Ashot Margaryan

Ashot Margaryan

Københavns Universitet

H-index: 27

Europe-Denmark

About Ashot Margaryan

Ashot Margaryan, With an exceptional h-index of 27 and a recent h-index of 27 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Københavns Universitet, specializes in the field of Genetics.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Population genomics of post-glacial western Eurasia

A genomic exploration of the possible de-extirpation of the Zanzibar leopard

Historic sampling of a vanishing beast: population structure and diversity in the black rhinoceros

Genomic ancestry, diet and microbiomes of Upper Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers from San Teodoro cave

The population genomic legacy of the second plague pandemic

Complete mitochondrial genomes from museum specimens clarify millipede evolution in the Eastern Arc Mountains

Population genomics of stone age eurasia

Genome-scale sequencing and analysis of human, wolf, and bison DNA from 25,000-year-old sediment

Ashot Margaryan Information

University

Københavns Universitet

Position

___

Citations(all)

6884

Citations(since 2020)

5424

Cited By

3404

hIndex(all)

27

hIndex(since 2020)

27

i10Index(all)

36

i10Index(since 2020)

33

Email

University Profile Page

Københavns Universitet

Ashot Margaryan Skills & Research Interests

Genetics

Top articles of Ashot Margaryan

Population genomics of post-glacial western Eurasia

Authors

Morten E Allentoft,Martin Sikora,Alba Refoyo-Martínez,Evan K Irving-Pease,Anders Fischer,William Barrie,Andrés Ingason,Jesper Stenderup,Karl-Göran Sjögren,Alice Pearson,Bárbara Sousa da Mota,Bettina Schulz Paulsson,Alma Halgren,Ruairidh Macleod,Marie Louise Schjellerup Jørkov,Fabrice Demeter,Lasse Sørensen,Poul Otto Nielsen,Rasmus A Henriksen,Tharsika Vimala,Hugh McColl,Ashot Margaryan,Melissa Ilardo,Andrew Vaughn,Morten Fischer Mortensen,Anne Birgitte Nielsen,Mikkel Ulfeldt Hede,Niels Nørkjær Johannsen,Peter Rasmussen,Lasse Vinner,Gabriel Renaud,Aaron Stern,Theis Zetner Trolle Jensen,Gabriele Scorrano,Hannes Schroeder,Per Lysdahl,Abigail Daisy Ramsøe,Andrei Skorobogatov,Andrew Joseph Schork,Anders Rosengren,Anthony Ruter,Alan Outram,Aleksey A Timoshenko,Alexandra Buzhilova,Alfredo Coppa,Alisa Zubova,Ana Maria Silva,Anders J Hansen,Andrey Gromov,Andrey Logvin,Anne Birgitte Gotfredsen,Bjarne Henning Nielsen,Borja González-Rabanal,Carles Lalueza-Fox,Catriona J McKenzie,Charleen Gaunitz,Concepción Blasco,Corina Liesau,Cristina Martinez-Labarga,Dmitri V Pozdnyakov,David Cuenca-Solana,David O Lordkipanidze,Dmitri En’shin,Domingo C Salazar-García,T Douglas Price,Dušan Borić,Elena Kostyleva,Elizaveta V Veselovskaya,Emma R Usmanova,Enrico Cappellini,Erik Brinch Petersen,Esben Kannegaard,Francesca Radina,Fulya Eylem Yediay,Henri Duday,Igor Gutiérrez-Zugasti,Ilya Merts,Inna Potekhina,Irina Shevnina,Isin Altinkaya,Jean Guilaine,Jesper Hansen,Joan Emili Aura Tortosa,João Zilhão,Jorge Vega,Kristoffer Buck Pedersen,Krzysztof Tunia,Lei Zhao,Liudmila N Mylnikova,Lars Larsson,Laure Metz,Levon Yepiskoposyan,Lisbeth Pedersen,Lucia Sarti,Ludovic Orlando,Ludovic Slimak,Lutz Klassen,Malou Blank,Manuel González-Morales,Mara Silvestrini,Maria Vretemark,Marina S Nesterova,Marina Rykun,Mario Federico Rolfo,Marzena Szmyt,Marcin Przybyła,Mauro Calattini,Mikhail Sablin,Miluše Dobisíková,Morten Meldgaard,Morten Johansen,Natalia Berezina,Nick Card,Nikolai A Saveliev,Olga Poshekhonova,Olga Rickards,Olga V Lozovskaya,Olivér Gábor,Otto Christian Uldum,Paola Aurino,Pavel Kosintsev,Patrice Courtaud,Patricia Ríos,Peder Mortensen,Per Lotz,Per Persson,Pernille Bangsgaard,Peter de Barros Damgaard,Peter Vang Petersen,Pilar Prieto Martinez,Piotr Włodarczak,Roman V Smolyaninov,Rikke Maring,Roberto Menduiña,Ruben Badalyan,Rune Iversen,Ruslan Turin,Sergey Vasilyev,Sidsel Wåhlin,Svetlana Borutskaya,Svetlana Skochina,Søren Anker Sørensen,Søren H Andersen,Thomas Jørgensen,Yuri B Serikov,Vyacheslav I Molodin,Vaclav Smrcka,Victor Merts,Vivek Appadurai,Vyacheslav Moiseyev

