Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T05:23:42.746Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ancient Human Mitogenome of the Beagle Channel (Tierra del Fuego): An Argentine Collaborative Project

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2023

Valeria Arencibia*
Affiliation:
Centro de Ciencias Naturales, Ambientales y Antropológicas (CCNAA), Universidad Maimónides, and Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina
Marianne Muñoz Hidalgo
Affiliation:
Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA) and Instituto de Biotecnología-IABIMO (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina
Cristian Crespo
Affiliation:
CCNAA, Universidad Maimónides, Buenos Aires, and Instituto de Ciencias Polares, Ambiente y Recursos Naturales (ICPA), Universidad Nacional de Tierra del Fuego, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
Lucas Maldonado
Affiliation:
Instituto de Investigaciones en Microbiología y Parasitología Médica (IMPaM; UBA-CONICET), and Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Gabriel Lichtenstein
Affiliation:
Instituto de Investigaciones en Microbiología y Parasitología Médica (IMPaM; UBA-CONICET), and Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Laura Kamenetzky
Affiliation:
Instituto de Investigaciones en Microbiología y Parasitología Médica (IMPaM; UBA-CONICET), and Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Pablo Vera
Affiliation:
Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA) and Instituto de Biotecnología-IABIMO (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina
Atilio F. Zangrando
Affiliation:
Centro Austral de Investigaciones Científicas, and Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CADIC-CONICET), Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
Augusto Tessone
Affiliation:
Instituto de Geocronología y Geología Isotópica (INGEIS-CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina
Sergio Avena
Affiliation:
Centro de Ciencias Naturales, Ambientales y Antropológicas (CCNAA), Universidad Maimónides, and Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina
Verónica Lia
Affiliation:
Instituto de Agrobiotecnología y Biología Molecular (INTA-CONICET), and Departamento de Ecología, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
Andrea Puebla
Affiliation:
Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA) and Instituto de Biotecnología-IABIMO (CONICET), Buenos Aires, Argentina
Cristina Dejean
Affiliation:
Centro de Ciencias Naturales, Ambientales y Antropológicas (CCNAA), Universidad Maimónides, and Instituto de Ciencias Antropológicas y Cátedra de Antropología Biológica y Paleoantropología, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
*
Corresponding author: Valeria Arencibia, Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The increasing use of massively parallel sequencing in the study of current and ancient human populations has enabled new approaches to bioanthropological and archaeological issues; however, its application to archaeological samples requires the use of technologies that are not easily accessible outside US and European research centers. To obtain an ancient mitogenome in Argentina, several institutions collaborated to apply massively parallel sequencing and bioinformatic methodologies on an enriched ancient DNA library of an individual from the Beagle Channel (dated 1504 ± 46 years BP), a region of particular interest for this line of inquiry. Phylogenetic reconstruction showed a close relationship with a Yamana from Navarino Island and an individual from Hoste Island (Chilean Antarctic Province): the three shared an ancestor who lived between 203 and 4,439 years ago. These three have mutations reported only for current and ancient individuals from the Beagle Channel, and their relationship with the rest of the D1g sub-haplogroups is unclear. The results obtained here are consistent with the reduction of mobility in the Fuegian archipelago around 4500 years BP that has been proposed based on archaeological evidence.

Resumen

Resumen

La creciente utilización de la secuenciación masiva en el estudio de poblaciones humanas actuales y antiguas, posibilitó nuevos abordajes a problemáticas bioantropológicas y arqueológicas. Sin embargo, su aplicación en muestras arqueológicas requiere del uso de tecnologías que no son fácilmente accesibles fuera de los centros de investigación estadounidenses y europeos. Con el fin de obtener un mitogenoma antiguo realizado en Argentina, varias instituciones colaboraron para aplicar metodologías de secuenciación masiva y bioinformática sobre una biblioteca enriquecida de ADNa, de un individuo del canal Beagle (datado en 1504 ± 46 años AP), región cuyas singularidades la vuelven un lugar de particular interés para esta línea de estudio. Las reconstrucciones filogenéticas realizadas lo muestran cercanamente emparentado a un yámana de la Isla Navarino y a un individuo de la isla Hoste (Provincia de la Antártica Chilena), compartiendo los tres un ancestro de 203–4,439 años atrás. Éstos poseen mutaciones reportadas únicamente para individuos actuales y antiguos del canal Beagle, y su relación con el resto de los subhaplogrupos de D1g es incierta. Los resultados obtenidos son consistentes con la reducción de la movilidad en el archipiélago fueguino propuesta en base a evidencias arqueológicas hacia 4500 años AP.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Society for American Archaeology

Over the last few decades, bioanthropology and archaeological research has incorporated the use of genetic information recovered from skeletal remains to examine a variety of issues regarding the origin and worldwide dispersion of our species. DNA studies on past and current populations have been at the center of the latest models of occupation of the Americas and of the different microevolutionary processes shaping the genetic diversity of native populations (e.g., Brandini et al. Reference Brandini, Bergamaschi, Cerna, Gandini, Bastaroli, Bertolini and Cereda2017; Lindo et al. Reference Lindo, Haas, Hofman, Apata, Moraga, Verdugo and Watson2018; Perez et al. Reference Perez, Postillone, Rindel, Gobbo, Gonzalez and Bernal2016; Posth et al. Reference Posth, Nakatsuka, Lazaridis, Skoglund, Mallick, Lamnidis and Rohland2018). The use of massively parallel sequencing has facilitated the recovery of mitochondrial and nuclear genomes, enabling increasing precision in the definition of American founding mitochondrial lineages, the description of regional peopling processes and interpopulation dynamics, the identification of adaptations to local environments, and changes in demographic patterns (De la Fuente et al. Reference De la Fuente, Ávila-Arcos, Galimany, Carpenter, Homburger, Blanco and Contreras2018; Fehren-Schmitz and Georges Reference Fehren-Schmitz and Georges2016; Lindo et al. Reference Lindo, Haas, Hofman, Apata, Moraga, Verdugo and Watson2018; Posth et al. Reference Posth, Nakatsuka, Lazaridis, Skoglund, Mallick, Lamnidis and Rohland2018).

However, the application of such procedures to archaeological samples poses challenges and requires strategies that cannot be readily implemented by most researchers because of their high cost or the lack of adequate infrastructure, equipment, and specialized technical staff; one such difficult-to-implement strategy is the fabrication of special probes to capture the target DNA and the enrichment of sequencing libraries. Therefore, analyses on South American archaeological samples are usually conducted in the context of cooperation agreements between local researchers and nonlocal research centers mostly located in the United States and Europe (Wade Reference Wade2018). As a result, the involvement of South American researchers in ancient DNA (aDNA) studies is frequently subordinated to the research agenda of the nonlocal laboratories. This situation discourages the pursuit of locally relevant research objectives that often involve more restricted time or spatial scales (Arencibia et al. Reference Arencibia, Crespo, Guraieb, Russo, Dejean and Goñi2019; Cardozo et al. Reference Cardozo, Dejean, Russo, Mazza, Loponte, Acosta, Feuillet and Corne2021; Crespo et al. Reference Crespo, Cardozo, Tessone, Vázquez, Kisielinski, Arencibia, Tackney, Francisco Zangrando and Dejean2020; Motti et al. Reference Motti, Winingear, Valenzuela, Nieves-Colón, Harkins, García Laborde, Bravi, Guichón and Stone2020; Postillone et al. Reference Postillone, Martínez, Flensborg and Dejean2020; Russo et al. Reference Russo, Mendisco, Avena, Dejean and Seldes2016, Reference Russo, Dejean, Avena, Seldes and Ramundo2018; Tavella et al. Reference Tavella, Demarchi and Nores2020). The development of such asymmetrical relationships is common to many scientific fields that depend on costly technological development; this “subordinate integration” (Kreimer Reference Kreimer2006; Kreimer and Ugartemendía Reference Kreimer and Ugartemendía2007) is a recurring phenomenon in the global division of scientific labor today. In this context, the procurement of resources to support the pursuit of avenues of research that are consistent with local and regional goals is essential to the local advancement of archaeological science.

