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Article Abstract

Since leaving Africa, human populations have gone through a series of range expansions. While the genomic signatures of these expansions are well detectable on a continental scale, the genomic consequences of small-scale expansions over shorter time spans are more challenging to disentangle. The medieval migration of the Walser people from their homeland in ssouthern Switzerland (Upper Valais) into other regions of the Alps is a good example of such a comparatively recent geographic and demographic expansion in humans. While several studies from the 1980s, based on allozyme markers, assessed levels of isolation and inbreeding in individual Walser communities, they mostly did so by focusing on a single community at a time. Here, we provide a comprehensive overview of genetic diversity and differentiation based on samples from multiple Walser, Walser-homeland, and non-Walser Alpine communities, along with an idealized (simulated) Swiss reference population (Ref-Pop). To explore genetic signals of the Walser migration in the genomes of their descendants, we use a set of forensic autosomal STRs as well as uniparental markers. Estimates of pairwise F based on autosomal STRs reveal that the Walser-homeland and Walser communities show low to moderate genetic differentiation from the non-Walser Alpine communities and the idealized Ref-Pop. The geographically more remote and likely more isolated Walser-homeland community of Lötschental and the Walser communities of Vals and Gressoney appear genetically more strongly differentiated than other communities. Analyses of mitochondrial DNA revealed the presence of haplogroup W6 among the Walser communities, a haplogroup that is otherwise rare in central Europe. Our study contributes to the understanding of genetic diversity in the Walser-homeland and Walser people, but also highlights the need for a more comprehensive study of the population genetic structure and evolutionary history of European Alpine populations using genome-wide data.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fsigen.2024.103206DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The text discusses human range expansions since leaving Africa, focusing particularly on the small-scale expansions of the Walser people in the Alps from southern Switzerland.
  • The study provides a comprehensive genetic analysis of multiple Walser and non-Walser Alpine communities, highlighting low to moderate genetic differentiation among them.
  • Additionally, the findings include the unique presence of haplogroup W6 in the Walser communities, suggesting the need for further research into the population genetics of Alpine regions.
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