Journal

Nature

Published Date

2024/1/11

Western Eurasia witnessed several large-scale human migrations during the Holocene, , , –. Here, to investigate the cross-continental effects of these migrations, we shotgun-sequenced 317 genomes—mainly from the Mesolithic and Neolithic periods—from across northern and western Eurasia. These were imputed alongside published data to obtain diploid genotypes from more than 1,600 ancient humans. Our analyses revealed a ‘great divide’ genomic boundary extending from the Black Sea to the Baltic. Mesolithic hunter-gatherers were highly genetically differentiated east and west of this zone, and the effect of the neolithization was equally disparate. Large-scale ancestry shifts occurred in the west as farming was introduced, including near-total replacement of hunter-gatherers in many areas, whereas no substantial ancestry shifts happened east of the zone during the same period. Similarly, relatedness …

A genomic exploration of the possible de-extirpation of the Zanzibar leopard

Authors

Xin Sun,Emily Louisa Cavill,Ashot Margaryan,Jianqing Lin,Søren Thingaard,Tamrini A Said,Shyam Gopalakrishnan,M Thomas P Gilbert

Journal

bioRxiv

Published Date

2023

The recently extirpated Zanzibar leopard was the only known African leopard (Panthera pardus spp.) population restricted exclusively to a major island habitat. Although its demise was driven through habitat change and conflict with humans, given its role as a keystone species for the Zanzibar Archipelago, its potential reintroduction might offer a means for helping preserve the natural biodiversity of its former habitat. Whether this is feasible, however, would be contingent on both whether closely related source populations can be identified on mainland Africa, and whether the Zanzibar form exhibited any special adaptations that might need to be considered when choosing such a source. In light of these questions, we genomically profiled two of the six known historic specimens, to explore whether they represent a realistic candidate for de-extirpation through reintroduction. Our analyses indicate that despite its geographic separation, the Zanzibar leopard shared a close genetic relationship with mainland East African individuals. Furthermore, although its uniqueness as an island population was emphasised by genomic signatures of high inbreeding and increased mutation load, the latter similar to the level of the critically endangered Amur leopard (P. p. orientalis), we find no evidence of positive selection unique to Zanzibar. We therefore conclude that should attempts to restore leopards to Zanzibar be planned, then mainland East African leopards would provide a suitable gene pool, whether using genetic engineering or conventional rewilding approaches.

Historic sampling of a vanishing beast: population structure and diversity in the black rhinoceros

Authors

Fátima Sánchez-Barreiro,Binia De Cahsan,Michael V Westbury,Xin Sun,Ashot Margaryan,Claudia Fontsere,Michael W Bruford,Isa-Rita M Russo,Daniela C Kalthoff,Thomas Sicheritz-Pontén,Bent Petersen,Love Dalén,Guojie Zhang,Tomás Marquès-Bonet,M Thomas P Gilbert,Yoshan Moodley

Journal

Molecular biology and evolution

Published Date

2023/9

The black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis L.) is a critically endangered species historically distributed across sub-Saharan Africa. Hunting and habitat disturbance have diminished both its numbers and distribution since the 19th century, but a poaching crisis in the late 20th century drove them to the brink of extinction. Genetic and genomic assessments can greatly increase our knowledge of the species and inform management strategies. However, when a species has been severely reduced, with the extirpation and artificial admixture of several populations, it is extremely challenging to obtain an accurate understanding of historic population structure and evolutionary history from extant samples. Therefore, we generated and analyzed whole genomes from 63 black rhinoceros museum specimens collected between 1775 and 1981. Results showed that the black rhinoceros could be genetically structured into six …