The Beagle Channel area holds a particular interest for genetic studies. The area was probably one of the last territories to be reached by humans, which is one reason why it has been intensively studied over many years by different research groups. These studies have yielded a large and diverse body of information that has provided valuable contextual information for framing genetic studies. The earliest archaeological signal in the region dates to about 8000 years BP (Zangrando et al. Reference Zangrando, Bjerck, Piana, Breivik, Tivoli and Negre2018, Reference Zangrando, Tivoli, Ponce, Alunni, Fernández Ropero and Martinoli2022) and the available zooarchaeological, technological, and isotopic evidence points to the existence of maritime adaptations in the area as early as 6400 years BP (Orquera and Piana Reference Orquera and Piana1999, Reference Orquera and Piana2009; Suby et al. Reference Suby, Zangrando and Piana2011; Zangrando Reference Zangrando2009). Additionally, Patagonia in general has exceptional preservation conditions that facilitate the recovery of genetic material, a fact made evident by the increasing number of Patagonian aDNA analyses performed in laboratories around the world (Arencibia et al. Reference Arencibia, Crespo, Guraieb, Russo, Dejean and Goñi2019; Crespo et al. Reference Crespo, Dubois, Gabriela Russo, Lanata and Dejean2017a, Reference Crespo, María Russo, Lanata and Dejean2017b, Reference Crespo, Cardozo, Tessone, Vázquez, Kisielinski, Arencibia, Tackney, Francisco Zangrando and Dejean2020; de la Fuente et al. Reference De la Fuente, Galimany, Kemp, Judd, Reyes and Moraga2015, Reference De la Fuente, Ávila-Arcos, Galimany, Carpenter, Homburger, Blanco and Contreras2018; Lalueza et al. Reference Lalueza, Pérez-Pérez, Prats, Cornudella and Turbón1997; Motti et al. Reference Motti, Hagelberg, Lindo, Malhi, Bravi and Guichón2015, Reference Motti, Sebastián Muñoz, Cruz, D´Angelo del Campo, Borrero, Bravi, Guichón, Otero, Svoboda and Banegas2019; Nakatsuka et al. Reference Nakatsuka, Luisi, Motti, Salemme, Santiago, D'Angelo del Campo and Vecchi2020; Parolin et al. Reference Parolin, Galimany, Otero, Dahinten, Gabriela Millán, Moraga, Otero, Svoboda and Banegas2019; Raghavan et al. Reference Raghavan, Steinrücken, Harris, Schiffels, Rasmussen, DeGiorgio and Albrechtsen2015).

From a genetic point of view, maternal lineage C1 has been found in high frequencies in the Beagle Channel area (Tierra del Fuego, Argentina; Figure 1) and D1g and D4h3a have also been identified, albeit in lower proportions (Crespo et al. Reference Crespo, María Russo, Lanata and Dejean2017b, Reference Crespo, Lanata, Cardozo, Avena and Dejean2018; de la Fuente et al. Reference De la Fuente, Galimany, Kemp, Judd, Reyes and Moraga2015, Reference De la Fuente, Ávila-Arcos, Galimany, Carpenter, Homburger, Blanco and Contreras2018; Lalueza Fox Reference Lalueza Fox1996). Similar frequencies of the C1 and D1g lineages have also been observed in ancient samples from nearby areas, such as Peninsula Mitre and Isla de los Estados; these findings could indicate different degrees of contact or shared origins among diverse native groups in Tierra del Fuego and the Beagle Channel (Crespo et al. Reference Crespo, María Russo, Lanata and Dejean2017b, Reference Crespo, Cardozo, Tessone, Vázquez, Kisielinski, Arencibia, Tackney, Francisco Zangrando and Dejean2020; Nakatsuka et al. Reference Nakatsuka, Luisi, Motti, Salemme, Santiago, D'Angelo del Campo and Vecchi2020).

Figure 1. Region of interest. The star indicates the location of the Paiashauaia 1 burial by the Beagle Channel (Tierra del Fuego, Argentina); the circle indicates the location of the IPY08 burial by Seno Año Nuevo (Chile; de la Fuente et al. Reference De la Fuente, Ávila-Arcos, Galimany, Carpenter, Homburger, Blanco and Contreras2018). Image generated with Google Earth (v7.3.3.7786).

Given the region's distinctive characteristics, we studied an individual recovered from an archaeological site located on the Beagle Channel coast by analyzing its lineage within the regional phylogenetic context. To this end, we implemented a process to build and enrich an aDNA library and to undertake the massively parallel sequencing methodologies and bioinformatic procedures that are necessary to obtain a mitogenome “made in Argentina” (i.e., only using locally available resources).

Materials and Methods

The Analyzed Individual

An upper left incisor was taken from human remains recovered from Paiashauaia I, a primary mortuary context located at a rocky outcrop next to the mouth of the Paraná River, a few meters from the Beagle Channel coast (Figure 1; laboratory code: PZ3). Bioarchaeological analysis determined that the individual was a female between 35 and 45 years old, dated at 1504 ± 46 years BP by radiocarbon AMS (Suby et al. Reference Suby, Zangrando and Piana2011; for more details on methodology, see Supplemental Text 1). These remains are currently preserved in the Museo del Fin del Mundo's repository in Tierra del Fuego; permits for sample transportation and analysis were obtained from the Secretaría de Cultura of Tierra del Fuego in 2016. In addition, the sample was treated with respect and scientific rigor as set forth by the code of ethics for the study of human remains of the Asociación de Antropología Biológica of Argentina (2007; Aranda et al. Reference Aranda, Barrientos and Del Papa2014).

The hypervariable regions 1 and 2 of PZ3's mitochondrial DNA were successfully recovered, amplified, and sequenced by Sanger (Crespo et al. Reference Crespo, Cardozo, Tessone, Vázquez, Kisielinski, Arencibia, Tackney, Francisco Zangrando and Dejean2020). According to this study, PZ3's mitochondrial lineage was a distinctive D1g exclusively found in the Beagle Channel area.

Laboratory Protocols

All precautions for preventing and detecting exogenous contamination in the ancient sample were followed (see the detailed protocol in Supplemental Text 1). DNA extraction and library preparation were carried out at the aDNA laboratory clean room facility at the Universidad Maimónides in Buenos Aires. Library amplification, bait preparation, and capture were done at the laboratories of the Instituto Nacional de Tecnología Agropecuaria (INTA). The sample was powdered for DNA extraction. Extraction blank controls were conducted and subjected to PCR for the hypervariable region, along with the archaeological samples, to monitor for possible contamination.

The aDNA library was constructed using the NEBNEX Ultra II DNA Library Prep Kit for Illumina following the manufacturer's instructions (Supplemental Text 1). DNA fragmentation was not performed before construction of the library. After USER enzyme (NEB) treatment, the adaptor-ligated DNA was purified without size selection using AMPureXP Beads (Beckman Coulter).

The indexed aDNA library was captured in solution using 3′ biotin-labeled probes with the mitochondrial genome of an H haplogroup blood donor, coupled to Dynabeads® M-280 Streptavidin Magnetic Beads (Invitrogen; Maricic et al. Reference Maricic, Whitten and Pääbo2010); the solution was incubated at 55°C for 48 hours. After washing, the captured library was eluted by heating, and the DNA was purified (Supplemental Text 1).

The captured aDNA library was sequenced by synthesis with MiSeq Reagent Kit v2 (2 × 150) at INTA's Consorcio Argentino de Tecnología Genómica (CATG). PCR and Sanger sequencing were used to confirm SNPs in two low-depth regions (primers specified in Supplemental Table 1).

Bioinformatic Analysis

Processing and Mapping of Sequenced Reads and Variant Calling. The quality of the Illumina reads was evaluated with FastQC (v0.10.1), and the reads were trimmed and end-clipped to a PHRED score of 30 using Cutadapt (v1.16; Martin Reference Martin2011; see the detailed protocol in the Supplemental Text 1). Paired-end reads were then merged using AdapterRemoval (v2.3.3; Schubert et al. Reference Schubert, Lindgreen and Orlando2016) and mapped to the revised Cambridge Reference Sequence (rCRS; Andrews et al. Reference Andrews, Kubacka, Chinnery, Lightowlers, Turnbull and Howell1999) using the Burrows Wheeler Aligner (BWA; v0.7.10; Li and Durbin Reference Li and Durbin2009). The output was converted to a BAM file using Samtools (v1.7; Li and Durbin Reference Li and Durbin2009), and one 3′ nucleotide was trimmed in the BAM file with bamUtil (v1.0.15; Jun et al. Reference Jun, Wing, Abecasis and Kang2015). Mapping statistics were calculated with Bamtools (v2.5.1; Barnett et al. Reference Barnett, Garrison, Quinlan, Str̈mberg and Marth2011) and Samtools, duplications were marked and discarded using Picard-tools (v2.18; http://broadinstitute.github.io/picard/), and aDNA damage patterns were assessed using MapDamage2 (v2.0; Jónsson et al. Reference Jónsson, Ginolhac, Schubert, Johnson and Orlando2013).

