to fill the gap of the European map of ancient populations who lived in this land at different periods of time. By combining and comparing present and future results, we can create a map of ancient populations and their relationships from the first settled groups to their contemporaries in the present day countries. The process of creating the full picture of human evolution is complicated and needs further analyses in places from which aDNA has not yet been surveyed. The structure and evolution of the mtDNA gene pool of contemporary Bulgarians has been previously analyzed in a large sample comprising 855 individuals [63]. In order to further clarify and directly observe the gradual changes of the matrilineal composition of Bulgarians, we will perform phylogenetic analyses of ancient DNA retrieved from human remains found in different places of the country and dating to different periods of the Bulgarian past. The obtained data will contribute not only to the better understanding of the Bulgarian genetic past, but it will also shed new light on the European genetic evolution.



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