Genomic ancestry, diet and microbiomes of Upper Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers from San Teodoro cave

Authors

Gabriele Scorrano,Sofie Holtsmark Nielsen,Domenico Lo Vetro,Rikai Sawafuji,Meaghan Mackie,Ashot Margaryan,Anna K Fotakis,Cristina Martínez-Labarga,Pier Francesco Fabbri,Morten E Allentoft,Marialetizia Carra,Fabio Martini,Olga Rickards,Jesper V Olsen,Mikkel Winther Pedersen,Enrico Cappellini,Martin Sikora

Journal

Communications Biology

Published Date

2022/11/18

Recent improvements in the analysis of ancient biomolecules from human remains and associated dental calculus have provided new insights into the prehistoric diet and genetic diversity of our species. Here we present a multi-omics study, integrating metagenomic and proteomic analyses of dental calculus, and human ancient DNA analysis of the petrous bones of two post-Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) individuals from San Teodoro cave (Italy), to reconstruct their lifestyle and the post-LGM resettlement of Europe. Our analyses show genetic homogeneity in Sicily during the Palaeolithic, representing a hitherto unknown Italian genetic lineage within the previously identified Villabruna cluster. We argue that this lineage took refuge in Italy during the LGM, followed by a subsequent spread to central-western Europe. Analysis of dental calculus showed a diet rich in animal proteins which is also reflected on the oral …

The population genomic legacy of the second plague pandemic

Authors

Shyam Gopalakrishnan,S Sunna Ebenesersdottir,Inge KC Lundstrøm,Gordon Turner-Walker,Kristjan HS Moore,Pierre Luisi,Ashot Margaryan,Michael D Martin,Martin Rene Ellegaard,Ásgeir Sigurðsson,Steinunn Snorradóttir,Droplaug N Magnúsdóttir,Jason E Laffoon,Lucy van Dorp,Xiaodong Liu,Ida Moltke,María C Ávila-Arcos,Joshua G Schraiber,Simon Rasmussen,David Juan,Pere Gelabert,Toni De-Dios,Anna K Fotakis,Miren Iraeta-Orbegozo,Åshild J Vågene,Sean Dexter Denham,Axel Christophersen,Hans K Stenøien,Filipe G Vieira,Shanlin Liu,Torsten Günther,Toomas Kivisild,Ole Georg Moseng,Birgitte Skar,Christina Cheung,Marcela Sandoval-Velasco,Nathan Wales,Hannes Schroeder,Paula F Campos,Valdís B Guðmundsdóttir,Thomas Sicheritz-Ponten,Bent Petersen,Jostein Halgunset,Edmund Gilbert,Gianpiero L Cavalleri,Eivind Hovig,Ingrid Kockum,Tomas Olsson,Lars Alfredsson,Thomas F Hansen,Thomas Werge,Eske Willerslev,Francois Balloux,Tomas Marques-Bonet,Carles Lalueza-Fox,Rasmus Nielsen,Kári Stefánsson,Agnar Helgason,M Thomas P Gilbert

Journal

Current Biology

Published Date

2022/11/7

Human populations have been shaped by catastrophes that may have left long-lasting signatures in their genomes. One notable example is the second plague pandemic that entered Europe in ca. 1,347 CE and repeatedly returned for over 300 years, with typical village and town mortality estimated at 10%–40%.1 It is assumed that this high mortality affected the gene pools of these populations. First, local population crashes reduced genetic diversity. Second, a change in frequency is expected for sequence variants that may have affected survival or susceptibility to the etiologic agent (Yersinia pestis).2 Third, mass mortality might alter the local gene pools through its impact on subsequent migration patterns. We explored these factors using the Norwegian city of Trondheim as a model, by sequencing 54 genomes spanning three time periods: (1) prior to the plague striking Trondheim in 1,349 CE, (2) the 17th–19th …

Complete mitochondrial genomes from museum specimens clarify millipede evolution in the Eastern Arc Mountains

Authors

Martin Nielsen,Ashot Margaryan,Tejs Lind Nielsen,Henrik Enghoff,Morten E Allentoft