Variant calling was performed using BCFtools (v1.9; Danecek and McCarthy Reference Danecek and McCarthy2017; Narasimhan et al. Reference Narasimhan, Petr Danecek, Yali Xue and Durbin2016). The information yielded by the Sanger sequences and obtained for HVR1 in Crespo and colleagues (Reference Crespo, Cardozo, Tessone, Vázquez, Kisielinski, Arencibia, Tackney, Francisco Zangrando and Dejean2020) was incorporated into variant calling. Finally, variant filtering was also made using BCFtools.

Construction of the Consensus Mitogenome. A final VCF file was used to construct a consensus genome of the individual PZ3 using BCFtools (Supplemental Text 1). Positions with depth <2 were treated as missing data (N). The mitochondrial haplogroup was determined by using HaploGrep2 (v2.2; Weissensteiner et al. Reference Weissensteiner Hansi, Kloss-Brandstätter, Forer, Specht, Bandelt, Kronenberg, Salas and Schönherr2016).

Haplotype Polymorphisms and Phylogenetic Relationships

We compiled a database that included ancient and modern D1 sequences from Argentina, Brazil, and Chile to compare the PZ3 mitochondrial haplotype to other D1 mitogenomes. Sequences reported up to 2016 were obtained from Phylotree Build 17 (February 18, 2016; van Oven and Kayser Reference Van Oven and Kayser2009), and more recently reported sequences were retrieved from the literature. One representative of each of the D1 sublineages not reported in the three countries was also included for analysis, as well as one D4h3a and the RSRS (Behar et al. Reference Behar, Van Oven, Rosset, Metspalu, Loogväli, Silva, Kivisild, Torroni and Villems2012), yielding a final data matrix of 79 sequences (Supplemental Table 2).

Sequences were aligned using the FFT-NS-2 algorithm in MAFFT (v7.471; Katoh et al. Reference Katoh, Misawa, Kuma and Miyata2002). The absolute number of changes among haplotypes was computed in R (v3.4.4; R Development Core Team 2020) using the haplotypes package (v1.1.2; Aktas Reference Aktas2020) while considering gaps as a fifth character state. A haplotype median-joining network was constructed using Network (v10.2; http://www.fluxus-engineering.com). To facilitate visualization, only the D1 individuals from Argentina and Chile were included in the analysis. Each polymorphic site was weighted according to the mutational rates described by Soares and colleagues (Reference Soares, Ermini, Thomson, Mormina, Rito, Röhl, Salas, Oppenheimer, Macaulay and Richards2009). We did not consider mutations 309.1C, 315.1C, A16182c, A16183c, and 16193.1C, or positions with gaps and missing values.

The phylogenetic analysis of D1 mitogenomes was performed with BEAST (v2.6.2; Bouckaert et al. Reference Bouckaert, Vaughan, Barido-Sottani, Duchêne, Fourment, Gavryushkina and Heled2019). Two partitions were considered, one corresponding to the HVR (1–577; 16023–16569) and the other to the coding region (578–16022). Site models were averaged using bModelTest (Bouckaert and Drummond Reference Bouckaert and Drummond2017). As suggested for intraspecific data (Drummond and Bouckaert Reference Drummond and Bouckaert2015), analyses were conducted under a strict molecular clock model, with the prior distribution for the clock rate set as the default. Analyses were done under the coalescent constant population, coalescent exponential population, and coalescent extended Bayesian skyline models. The MCMC chain length was set to 15 million, 20 million, and 65 million iterations, respectively, and data were stored every 1,500th iteration. A clock rate of 0.024694 substitutions per site per million years (Llamas et al. Reference Llamas, Fehren-Schmitz, Valverde, Soubrier, Mallick, Rohland and Nordenfelt2016) and a ploidy of 0.5 were set for the coalescent extended Bayesian skyline. The subsequent model selection was conducted using nested sampling (Maturana Russel et al. Reference Maturana Russel, Brewer, Klaere and Bouckaert2019). For the Bayesian skyline plot, the y-axis transformation to effective population size was performed using a generational time of 25 years (as used in Brandini et al. Reference Brandini, Bergamaschi, Cerna, Gandini, Bastaroli, Bertolini and Cereda2017).

The run parameters were checked with Tracer (v1.7.1; Rambaut et al. Reference Rambaut, Drummond, Xie, Baele and Suchard2018), and trees maximizing the posterior probability were scored with TreeAnnotator (v2.6.2; Bouckaert et al. Reference Bouckaert, Vaughan, Barido-Sottani, Duchêne, Fourment, Gavryushkina and Heled2019). A qualitative analysis of the consensus trees obtained was performed with DensiTree (v2.2.7; Bouckaert et al. Reference Bouckaert, Vaughan, Barido-Sottani, Duchêne, Fourment, Gavryushkina and Heled2019). Graphical postprocessing was done with FigTree (v1.4.4; Rambaut Reference Rambaut2018), and Inkscape (v1.0; www.inkscape.org) was used for image design.

Results

No sign of exogenous DNA contamination was found in the extraction blank, and we ruled out any contamination of the sample with DNA from the researchers who had contact with it. The results of concentration, quantification, and fragment analyses indicate that the library was successfully generated. There are typical postmortem DNA damage patterns that help distinguish ancient sequences from modern contaminants, such as short sequences and cytosine deamination, observed as transitions from C to T at the 5′ end and from G to A at the 3′ end of the readings (Briggs et al. Reference Briggs, Stenzel, Johnson, Green, Kelso, Prüfer and Meyer2007; Jónsson et al. Reference Jónsson, Ginolhac, Schubert, Johnson and Orlando2013; Sawyer et al. Reference Sawyer, Krause, Guschanski, Savolainen and Pääbo2012). Supplemental Figure 1 shows the results obtained with MapDamage2. The excess of purines at the position immediately before the fragment start is a characteristic pattern in ancient DNA (Supplemental Figure 1A); Supplemental Figure 1B illustrates what is expected for a library treated with the USER enzyme, which removes most of these signs of damage.

About 43% of the reads from the enriched sequence PZ3 library passed bioinformatic filters and were mapped against the rCRS (Supplemental Table 3). The average depth achieved was 8X. The incorporation of Sanger sequences allowed us to increase the read depth for two variant positions. The generated consensus mitogenome had 99.7% coverage. A total of 37 SNPs were identified in the haplotype of individual PZ3 with respect to the rCRS (Table 1). Both this number of mutations and their distribution pattern (coding region: 27 mutations / 15,449 total bases; HVR: 10 mutations / 1,120 total bases) were consistent with expected values (Soares et al. Reference Soares, Ermini, Thomson, Mormina, Rito, Röhl, Salas, Oppenheimer, Macaulay and Richards2009), giving robustness to the results.

Table 1. Variants Found in the PZ3 Consensus Mitogenome.

This haplotype was assigned to the haplogroup D1g and is very similar to two previously reported individuals from the Chilean Antarctic Province: YA2D (de Saint Pierre et al. Reference De Saint Pierre, Bravi, Motti, Fuku, Tanaka, Llop, Bonatto and Moraga2012) and IPY08 (De la Fuente et al. Reference De la Fuente, Ávila-Arcos, Galimany, Carpenter, Homburger, Blanco and Contreras2018). These three haplotypes are characterized by the lack of the A8116 G mutation, originally proposed as a defining characteristic of the D1g haplogroup along with the C16187T reversion (Bodner et al. Reference Bodner, Perego, Huber, Fendt, Röck, Zimmermann and Olivieri2012) but that was later removed in the clade redefinition of de Saint Pierre and colleagues (Reference De Saint Pierre, Bravi, Motti, Fuku, Tanaka, Llop, Bonatto and Moraga2012). The only differences between these and PZ3 are located at positions 309–315 and 3107 (Figure 2 and Supplemental Table 4), which are either hotspot regions or challenging positions for aDNA reconstruction and thus have low or no evolutionary weight.

