Abstract

In the last years several phylogeographic studies of both extant and extinct red deer populations have been conducted. Three distinct mitochondrial lineages (western, eastern and North-African/Sardinian) have been identified reflecting different glacial refugia and postglacial recolonisation processes. However, little is known about the genetics of the Alpine populations and no mitochondrial DNA sequences from Alpine archaeological specimens are available. Here we provide the first mitochondrial sequences of an Alpine Copper Age Cervus elaphus. DNA was extracted from hair shafts which were part of the remains of the clothes of the glacier mummy known as the Tyrolean Iceman or Ötzi (5,350–5,100 years before present). A 2,297 base pairs long fragment was sequenced using a mixed sequencing procedure based on PCR amplifications and 454 sequencing of pooled amplification products. We analyzed the phylogenetic relationships of the Alpine Copper Age red deer's haplotype with haplotypes of modern and ancient European red deer. The phylogenetic analyses showed that the haplotype of the Alpine Copper Age red deer falls within the western European mitochondrial lineage in contrast with the current populations from the Italian Alps belonging to the eastern lineage. We also discussed the phylogenetic relationships of the Alpine Copper Age red deer with the populations from Mesola Wood (northern Italy) and Sardinia.

Highlights

  • One of the most remarkable features of the glacier mummy known as the Tyrolean Iceman is the exceptional quality of preservation of clothes and equipment found with her at the time of the discovery

  • The products were diluted to equal concentrations, pooled and used as a substrate to prepare a library for sequencing using a GS-454/Roche Genome Sequencer (FLX Roche 454 Lifesciences)

  • We focused on the European haplotypes and we constructed two phylogenetic networks: one for the cytb and one for the control region

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most remarkable features of the glacier mummy known as the Tyrolean Iceman ( called Similaun Man or Otzi) is the exceptional quality of preservation of clothes and equipment found with her at the time of the discovery. Studies carried out through matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometric (MALDI-TOF MS) method and microscopy analyzed fur specimens from the accoutrement and detected chamois, brown bear, goat, cattle, canid species, sheep and red deer [3,4,5]. In 2012 Olivieri et al, [6] identified and sequenced mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) fragments of sheep (Ovis aries) from black animal hair shafts recovered from Otzi’s clothes. The study described the oldest mitochondrial sequences from European sheep known until and a sheep’s lineage that has not yet been identified in modern sheep populations

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