Journal

Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society

Published Date

2022/10/1

The Eastern Arc Mountains in Tanzania represent a hotspot for biological diversity of global importance. The level of endemism is high, and Eastern Arc biodiversity has been studied extensively in vertebrates and invertebrates, including millipedes. However, millipede evolution is vastly understudied at the molecular level. Therefore, we used next-generation ‘shotgun’ sequencing to obtain mitochondrial genome sequences of 26 museum specimens, representing six genera and 12 millipede species found across the Eastern Arc Mountains. Bayesian and maximum likelihood methods yielded consistent topologies with high node support, confirming a high level of congruence between molecular and morphological analyses. The only exception was a Tropostreptus sigmatospinus individual from Zanzibar, which was placed outside an otherwise monophyletic group consisting of mainland individuals of the same …

Population genomics of stone age eurasia

Authors

Morten E Allentoft,Martin Sikora,Alba Refoyo-Martínez,Evan K Irving-Pease,Anders Fischer,William Barrie,Andrés Ingason,Jesper Stenderup,Karl-Göran Sjögren,Alice Pearson,Barbara Mota,Bettina Schulz Paulsson,Alma Halgren,Ruairidh Macleod,Marie Louise Schjellerup Jørkov,Fabrice Demeter,Maria Novosolov,Lasse Sørensen,Poul-Otto Nielsen,Rasmus HA Henriksen,Tharsika Vimala,Hugh McColl,Ashot Margaryan,Melissa Ilardo,Andrew Vaughn,Morten Fischer Mortensen,Anne Birgitte Nielsen,Mikkel Ulfeldt Hede,Peter Rasmussen,Lasse Vinner,Gabriel Renaud,Aaron Stern,Theis Zetner Trolle Jensen,Niels Nørkjær Johannsen,Gabriele Scorrano,Hannes Schroeder,Per Lysdahl,Abigail Daisy Ramsøe,Andrei Skorobogatov,Andrew Joseph Schork,Anders Rosengren,Anthony Ruter,Alan Outram,Aleksey A Timoshenko,Alexandra Buzhilova,Alfredo Coppa,Alisa Zubova,Ana Maria Silva,Anders J Hansen,Andrey Gromov,Andrey Logvin,Anne Birgitte Gotfredsen,Bjarne Henning Nielsen,Borja González-Rabanal,Carles Lalueza-Fox,Catriona J McKenzie,Charleen Gaunitz,Concepción Blasco,Corina Liesau,Cristina Martinez-Labarga,Dmitri V Pozdnyakov,David Cuenca-Solana,David O Lordkipanidze,Dmitri En’shin,Domingo C Salazar-García,T Douglas Price,Dušan Borić,Elena Kostyleva,Elizaveta V Veselovskaya,Emma R Usmanova,Enrico Cappellini,Erik Brinch Petersen,Esben Kannegaard,Francesca Radina,Fulya Eylem Yediay,Henri Duday,Igor Gutiérrez-Zugasti,Inna Potekhina,Irina Shevnina,Isin Altinkaya,Jean Guilaine,Jesper Hansen,Joan Emili Aura Tortosa,João Zilhão,Jorge Vega,Kristoffer Buck Pedersen,Krzysztof Tunia,Lei Zhao,Liudmila N Mylnikova,Lars Larsson,Laure Metz,Levon Yeppiskoposyan,Lisbeth Pedersen,Lucia Sarti,Ludovic Orlando,Ludovic Slimak,Lutz Klassen,Malou Blank,Manuel González-Morales,Mara Silvestrini,Maria Vretemark,Marina S Nesterova,Marina Rykun,Mario Federico Rolfo,Marzena Szmyt,Marcin Przybyła,Mauro Calattini,Mikhail Sablin,Miluše Dobisíková,Morten Meldgaard,Morten Johansen,Natalia Berezina,Nick Card,Nikolai A Saveliev,Olga Poshekhonova,Olga Rickards,Olga V Lozovskaya,Otto Christian Uldum,Paola Aurino,Pavel Kosintsev,Patrice Courtaud,Patricia Ríos,Peder Mortensen,Per Lotz,Per Åke Persson,Pernille Bangsgaard,Peter de Barros Damgaard,Peter Vang Petersen,Pilar Prieto Martinez,Piotr Włodarczak,Roman V Smolyaninov,Rikke Maring,Roberto Menduiña,Ruben Badalyan,Rune Iversen,Ruslan Turin,Sergey Vasilyiev,Sidsel Wåhlin,Svetlana Borutskaya,Svetlana Skochina,Søren Anker Sørensen,Søren H Andersen,Thomas Jørgensen,Yuri B Serikov,Vyacheslav I Molodin,Vaclav Smrcka,Victor Merz,Vivek Appadurai,Vyacheslav Moiseyev,Yvonne Magnusson