Figure 2. Bayesian phylogeny depicting the relationships between individuals of the human mitochondrial haplogroup D1 and external groups. The x-axis denotes time into the past in years. The tree is based on an extended Bayesian skyline analysis of the mitogenomes considering two partitions (coding and hypervariable region) performed in BEAST (v.2.6.2; Bouckaert et al. Reference Bouckaert, Vaughan, Barido-Sottani, Duchêne, Fourment, Gavryushkina and Heled2019). Sequence sources and sample numbers are available in Supplemental Table 2. Nodes with posterior probability >0.7 have bars indicating age ranges accumulating 95% posterior probability. The table shows the age ranges and posterior probability for each node. Names of major well-supported sub-haplogroups are indicated. Circles: modern individuals; stars: ancient individuals.

The geographic information of the individuals included in the database (Supplemental Table 2) made possible the Bayesian phylogenetic reconstruction of the mitochondrial D1 lineage for Argentina, Brazil, and Chile. Nested sampling results pointed to the extended Bayesian skyline as the best of the three models considered (ML: −25,739.289; SD: 16.571; Figure 2). The topology obtained strongly suggests that PZ3 is closely related to YA2D and IPY08 (sample numbers 76 and 18, respectively; Supplemental Table 2; posterior probability of 1.00). The estimated age of their hypothetical ancestor is between 203 and 4,439 years. These three individuals were grouped within the D1g haplogroup, whose node age was estimated to be between 12,555 and 17,713 years but with low posterior probability (0.653), a characteristic that was generally observed among sublineage relationships (Figure 2; Supplemental Figure 2).

The haplotype network also supports the inclusion of individual PZ3 within haplogroup D1g, with a derived haplotype from that of YA2D and IPY08; the three were distanced by at least six mutations from the haplogroup's common ancestor (Figure 3). Moreover, this analysis reconstructs D1g sub-haplogroups with good support. The Bayesian skyline plot (BSP; Figure 4) shows an increase in population size between 10,000 and 15,000 years ago, overlapping with the age range obtained by Brandini and others (Reference Brandini, Bergamaschi, Cerna, Gandini, Bastaroli, Bertolini and Cereda2017) for South American mitogenomes.

Figure 3. Haplotype median-joining network of the D1 lineage including individuals from Argentina and Chile constructed using Network (v10.2). Positions 309.1, 315.1, 16182, 16183, and 16193.1, as well as positions with gaps and missing values, were not considered.

Figure 4. Bayesian skyline plot representing historical demographic trends in sampled D1 individuals. Time is reported on the x-axis as years BP, and the effective population size change is reported on the y-axis. Estimations were based on a mutation rate of 0.024694 substitutions per site per million years (Llamas et al. Reference Llamas, Fehren-Schmitz, Valverde, Soubrier, Mallick, Rohland and Nordenfelt2016), and y-axis transformation was performed considering a generational time of 25 years (as used in Brandini et al. Reference Brandini, Bergamaschi, Cerna, Gandini, Bastaroli, Bertolini and Cereda2017).

Discussion

This article presents the first mitogenome entirely generated in Argentina, made possible by the pooled resources and joint efforts of researchers from several local institutions. The analysis performed did not find signs of contamination, and the mitogenome obtained presented the damage patterns expected for ancient DNA samples, although a complete profile could not be achieved due to the use of the USER enzyme during the library assembly. In addition, the pattern of mutation distribution (Table 1) was consistent with expectations for the mitogenome (Soares et al. Reference Soares, Ermini, Thomson, Mormina, Rito, Röhl, Salas, Oppenheimer, Macaulay and Richards2009), attesting to the reliability of our results. The mitochondrial haplotype of individual PZ3 was assigned to the D1g haplogroup, one of the most frequently found in Patagonia (Bodner et al. Reference Bodner, Perego, Huber, Fendt, Röck, Zimmermann and Olivieri2012). In addition, the topology obtained by Bayesian phylogenetic reconstruction (Figure 2) supports this conclusion (posterior probability of 0.653). It also suggests that the PZ3 haplotype was closely related to a Yamana one—YA2D—from Navarino Island, as well as to an individual of unknown age, IPY08, from Hoste Island, located near the Seno Año Nuevo; both islands are in the Chilean Antarctic province (Figure 1).

Although with low posterior probability, the age of D1g node was estimated at between 12,555 and 17,713 years (Figure 2), concordant with the 20.9–11.7 thousands of years range estimated by Roca-Rada and colleagues (Reference Roca-Rada, Politis, Messineo, Scheifler, Scabuzzo, González and Harkins2021). It also partially overlaps with the 18,300 ± 2400 age range estimated for this clade by Bodner and colleagues (Reference Bodner, Perego, Huber, Fendt, Röck, Zimmermann and Olivieri2012), who suggested that the D1g and D1j lineages could have been part of the genetic diversity of the first humans to settle in South America. Our estimate for the age of D1g is also consistent with the genetic and archaeological evidence of the earliest human occupation of this subcontinent (Brandini et al. Reference Brandini, Bergamaschi, Cerna, Gandini, Bastaroli, Bertolini and Cereda2017; Fagundes et al. Reference Fagundes, Kanitz, Eckert, Valls, Bogo, Salzano and Smith2008; Tamm et al. Reference Tamm, Kivisild, Reidla, Metspalu, Smith, Mulligan and Bravi2007). Moreover, the population increase observed between 10,000 and 15,000 years ago in the Bayesian skyline plot (Figure 4) is consistent with the age range for population growth estimated by Brandini and colleagues (Reference Brandini, Bergamaschi, Cerna, Gandini, Bastaroli, Bertolini and Cereda2017) based on multiple South American mitogenomes. According to the authors, this expansion corresponds to the entry of human populations into South America.

From a more general perspective, it is worth noting that most of the D1g sub-haplogroups were reconstructed with posterior probability greater than 0.85 (Figure 2). However, relationships among these sub-haplogroups and between them and the PZ3-YA2D-IPY08 clade cannot be determined with certainty, given the low support of higher-level nodes (the deepest in time). This pattern can be observed throughout the entire phylogeny and can also be appreciated by qualitative analysis of the consensus trees obtained in this study (Supplemental Figure 2), where uncertainties regarding tree topology increase with the node level. This reveals a weak phylogenetic signal at the level of sub-haplogroup relationships, possibly due to the group's youth in evolutionary terms. Alternatively, the weak signal could be an artifact caused by poor sampling of the branches (only a few sequences are available for each sub-haplogroup). To our knowledge, there are no other published data regarding node support for this haplogroup. To provide more accurate answers regarding the population events that could be responsible for the observed pattern, it is necessary to pursue this line of inquiry and expand the database.

The age of the most recent common ancestor shared by PZ3, YA2D, and IPY08 was estimated at between 203 and 4,439 years (Figure 2). This wide age range is probably due to the paucity of information provided by the few and evolutionarily scarcely relevant differences between these three sequences. At that time, populations with maritime economies had already settled and stabilized in the southern Tierra del Fuego Archipelago, possibly as early as 6400 years BP (Orquera et al. Reference Orquera, Legoupil and Piana2011; Orquera and Piana Reference Orquera and Piana2009). The median haplotype network (Figure 3) showed that YA2D, IPY08, and PZ3 mitogenomes, the only insular individuals in our database, are separated from the hypothetical common ancestor shared with the rest of the D1g clade by at least six mutations: C10202T, T10724C, T13020C, T16086C, C16286T, and T16189C (the last one is considered to be a hotspot). The most noteworthy of the mutations are those in positions 16086 and 16286: they have also been reported in studies of the hypervariable region in both ancient and current individuals from the Beagle Channel area (Crespo et al. Reference Crespo, Cardozo, Tessone, Vázquez, Kisielinski, Arencibia, Tackney, Francisco Zangrando and Dejean2020; de la Fuente et al. Reference De la Fuente, Galimany, Kemp, Judd, Reyes and Moraga2015, Reference De la Fuente, Ávila-Arcos, Galimany, Carpenter, Homburger, Blanco and Contreras2018; de Saint Pierre et al. Reference De Saint Pierre, Bravi, Motti, Fuku, Tanaka, Llop, Bonatto and Moraga2012; Motti et al. Reference Motti, Winingear, Valenzuela, Nieves-Colón, Harkins, García Laborde, Bravi, Guichón and Stone2020). In addition, the absence of the mutation in position 8116 is characteristic of Yaghan populations (de Saint Pierre et al. Reference De Saint Pierre, Bravi, Motti, Fuku, Tanaka, Llop, Bonatto and Moraga2012).

