4.5 Article

Kinship analysis of skeletal remains from the Middle Ages

Journal

FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL-GENETICS
Volume 63, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.fsigen.2023.102829

Keywords

Ancient DNA; STR markers; Medieval Bosnia; Skeletal remains; Archaeology

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Medieval cemeteries in Travnik, Bosnia and Herzegovina were excavated from 2011 to 2014, revealing skeletal remains of 11 individuals. Genetic analysis was conducted on these remains to test familial relationships and predict Y-haplogroup. Autosomal and Y-STR markers were analyzed, and kinship analysis showed direct brother-brother relatives with a high probability. Y-STR profiles indicated the same paternal lineage and J2a haplogroup for all male individuals. This study highlights the importance of utilizing STR markers and additional markers like Y-STRs in archaeogenetic studies to obtain comprehensive information on relatives and ancestry.
Medieval cemeteries Klisa-Guca Gora, Alihodze and Glavica-Han Bila located in the Travnik area (Travnik, Bosnia and Herzegovina) were archaeologically examined in the period 2011-2014, revealing human skeletal remains of 11 individuals in total. Archaeological skeletal samples, previously deposited in Travnik Homeland Museum (Travnik, Bosnia and Herzegovina) were subjected to genetic analysis. The aim of this research was to test familiar relationship of 11 individuals excavated from three medieval cemeteries and to predict Y-haplogroup for male individuals. In order to perform molecular-genetic characterisation of collected human skeletal remains, two systems of genetic markers were analysed: autosomal and Y-STR loci. Complete or partial data obtained by autosomal STR typing of 11 individuals were subjected to kinship analysis. Male sex was determined in eight samples out of 11. Direct relatives of the brother-brother type were detected in one case with high kinship probability (KP) value of 99.99996 %. Complete or nearly complete and usable Y-STR profiles were obtained for six out of eight male individuals. The presence of identical haplotypes at Y-STR loci and results of Yhaplogroup prediction suggest that all male individuals share the same paternal lineage and belong to J2a haplogroup. Overall, this study emphasises the usefulness, efficiency and sensitivity of STR markers in the molecular-genetic characterisation of old skeletal remains as well as the importance of employing additional markers like Y-STRs in archaeogenetic studies, besides traditionally used autosomal STR markers, in order to get a comprehensive information about close and distant relatives, and ancestry.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available