Journal

BioRxiv

Published Date

2022/5/5

The transitions from foraging to farming and later to pastoralism in Stone Age Eurasia (c. 11-3 thousand years before present, BP) represent some of the most dramatic lifestyle changes in human evolution. We sequenced 317 genomes of primarily Mesolithic and Neolithic individuals from across Eurasia combined with radiocarbon dates, stable isotope data, and pollen records. Genome imputation and co-analysis with previously published shotgun sequencing data resulted in >1600 complete ancient genome sequences offering fine-grained resolution into the Stone Age populations. We observe that: 1) Hunter-gatherer groups were more genetically diverse than previously known, and deeply divergent between western and eastern Eurasia. 2) We identify hitherto genetically undescribed hunter-gatherers from the Middle Don region that contributed ancestry to the later Yamnaya steppe pastoralists; 3) The genetic impact of the Neolithic transition was highly distinct, east and west of a boundary zone extending from the Black Sea to the Baltic. Large-scale shifts in genetic ancestry occurred to the west of this “Great Divide”, including an almost complete replacement of hunter-gatherers in Denmark, while no substantial ancestry shifts took place during the same period to the east. This difference is also reflected in genetic relatedness within the populations, decreasing substantially in the west but not in the east where it remained high until c. 4,000 BP; 4) The second major genetic transformation around 5,000 BP happened at a much faster pace with Steppe-related ancestry reaching most parts of Europe within 1,000-years. Local Neolithic farmers …

Genome-scale sequencing and analysis of human, wolf, and bison DNA from 25,000-year-old sediment

Authors

Pere Gelabert,Susanna Sawyer,Anders Bergström,Ashot Margaryan,Thomas C Collin,Tengiz Meshveliani,Anna Belfer-Cohen,David Lordkipanidze,Nino Jakeli,Zinovi Matskevich,Guy Bar-Oz,Daniel M Fernandes,Olivia Cheronet,Kadir T Özdoğan,Victoria Oberreiter,Robin NM Feeney,Mareike C Stahlschmidt,Pontus Skoglund,Ron Pinhasi

Journal

Current biology

Published Date

2021/8/23

Cave sediments have been shown to preserve ancient DNA but so far have not yielded the genome-scale information of skeletal remains. We retrieved and analyzed human and mammalian nuclear and mitochondrial environmental "shotgun" genomes from a single 25,000-year-old Upper Paleolithic sediment sample from Satsurblia cave, western Georgia:first, a human environmental genome with substantial basal Eurasian ancestry, which was an ancestral component of the majority of post-Ice Age people in the Near East, North Africa, and parts of Europe; second, a wolf environmental genome that is basal to extant Eurasian wolves and dogs and represents a previously unknown, likely extinct, Caucasian lineage; and third, a European bison environmental genome that is basal to present-day populations, suggesting that population structure has been substantially reshaped since the Last Glacial Maximum. Our …

Genomic steppe ancestry in skeletons from the Neolithic Single Grave Culture in Denmark

Authors

Anne Friis-Holm Egfjord,Ashot Margaryan,Anders Fischer,Karl-Göran Sjögren,T Douglas Price,Niels N Johannsen,Poul Otto Nielsen,Lasse Sørensen,Eske Willerslev,Rune Iversen,Martin Sikora,Kristian Kristiansen,Morten E Allentoft