These results may contribute to the discussion of at least two issues regarding population dynamics in the Tierra del Fuego archipelago. First, there are three types of archaeological evidence suggesting the existence of interactions between populations in the Beagle Channel and the Brunswick Peninsula-Seno Otway during the mid-Holocene (Figure 1): (1) the presence of green obsidian artifacts in Beagle Channel sites, a material that was frequently used in the Otway area archaeological sites (Álvarez Reference Álvarez2004; Manzi Reference Manzi, Civalero, Fernández and Guráieb2004; Morello et al. Reference Morello, Stern and Román2015; Pallo Reference Pallo2016) and that would probably be obtained in raw form from somewhere in the Brunswick Peninsula (Emperaire and Laming-Emperaire Reference Emperaire and Laming-Emperaire1961; Stern and Prieto Reference Stern and Prieto1991); (2) decoration designs and techniques found on similar artifact types in both areas (Fiore Reference Fiore2006); and (3) the distribution of subfoliar and lanceolate projectile points (Piana and Orquera Reference Piana, Orquera, Morello, Martinic, Prieto and Bahamonde2007). However, the material evidence of this superregional interaction is no longer found in the archaeological record after about 5000–4000 years BP, suggesting spatial circumscription and a reduction in mobility due to several factors (Zangrando Reference Zangrando2009). This change in the archaeological record coincides with our estimate for the maximum age of the most recent common ancestor of PZ3, YA2D, and IPY08. From this moment on, genetic drift may have fixated different lineages in the Beagle Channel and the islands of the western archipelago (de la Fuente et al. Reference De la Fuente, Ávila-Arcos, Galimany, Carpenter, Homburger, Blanco and Contreras2018). This process could also explain the preponderance of the D4h3a lineage over D1g and C1 lineages during the mid-Holocene in the western archipelago, an area associated with Alacalufe groups, and the dominance of C1 in the Beagle Channel population (de la Fuente et al. Reference De la Fuente, Galimany, Kemp, Judd, Reyes and Moraga2015; Moraga et al. Reference Moraga, de Saint Pierre, Torres and Ríos2010).

Second, the genetic proximity between PZ3 and IPY08 suggests the existence of gene flow or a recent common origin among the groups that occupied both sectors of the archipelago during the mid-Holocene. Although the sites where these individuals were recovered are only 90 km apart, there is very little information about the level of interaction between the Beagle Channel and southwestern areas of the archipelago during that period, mainly because there have been few archaeological explorations of Hoste Island. During historic times, Wedell (Reference Wedell2006 [1825]:159–162) indicated the presence of different groups in the Seno Año Nuevo area, yet Bridges (Reference Bridges1886) excluded the southern sector of Hoste Island from the Yaghan territory. Several authors have reported that the geographical distribution of Yaghan populations toward the western end of the archipelago was unclear during the nineteenth century: that area was also occupied by groups that could be ethnically and linguistically linked to Alacalufe populations (Orquera and Piana Reference Orquera and Piana1999). However, as has been suggested for the easternmost sector of the Fuegian archipelago (Crespo et al. Reference Crespo, Cardozo, Tessone, Vázquez, Kisielinski, Arencibia, Tackney, Francisco Zangrando and Dejean2020), the genetic diversity of populations before European contact indicates greater interaction between groups than what is suggested in historical documents. Even if we accept the existence of a genetic continuity between local populations pre- and post-European contact, the cultural geography of the channels and island south of Tierra del Fuego may have been highly dynamic.

Final Remarks

The mitogenome for individual PZ3 was obtained with an average depth of 8X and 99.7% coverage. The quality of the readings was high but there were few of them, which resulted in a relatively low average depth. Adjustments are being made to deal with these shortcomings. The haplotype was assigned to haplogroup D1g and was found to be closely related to YA2D and IPY08, a Yamana from Navarino Island and an ancient individual from Hoste Island. The estimated age for these mitogenomes’ most recent common ancestor was 203–4,439 years (Figure 2), a time in which available archaeological evidence suggests that human groups with maritime economies were already settled in the southern Tierra del Fuego archipelago. The mitogenomes of PZ3, YA2D, and IPY08 present mutations that have only been described in past and extant Yaghan populations from the Beagle Channel area (Figure 3). The maximum age for the common ancestor coincides with a reduction in mobility in Beagle and the western archipelago islands at approximately 4500 years BP.

The construction of the molecular phylogeny made possible the reconstruction of most of D1g sub-haplogroups (Figure 2) and the estimation of age intervals for their nodes that were consistent with results from previous studies. However, the relationships between these sub-haplogroups could not be determined with high certainty due to low support of the high-level nodes.

Finally, although massively parallel sequencing methodologies have been widely applied to aDNA studies, their implementation at the local level still poses many challenges. This first mitogenome entirely generated in Argentina faced some of these difficulties, but thanks to the collaboration of researchers from different local institutions it sets a solid precedent for future studies. This local workflow enabled local researchers to have greater control over sample processing and, in the future, will allow them to define and pursue locally relevant research goals and problems that are not necessarily aligned with research agendas in countries that traditionally led these kinds of studies.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful for the support of the Sección de Antropología Biológica (Instituto de Ciencias Antropológicas) and the Cátedra de Antropología Biológica y Paleoantropología (Departamento de Ciencias Antropológicas) of the Facultad de Filosofía y Letras (Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina), as well as for the support of CEBBAD and CCNAA (Universidad Maimónides), INTA, and IMPaM. The Secretaría de Cultura de la Provincia de Tierra del Fuego, Antártida e Islas del Atlántico Sur, granted permits for sample transportation and analysis in 2016. Finally, we thank the journal editor and three anonymous reviewers whose suggestions helped significantly improve this article.

Funding Statement

We appreciate the financial support provided by Fundación Científica Felipe Fiorellino, Fundación de Historia Natural Félix Azara, CONICET, UBA (UBACyT 20020150200233BA and 20020170200363BA), and ANPCyT (PICT 2014-3012).

Data Availability Statement

The consensus mitogenome of individual PZ3 was deposited in GenBank under accession number ON422324. The raw data, in fastq format, are available at the European Nucleotide Archive under accession number PRJEB58193.

Competing Interests

The authors declare none.

Supplemental Material

To view supplemental material for this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/laq.2023.13.

Supplemental Text 1. Materials and Methodology.

Supplemental Figure 1. Plots generated with Mapdamage2 (v2.0; Jónsson et al. Reference Jónsson, Ginolhac, Schubert, Johnson and Orlando2013) to visualize damage patterns. (A) Plots showing the base frequency outside and in the read (the open gray box corresponds to the read); (B) plots with the positions’ specific substitutions from the 5′ (left) and the 3′ end (right). Color codes: red, C to T substitutions; blue, G to A substitutions: gray, all other substitutions; orange, soft-clipped bases; green, deletions relative to the reference; purple, insertions relative to the reference.

Supplemental Figure 2. DensiTree analyses showing the posterior distribution of the trees retrieved by BEAST. Dark regions indicate branch topology agreement among trees.

Supplemental Table 1. Illumina Adapters and Primers Used in this Article.

Supplemental Table 2. Database Compiled and Used in this Article. The information included regarding the haplogroup and the location or population of origin of the sample is the one provided by the paper that published the sequence (or its update in Phylotree17).

Supplemental Table 3. Sequence Data Statistics for the PZ3 Mitogenome.

Supplemental Table 4. Absolute Number of Changes between Haplotypes Performed in R (V3.4.4; R Core Team, 2020) with the Haplotypes Package (v1.1.2; Aktas Reference Aktas2020). Gaps were considered as a fifth character state. Accession numbers (or Sample ID when not available) and haplogroup are listed.