Journal

PLoS One

Published Date

2021/1/14

The Gjerrild burial provides the largest and best-preserved assemblage of human skeletal material presently known from the Single Grave Culture (SGC) in Denmark. For generations it has been debated among archaeologists if the appearance of this archaeological complex represents a continuation of the previous Neolithic communities, or was facilitated by incoming migrants. We sampled and analysed five skeletons from the Gjerrild cist, buried over a period of c. 300 years, 2600/2500–2200 cal BCE. Despite poor DNA preservation, we managed to sequence the genome (>1X) of one individual and the partial genomes (0.007X and 0.02X) of another two individuals. Our genetic data document a female (Gjerrild 1) and two males (Gjerrild 5 + 8), harbouring typical Neolithic K2a and HV0 mtDNA haplogroups, but also a rare basal variant of the R1b1 Y-chromosomal haplogroup. Genome-wide analyses demonstrate that these people had a significant Yamnaya-derived (i.e. steppe) ancestry component and a close genetic resemblance to the Corded Ware (and related) groups that were present in large parts of Northern and Central Europe at the time. Assuming that the Gjerrild skeletons are genetically representative of the population of the SGC in broader terms, the transition from the local Neolithic Funnel Beaker Culture (TRB) to SGC is not characterized by demographic continuity. Rather, the emergence of SGC in Denmark was part of the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age population expansion that swept across the European continent in the 3rd millennium BCE, resulting in various degrees of genetic replacement and admixture processes …

Uncovering the genomic and metagenomic research potential in old ethanol-preserved snakes

Authors

Claus M Zacho,Martina A Bager,Ashot Margaryan,Peter Gravlund,Anders Galatius,Arne R Rasmussen,Morten E Allentoft

Journal

Plos one

Published Date

2021/8/23

Natural history museum collections worldwide represent a tremendous resource of information on past and present biodiversity. Fish, reptiles, amphibians and many invertebrate collections have often been preserved in ethanol for decades or centuries and our knowledge on the genomic and metagenomic research potential of such material is limited. Here, we use ancient DNA protocols, combined with shotgun sequencing to test the molecular preservation in liver, skin and bone tissue from five old (1842 to 1964) museum specimens of the common garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis). When mapping reads to a T. sirtalis reference genome, we find that the DNA molecules are highly damaged with short average sequence lengths (38–64 bp) and high C-T deamination, ranging from 9% to 21% at the first position. Despite this, the samples displayed relatively high endogenous DNA content, ranging from 26% to 56%, revealing that genome-scale analyses are indeed possible from all specimens and tissues included here. Of the three tested types of tissue, bone shows marginally but significantly higher DNA quality in these metrics. Though at least one of the snakes had been exposed to formalin, neither the concentration nor the quality of the obtained DNA was affected. Lastly, we demonstrate that these specimens display a diverse and tissue-specific microbial genetic profile, thus offering authentic metagenomic data despite being submerged in ethanol for many years. Our results emphasize that historical museum collections continue to offer an invaluable source of information in the era of genomics.

Population genomics of the Viking world (vol 585, pg 390, 2020)

Authors

Ashot Margaryan,Daniel J Lawson,Martin Sikora,Fernando Racimo,Simon Rasmussen,Ida Moltke,Lara M Cassidy,Emil Jorsboe,Andres Ingason,Mikkel W Pedersen,Thorfinn Korneliussen,Helene Wilhelmson,Magdalena M Bus,PD Damgaard,Rui Martiniano,Gabriel Renaud,Claude Bherer,J Victor Moreno-Mayar,Anna K Fotakis,Marie Allen,Raili Allmae,Martyna Molak,Enrico Cappellini,Gabriele Scorrano,Hugh McColl,Alexandra Buzhilova,Allison Fox,Anders Albrechtsen,Berit Schutz,Birgitte Skar,Caroline Arcini,Ceri Falys,Charlotte Hedenstierna Jonson,Dariusz Blaszczyk,Denis Pezhemsky,Gordon Turner-Walker,Hildur Gestsdottir,Inge Lundstrom,Ingrid Gustin,Ingrid Mainland,Inna Potekhina,Italo M Muntoni,Jade Cheng,Jesper Stenderup,JL Ma,Julie Gibson,Juri Peets,Jorgen Gustafsson,Katrine H Iversen,Linzi Simpson,Lisa Strand,Louise Loe,M Florek,M Vretemark,M Redknap,M Bajka,T Pushkina,M Sovso,N Grigoreva,T Christensen,O Kastholm,O Uldum,P Favia,P Holck,S Sten,SV Arge,S Ellingvag,V Moiseyev,W Bogdanowicz,Y Magnusson,L Orlando,P Pentz,MD Jessen,A Pedersen,M Collard,DG Bradley,ML Jorkov,J Arneborg,N Lynnerup,N Price,MTP Gilbert,ME Allentoft,J Bill,SM Sindbaek,L Hedeager,K Kristiansen,R Nielsen,T Werge,E Willerslev