References

References Cited

Aktas, Caner. 2020. Haplotypes: Manipulating DNA Sequences and Estimating Unambiguous Haplotype Network with Statistical Parsimony. R package version 1.1.2. https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/haplotypes/haplotypes.pdf, accessed December 9, 2022.Google Scholar
Álvarez, Myrian R. 2004. Estrategias tecnológicas en los grupos canoeros tempranos del área fuegopatagónica. Magallania 32:191208.Google Scholar
Andrews, Richard M., Kubacka, Iwona, Chinnery, Patrick F., Lightowlers, Robert N., Turnbull, Douglass M., and Howell, Neil. 1999. Reanalysis and Revision of the Cambridge Reference Sequence for Human Mitochondrial DNA. Nature Genetics 23:147.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Aranda, Claudia, Barrientos, Gustavo, and Del Papa, Mariano C.. 2014. Código deontológico para el estudio, conservación y gestión de restos humanos de poblaciones del pasado. Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica 16(2):111113.Google Scholar
Arencibia, Valeria, Crespo, Cristian, Guraieb, Solana García, Russo, María G., Dejean, Cristina B., and Goñi, Rafael. 2019. Análisis genético poblacional de grupos cazadores recolectores del Holoceno tardío del Lago Salitroso (Santa Cruz, Argentina). Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica 21(2):116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asociación de Antropología Biológica Argentina. 2007. Declaración de la Asociación de Antropología Biológica Argentina en relación con la ética del estudio de restos humanos. https://asociacionantropologiabiologicaargentina.org.ar, accessed December 9, 2022.Google Scholar
Barnett, Derek W., Garrison, Erik K., Quinlan, Aaron R., Str̈mberg, Michael P., and Marth, Gabor T.. 2011. Bamtools: A C++ API and Toolkit for Analyzing and Managing BAM Files. Bioinformatics 27:16911692.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Behar, Doron M., Van Oven, Mannis, Rosset, Saharon, Metspalu, Mait, Loogväli, Eva Liis, Silva, Nuno M., Kivisild, Toomas, Torroni, Antonio, and Villems, Richard. 2012. A “Copernican” Reassessment of the Human Mitochondrial DNA Tree from Its Root. American Journal of Human Genetics 90:675684.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bodner, Martin, Perego, Ugo A., Huber, Gabriela, Fendt, Liane, Röck, Alexander W., Zimmermann, Bettina, Olivieri, Anna, et al. 2012. Rapid Coastal Spread of First Americans: Novel Insights from South America's Southern Cone Mitochondrial Genomes. Genome Research 22:811820.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bouckaert, Remco R., and Drummond, Alexei J.. 2017. bModelTest: Bayesian Phylogenetic Site Model Averaging and Model Comparison. BMC Evolutionary Biology 17(1):42.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bouckaert, Remco, Vaughan, Timothy G., Barido-Sottani, Joëlle, Duchêne, Sebastián, Fourment, Mathieu, Gavryushkina, Alexandra, Heled, Joseph, et al. 2019. BEAST 2.5: An Advanced Software Platform for Bayesian Evolutionary Analysis. PLoS Computational Biology 15(4):e1006650.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brandini, Stefania, Bergamaschi, Paola, Cerna, Marco Fernando, Gandini, Francesca, Bastaroli, Francesca, Bertolini, Emilie, Cereda, Cristina, et al. 2017. The Paleo-Indian Entry into South America according to Mitogenomes. Molecular Biology and Evolution 35:299311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bridges, Thomas. 1886. El confín de la República: La Tierra del Fuego y sus habitantes. Boletín del Instituto Geográfico Argentino 7:313320.Google Scholar
Briggs, Adrian W., Stenzel, Udo, Johnson, Philip L. F., Green, Richard E., Kelso, Janet, Prüfer, Kay, Meyer, Matthias, et al. 2007. Patterns of Damage in Genomic DNA Sequences from a Neandertal. PNAS 104:1461614621.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cardozo, Darío Gonzalo, Dejean, Cristina Beatriz, Russo, Gabriela, Mazza, Bárbara, Loponte, Daniel, Acosta, Alejandro, Feuillet, María Rosario, and Corne, Silvia. 2021. Impacto de la conquista hispánica en el humedal del Paraná inferior (Argentina): Una perspectiva histórica y genética mitocondrial. Runa 42:409433.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crespo, Cristian M., Cardozo, Darío G., Tessone, Augusto, Vázquez, Martín, Kisielinski, Caroline, Arencibia, Valeria, Tackney, Justin, Francisco Zangrando, A., and Dejean, Cristina B.. 2020. Distribution of Maternal Lineages in Hunter-Gatherer Societies of the Southern Coast of Tierra Del Fuego, Argentina. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 173: 709720CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Crespo, Cristian M., Dubois, Cristian Favier, Gabriela Russo, M., Lanata, José L., and Dejean, Cristina B.. 2017a. First Analysis of Ancient MtDNA Genetic Diversity in Northern Coast of Argentinean Patagonia. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 12:9198.Google Scholar
Crespo, Cristian M., Lanata, José L., Cardozo, Darío G., Avena, Sergio, and Dejean, Cristina B.. 2018. Ancient Maternal Lineages in Hunter-Gatherer Groups of Argentinean Patagonia. Settlement, Population Continuity and Divergence. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 18:689695.Google Scholar
Crespo, Cristian M., María Russo, Adam Hajduk, Lanata, José, and Dejean, Cristina. 2017b. Variabilidad mitocondrial en muestras pre-colombinas de la patagonia argentina: hacia una visión de su poblamiento desde el ADN antiguo. Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica 19(1):121.Google Scholar
Danecek, Petr, and McCarthy, Shane A.. 2017. BCFtools/Csq: Haplotype-Aware Variant Consequences. Bioinformatics 33:20372039.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
De la Fuente, Constanza, Ávila-Arcos, María C., Galimany, Jacqueline, Carpenter, Meredith L., Homburger, Julian R., Blanco, Alejandro, Contreras, Paloma, et al. 2018. Genomic Insights into the Origin and Diversification of Late Maritime Hunter-Gatherers from the Chilean Patagonia. PNAS 115:E40064012.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
De la Fuente, Constanza, Galimany, Jacqueline, Kemp, Brian M., Judd, Kathleen, Reyes, Omar, and Moraga, Mauricio. 2015. Ancient Marine Hunter-Gatherers from Patagonia and Tierra Del Fuego: Diversity and Differentiation Using Uniparentally Inherited Genetic Markers. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 158:719729.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
De Saint Pierre, Michelle, Bravi, Claudio M., Motti, Josefina M. B., Fuku, Noriyuki, Tanaka, Masashi, Llop, Elena, Bonatto, Sandro L., and Moraga, Mauricio. 2012. An Alternative Model for the Early Peopling of Southern South America Revealed by Analyses of Three Mitochondrial DNA Haplogroups. PLoS ONE 7(9):e4348.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drummond, Alexei J., and Bouckaert, Remco R.. 2015. Bayesian Evolutionary Analysis with BEAST. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emperaire, José, and Laming-Emperaire, Annette. 1961. Les gisements des îles Englefield et Vivian dans la mer d'Otway (Patagonie australe). Journal de la Société des Américanistes 50:777.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fagundes, Nelson J. R., Kanitz, Ricardo, Eckert, Roberta, Valls, Ana C. S., Bogo, Mauricio R., Salzano, Francisco M., Smith, David Glenn, et al. 2008. Mitochondrial Population Genomics Supports a Single Pre-Clovis Origin with a Coastal Route for the Peopling of the Americas. American Journal of Human Genetics 82:583592.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fehren-Schmitz, Lars, and Georges, Lea. 2016. Ancient DNA Reveals Selection Acting on Genes Associated with Hypoxia Response in Pre-Columbian Peruvian Highlanders in the Last 8,500 Years. Scientific Reports 6:23485CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fiore, Dánae. 2006. Puentes de agua para el arte mobiliar: La distribución espacio-temporal de artefactos óseos decorados en Patagonia meridional y Tierra del Fuego. Cazadores-Recolectores del Cono Sur 1:137147.Google Scholar
Jónsson, Hákon, Ginolhac, Aurélien, Schubert, Mikkel, Johnson, Philip L., and Orlando, Ludovic. 2013. MapDamage2.0: Fast Approximate Bayesian Estimates of Ancient DNA Damage Parameters. Bioinformatics 29:16821684.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jun, Goo, Wing, Mary Kate, Abecasis, Gonçalo R., and Kang, Hyun Min. 2015. An Efficient and Scalable Analysis Framework for Variant Extraction and Refinement from Population-Scale DNA Sequence Data. Genome Research 25:918925.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Katoh, Kazutaka, Misawa, Kazuharu, Kuma, Kei-ichi, and Miyata, Takashi. 2002. MAFFT: A Novel Method for Rapid Multiple Sequence Alignment Based on Fast Fourier Transform. Nucleic Acids Research 30:30593066.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kreimer, Pablo. 2006. ¿Dependientes o integrados? La ciencia latinoamericana. Nómadas 24:199212.Google Scholar
Kreimer, Pablo, and Ugartemendía, Victoria. 2007. Ciencia en la universidad: Dimensiones locales e internacionales. Atos de Pesquisa Em Educação 2:461485.Google Scholar
Lalueza, Carles, Pérez-Pérez, Alejandro, Prats, Eva, Cornudella, Lluís, and Turbón, Daniel. 1997. Lack of Founding Amerindian Mitochondrial DNA Lineages in Extinct Aborigines from Tierra del Fuego-Patagonia. Human Molecular Genetics 6:4146.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lalueza Fox, Carles. 1996. Mitochondrial DNA Haplogroups in Four Tribes from Tierra del Fuego—Patagonia: Inferences about the Peopling of the Americas. Human Biology 68:855871.Google ScholarPubMed
Li, Heng, and Durbin, Richard. 2009. Fast and Accurate Short Read Alignment with Burrows-Wheeler Transform. Bioinformatics 25:17541760.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lindo, John, Haas, Randall, Hofman, Courtney, Apata, Mario, Moraga, Mauricio, Verdugo, Ricardo A., Watson, James T., et al. 2018. The Genetic Prehistory of the Andean Highlands 7000 Years BP through European Contact. Science Advances 4:eaau4921.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Llamas, Bastien, Fehren-Schmitz, Lars, Valverde, Guido, Soubrier, Julien, Mallick, Swapan, Rohland, Nadin, Nordenfelt, Susanne, et al. 2016. Ancient Mitochondrial DNA Provides High-Resolution Time Scale of the Peopling of the Americas. Science Advances 2:e1501385.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Manzi, Liliana M. 2004. La obsidiana verde como indicador de formas de uso del espacio en fuego-patagonia. In Contra viento y marea: Arqueología de Patagonia, edited by Civalero, María Teresa, Fernández, Pablo, and Guráieb, Gabriela, pp. 117134. Instituto Nacional de Antropología y Pensamiento Latinoamericano, Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Maricic, Tomislav, Whitten, Mark, and Pääbo, Svante. 2010. Multiplexed DNA Sequence Capture of Mitochondrial Genomes Using PCR Products. PLoS ONE 5(11):e14004.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Martin, Marcel. 2011. Cutadapt Removes Adapter Sequences from High-Throughput Sequencing Reads. EMBnet.Journal 17(1):1012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maturana Russel, Patricio, Brewer, Brendon J., Klaere, Steffen, and Bouckaert, Remco R.. 2019. Model Selection and Parameter Inference in Phylogenetics Using Nested Sampling. Systematic Biology 68:219233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moraga, Mauricio, de Saint Pierre, Michelle, Torres, Francisco, and Ríos, Juan. 2010. Kinship by Maternal via Between the Last Descendants of Kaweskar Ethnicity and Burials in the Patagonian Channels: Evidence from the Study of Mitochondrial Lineages. Magallania 38(2):103114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morello, Flavia, Stern, Charles, and Román, Manuel San. 2015. Obsidiana verde en Tierra del Fuego y Patagonia: Caracterización, distribución y problemáticas culturales a lo largo del Holoceno. Intersecciones en Antropología 16(1):139153.Google Scholar