Journal

Nature

Published Date

2021

화학공학소재연구정보센터(CHERIC) | 연구정보 | 문헌DB | 학술지 검색 화학공학소재연구정보 센터 홈 로그인 로그아웃 연락처 사이트맵 센터 센터소개 회원가입/정보수정 뉴스 공지사항 연구 동향 학회참관기 우수연구자소개 취업정보 연구정보 문헌DB KDB Compound Search 전문연구 정보 동영상 심포지움 자료 연구성과보고서 저널정보 논문 작성법 참고문헌DB 분석기기DB 화학 공정DB PSPDB 연구자지식지도 상태도정보 교육정보 사이버강의-학부 사이버강의-대학원 실무 강좌 강의자료 링크 교육자료 링크 사이버실험실 물성측정실험 매뉴얼 커뮤니티 공학포럼 카페 신진연구자인터뷰 리소스 특허정보 술어DB 관련법령 자격증정보 성과소개서 연구보고서 문헌DB 학술지 검색 학술대회 발표논문집 최신 국내 저널 최신 리뷰페이퍼 KDB Periodic Table of Elements Unit Conversion Universal Constants Pure Component Properties Binary Vapor-Liquid Equil. Data Calculation Modules Research Articles Citing KDB Compound Search …

Towards the extended barcode concept: Generating DNA reference data through genome skimming of danish plants

Authors

Physilia YS Chua,Frederik Leerhøi,Emilia MR Langkjær,Ashot Margaryan,Christina L Noer,Stine R Richter,Marlene E Restrup,Hans Henrik Bruun,Ida Hartvig,Eric Coissac,Sanne Boessenkool,Inger G Alsos,Kristine Bohmann

Journal

BioRxiv

Published Date

2021/8/12

BackgroundRecently, there has been a push towards the extended barcode concept of utilising chloroplast genomes (cpGenome) and nuclear ribosomal DNA (nrDNA) sequences for molecular identification of plants instead of the standard barcode regions. These extended barcodes has a wide range of applications, including biodiversity monitoring and assessment, primer design, and evolutionary studies. However, these extended barcodes are not well represented in global reference databases. To fill this gap, we generated cpGenomes and nrDNA reference data from genome skims of 184 plant species collected in Denmark. We further explored the application of our generated reference data for molecular identifications of plants in an environmental DNA metagenomics study.ResultsWe assembled partial cpGenomes for 82.1% of sequenced species and full or partial nrDNA sequences for 83.7% of species. We added all assemblies to GenBank, of which chloroplast reference data from 101 species and nuclear reference data from 6 species were not previously represented. On average, we recovered 45 genes per species. The rate of recovery of standard barcodes was higher for nuclear barcodes (>89%) than chloroplast barcodes (< 60%). Extracted DNA yield did not affect assembly outcome, whereas high GC content did so negatively. For the in silico simulation of metagenomic reads, taxonomic assignments using the reference data generated had better species resolution (94.9%) as compared to GenBank (18.1%) without any identification errors.ConclusionsGenome skimming generates reference data of both standard barcodes and …

31,600-year-old human virus genomes support a Pleistocene origin for common childhood infections

Authors

Sofie Holtsmark Nielsen,Lucy van Dorp,Charlotte J Houldcroft,Anders G Pedersen,Morten E Allentoft,Lasse Vinner,Ashot Margaryan,Elena Pavlova,Vyacheslav Chasnyk,Pavel Nikolskiy,Vladimir Pitulko,Ville N Pimenoff,François Balloux,Martin Sikora

Journal

BioRxiv

Published Date

2021/6/28

The origins of viral pathogens and the age of their association with humans remains largely elusive. To date, there is no direct evidence about the diversity of viral infections in early modern humans pre-dating the Holocene. We recovered two near-complete genomes (5.2X and 0.7X) of human adenovirus C (HAdV-C), as well as low-coverage genomes from four distinct species of human herpesvirus obtained from two 31,630-year-old milk teeth excavated at Yana, in northeastern Siberia. Phylogenetic analysis of the two HAdV-C genomes suggests an evolutionary origin around 700,000 years ago consistent with a common evolutionary history with hominin hosts. Our findings push back the earliest direct molecular evidence for human viral infections by ∼25,000 years, and demonstrate that viral species causing common childhood viral infections today have been in circulation in humans at least since the Pleistocene.