Motti, Josefina M. B., Hagelberg, Erika, Lindo, John, Malhi, Ripan S., Bravi, Claudio M., and Guichón, Ricardo A.. 2015. Primer genoma mitocondrial en restos humanos de la costa de Santa Cruz, Argentina. Magallania 43(2):119131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Motti, Josefina M. B., Sebastián Muñoz, A., Cruz, Isabel, D´Angelo del Campo, Manuel D., Borrero, Luis A., Bravi, Claudio M., and Guichón, Ricardo A.. 2019. Análisis de ADN mitocondrial en restos humanos del Holoceno tardío del sur de Santa Cruz. In Arqueología de la Patagonia: El pasado en las arenas, edited by Otero, Julieta Gómez, Svoboda, Ariadna, and Banegas, Anahí, pp. 493503. Altuna Impresores, Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Motti, Josefina M. B., Winingear, Stevie, Valenzuela, L. O., Nieves-Colón, M. A., Harkins, Kelly M., García Laborde, P., Bravi, C. M., Guichón, R. A., and Stone, A. C.. 2020. Identification of the Geographic Origins of People Buried in the Cemetery of the Salesian Mission of Tierra del Fuego through the Analyses of mtDNA and Stable Isotopes. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 33:102559.Google Scholar
Nakatsuka, Nathan, Luisi, Pierre, Motti, Josefina M. B., Salemme, Mónica, Santiago, Fernando, D'Angelo del Campo, Manuel D, Vecchi, Rodrigo J., et al. 2020. Ancient Genomes in South Patagonia Reveal Population Movements Associated with Technological Shifts and Geography. Nature Communications 11:3868CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Narasimhan, Vagheesh, Petr Danecek, Aylwyn Scally, Yali Xue, Chris Tyler-Smith, and Durbin, Richard. 2016. BCFtools/RoH: A Hidden Markov Model Approach for Detecting Autozygosity from Next-Generation Sequencing Data. Bioinformatics 32:17491751.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Orquera, Luis A., Legoupil, Dominique, and Piana, Ernesto L.. 2011. Littoral Adaptation at the Southern End of South America. Quaternary International 239:6169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Orquera, Luis A., and Piana, Ernesto L.. 1999. Arqueología de la región del Canal Beagle (Tierra del Fuego, República Argentina). Sociedad Argentina de Antropología, Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Orquera, Luis A., and Piana, Ernesto L.. 2009. Sea Nomads of the Beagle Channel in Southernmost South America: Over Six Thousand Years of Coastal Adaptation and Stability. Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 4:6181.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pallo, María Cecilia. 2016. Obsidian Transport in Fuego-Patagonia (Southernmost South America): A Spatial Statistical Approach. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 44:114126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parolin, María Laura, Galimany, Jacqueline, Otero, Julieta Gómez, Dahinten, Silvia L., Gabriela Millán, A., and Moraga, Mauricio. 2019. Primeras secuencias mitocondriales de la región control completa en muestras humanas del Holoceno tardío de la costa norte y centro de Patagonia, Argentina. In Arqueología de la Patagonia: El pasado en las arenas, edited by Otero, Julieta Gómez, Svoboda, Ariadna, and Banegas, Anahí, pp. 469480. Altuna Impresores, Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Perez, S. Ivan, Postillone, María Bárbara, Rindel, Diego, Gobbo, Diego, Gonzalez, Paula N., and Bernal, Valeria. 2016. Peopling Time, Spatial Occupation and Demography of Late Pleistocene–Holocene Human Population from Patagonia. Quaternary International 425:214223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piana, Ernesto L., and Orquera, Luis A.. 2007. Diferencias regionales y temporales en el litoral sur sudamericano. In Arqueología de Fuego-Patagonia: Levantando piedras, desenterrando huesos . . . y develando arcanos, edited by Morello, Flavia, Martinic, Mateo, Prieto, Alfredo, and Bahamonde, Gabriel, pp. 311326. Ediciones CEQUA, Punta Arenas, Chile.Google Scholar
Posth, Cosimo, Nakatsuka, Nathan, Lazaridis, Iosif, Skoglund, Pontus, Mallick, Swapan, Lamnidis, Thiseas C., Rohland, Nadin, et al. 2018. Reconstructing the Deep Population History of Central and South America. Cell 175:1185–1197.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Postillone, María Bárbara, Martínez, Gustavo, Flensborg, Gustavo, and Dejean, Cristina B.. 2020. First Analysis of Mitochondrial Lineages from the Eastern Pampa–Patagonia Transition during the Final Late Holocene. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 171:659670.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Raghavan, Maanasa, Steinrücken, Matthias, Harris, Kelley, Schiffels, Stephan, Rasmussen, Simon, DeGiorgio, Michael, Albrechtsen, Anders, et al. 2015. Genomic Evidence for the Pleistocene and Recent Population History of Native Americans. Science 349:aab3884.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rambaut, Andrew. 2018. FigTree version 1.4.4: Tree Drawing Tool in Computer Program and Documentation. http://tree.bio.ed.ac.uk/software/figtree/, accessed December 9, 2022.Google Scholar
Rambaut, Andrew, Drummond, Alexei J., Xie, Dong, Baele, Guy, and Suchard, Marc A.. 2018. Posterior Summarization in Bayesian Phylogenetics Using Tracer 1.7. Systematic Biology 67:901904.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
R Development Core Team. 2020. R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. Foundation for Statistical Computing. https://softlibre.unizar.es/manuales/aplicaciones/r/fullrefman.pdf, accessed December 9, 2022.Google Scholar
Roca-Rada, Xavier, Politis, Gustavo, Messineo, Pablo G., Scheifler, Nahuel, Scabuzzo, Clara, González, Mariela, Harkins, Kelly M., et al. 2021. Ancient Mitochondrial Genomes from the Argentinian Pampas Inform the Early Peopling of the Southern Cone of South America. Iscience 24:102553.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Russo, M. Gabriela, Dejean, Cristina B., Avena, Sergio A., Seldes, Verónica, and Ramundo, Paola. 2018. Mitochondrial Lineage A2ah Found in a Pre-Hispanic Individual from the Andean Region. American Journal of Human Biology 30:e23134.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Russo, M. Gabriela, Mendisco, Fanny, Avena, Sergio A., Dejean, Cristina B., and Seldes, Verónica. 2016. Pre-Hispanic Mortuary Practices in Quebrada de Humahuaca (North-Western Argentina): Genetic Relatedness among Individuals Buried in the Same Grave. Annals of Human Genetics 80: 210220.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sawyer, Susanna, Krause, Johannes, Guschanski, Katerina, Savolainen, Vincent, and Pääbo, Svante. 2012. Temporal Patterns of Nucleotide Misincorporations and DNA Fragmentation in Ancient DNA. PLoS ONE 7(3):e34131.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schubert, Mikkel, Lindgreen, Stinus, and Orlando, Ludovic. 2016. AdapterRemoval v2: Rapid Adapter Trimming, Identification, and Read Merging. BMC Research Notes 9:88.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Soares, Pedro, Ermini, Luca, Thomson, Noel, Mormina, Maru, Rito, Teresa, Röhl, Arne, Salas, Antonio, Oppenheimer, Stephen, Macaulay, Vincent, and Richards, Martin B.. 2009. Correcting for Purifying Selection: An Improved Human Mitochondrial Molecular Clock. American Journal of Human Genetics 84:740759.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stern, Charles, and Prieto, Alfredo. 1991. Obsidiana verde de los sitios arqueológicos en los alrededores del seno Otway, Magallanes, Chile. Anales del Instituto de la Patagonia 20:139144.Google Scholar
Suby, Jorge A., Zangrando, Atilio F., and Piana, Ernesto. 2011. Exploraciones osteológicas de la salud de las poblaciones humanas del Canal Beagle. Relaciones de la Sociedad Argentina de Antropología 36:249270.Google Scholar
Tamm, Erika, Kivisild, Toomas, Reidla, Maere, Metspalu, Mait, Smith, David Glenn, Mulligan, Connie J., Bravi, Claudio M., et al. 2007. Beringian Standstill and Spread of Native American Founders. PLoS ONE 2(9):e829.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tavella, María Pía, Demarchi, Darío A., and Nores, Rodrigo. 2020. Diversidad genética en restos humanos de contextos arqueológicos tardíos de la provincia de Santiago del Estero a partir del estudio de ADN mitocondrial. Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica 22:013.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Oven, Mannis, and Kayser, Manfred. 2009. Updated Comprehensive Phylogenetic Tree of Global Human Mitochondrial DNA Variation. Human Mutation 30:E386394.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wade, Lizzie. 2018. Ancient DNA Tracks Migrations around Americas. Science 362:627628.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wedell, James. 2006 [1825]. Un viaje hacia el Polo Sur realizado en los años 1822–1824. Eudeba, Universidad de Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Weissensteiner Hansi, Dominic Pacher, Kloss-Brandstätter, Anita, Forer, Lukas, Specht, Günther, Bandelt, Hans-Jürgen, Kronenberg, Florian, Salas, Antonio, and Schönherr, Sebastian. 2016. HaploGrep 2: Mitochondrial Haplogroup Classification in the Era of High-Throughput Sequencing. Nucleic Acids Research 44:W58W63.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zangrando, Atilio F. 2009. Historia evolutiva y subsistencia de cazadores-recolectores marítimos de Tierra del Fuego. Colección Tesis de Doctorado, Sociedad Argentina de Antropología, Buenos Aires.Google Scholar
Zangrando, Atilio F., Bjerck, Hein B., Piana, Ernesto L., Breivik, Heidi M., Tivoli, Angélica M., and Negre, Joan. 2018. Spatial Patterning and Occupation Dynamics during the Early Holocene in an Archaeological Site from the South Coast of Tierra del Fuego: Binushmuka I. Estudios Atacameños 60:3149.Google Scholar
Zangrando, Atilio F., Tivoli, Angélica M., Ponce, Juan F., Alunni, Daniela V., Fernández Ropero, María del Carmen, and Martinoli, María Paz. 2022. Colonización humana de Tierra del Fuego: Contextos arqueológicos pre-transgresivos en la costa norte del Canal Beagle. Chungara 54:557577.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Region of interest. The star indicates the location of the Paiashauaia 1 burial by the Beagle Channel (Tierra del Fuego, Argentina); the circle indicates the location of the IPY08 burial by Seno Año Nuevo (Chile; de la Fuente et al. 2018). Image generated with Google Earth (v7.3.3.7786).

Figure 1

Table 1. Variants Found in the PZ3 Consensus Mitogenome.

Figure 2

Figure 2. Bayesian phylogeny depicting the relationships between individuals of the human mitochondrial haplogroup D1 and external groups. The x-axis denotes time into the past in years. The tree is based on an extended Bayesian skyline analysis of the mitogenomes considering two partitions (coding and hypervariable region) performed in BEAST (v.2.6.2; Bouckaert et al. 2019). Sequence sources and sample numbers are available in Supplemental Table 2. Nodes with posterior probability >0.7 have bars indicating age ranges accumulating 95% posterior probability. The table shows the age ranges and posterior probability for each node. Names of major well-supported sub-haplogroups are indicated. Circles: modern individuals; stars: ancient individuals.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Haplotype median-joining network of the D1 lineage including individuals from Argentina and Chile constructed using Network (v10.2). Positions 309.1, 315.1, 16182, 16183, and 16193.1, as well as positions with gaps and missing values, were not considered.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Bayesian skyline plot representing historical demographic trends in sampled D1 individuals. Time is reported on the x-axis as years BP, and the effective population size change is reported on the y-axis. Estimations were based on a mutation rate of 0.024694 substitutions per site per million years (Llamas et al. 2016), and y-axis transformation was performed considering a generational time of 25 years (as used in Brandini et al. 2017).

Supplementary material: File

Arencibia et al. supplementary material 1

Arencibia et al. supplementary material
Download Arencibia et al. supplementary material 1(File)
File 30.3 KB
Supplementary material: File

Arencibia et al. supplementary material 2

Arencibia et al. supplementary material
Download Arencibia et al. supplementary material 2(File)
File 99.8 KB
Supplementary material: File

Arencibia et al. supplementary material 3

Arencibia et al. supplementary material
Download Arencibia et al. supplementary material 3(File)
File 745.3 KB
Supplementary material: File

Arencibia et al. supplementary material 4

Arencibia et al. supplementary material
Download Arencibia et al. supplementary material 4(File)
File 18.5 KB
Supplementary material: File

Arencibia et al. supplementary material 5

Arencibia et al. supplementary material
Download Arencibia et al. supplementary material 5(File)
File 23.3 KB
Supplementary material: File

Arencibia et al. supplementary material 6

Arencibia et al. supplementary material
Download Arencibia et al. supplementary material 6(File)
File 9.5 KB
Supplementary material: File

Arencibia et al. supplementary material 7

Arencibia et al. supplementary material
Download Arencibia et al. supplementary material 7(File)
File 41.4 KB