The genomic origin of Zana of Abkhazia

Authors

Ashot Margaryan,Mikkel‐Holger S Sinding,Christian Carøe,Vladimir Yamshchikov,Igor Burtsev,M Thomas P Gilbert

Journal

Advanced Genetics

Published Date

2021/6

Enigmatic phenomena have sparked the imagination of people around the globe into creating folkloric creatures. One prime example is Zana of Abkhazia (South Caucasus), a well‐documented 19th century female who was captured living wild in the forest. Zana's appearance was sufficiently unusual, that she was referred to by locals as an Almasty—the analog of Bigfoot in the Caucasus. Although the exact location of Zana's burial site was unknown, the grave of her son, Khwit, was identified in 1971. The genomes of Khwit and the alleged Zana skeleton were sequenced to an average depth of ca. 3× using ancient DNA techniques. The identical mtDNA and parent‐offspring relationship between the two indicated that the unknown woman was indeed Zana. Population genomic analyses demonstrated that Zana's immediate genetic ancestry can likely be traced to present‐day East‐African populations. We speculate …

Reconstructing the Gerdrup Grave–the story of an unusual Viking Age double grave in context and in the light of new analysis

Authors

Ole Kastholm,Ashot Margaryan

Journal

Dan. J. Archaeol.

Published Date

2021/12/2

In 1981, a double burial from the 9th century was excavated at Gerdrup, north of Roskilde. The grave contained remains of the bodies of a woman and a man. The woman was buried with a spear, whilst the man had apparently been killed before burial. This has been interpreted as a ‘master and slave burial’, which was placed at an isolated location, perhaps because the buried were regarded as pariahs. However, previously unpublished excavation data combined with new 14C analyses indicate that the burial was part of a small multi-period burial site, which was located near a group of earlier burial mounds. Topographic analyses show that the burial was also located on an important ford, and therefore had a prominent location. Significantly, new DNA analyses surprisingly indicate that the two buried individuals actually have a parent-offspring relationship: they are mother and son. The previous interpretation of the Gerdrup grave is thus challenged. This article will present the relevant excavation data and discuss this in the light of the new analyses.

Author Correction: Population genomics of the Viking world

Authors

Ashot Margaryan,Daniel J Lawson,Martin Sikora,Fernando Racimo,Simon Rasmussen,Ida Moltke,Lara M Cassidy,Emil Jørsboe,Andrés Ingason,Mikkel W Pedersen,Thorfinn Korneliussen,Helene Wilhelmson,Magdalena M Buś,Peter de Barros Damgaard,Rui Martiniano,Gabriel Renaud,Claude Bhérer,J Víctor Moreno-Mayar,Anna K Fotakis,Marie Allen,Raili Allmäe,Martyna Molak,Enrico Cappellini,Gabriele Scorrano,Hugh McColl,Alexandra Buzhilova,Allison Fox,Anders Albrechtsen,Berit Schütz,Birgitte Skar,Caroline Arcini,Ceri Falys,Charlotte Hedenstierna Jonson,Dariusz Błaszczyk,Denis Pezhemsky,Gordon Turner-Walker,Hildur Gestsdóttir,Inge Lundstrøm,Ingrid Gustin,Ingrid Mainland,Inna Potekhina,Italo M Muntoni,Jade Cheng,Jesper Stenderup,Jilong Ma,Julie Gibson,Jüri Peets,Jörgen Gustafsson,Katrine H Iversen,Linzi Simpson,Lisa Strand,Louise Loe,Maeve Sikora,Marek Florek,Maria Vretemark,Mark Redknap,Monika Bajka,Tamara Pushkina,Morten Søvsø,Natalia Grigoreva,Tom Christensen,Ole Kastholm,Otto Uldum,Pasquale Favia,Per Holck,Sabine Sten,Símun V Arge,Sturla Ellingvåg,Vayacheslav Moiseyev,Wiesław Bogdanowicz,Yvonne Magnusson,Ludovic Orlando,Peter Pentz,Mads Dengsø Jessen,Anne Pedersen,Mark Collard,Daniel G Bradley,Marie Louise Jørkov,Jette Arneborg,Niels Lynnerup,Neil Price,M Thomas P Gilbert,Morten E Allentoft,Jan Bill,Søren M Sindbæk,Lotte Hedeager,Kristian Kristiansen,Rasmus Nielsen,Thomas Werge,Eske Willerslev

Journal

Nature

Published Date

2021/3/25

In Supplementary Table 1 of this Article, there were typos in the dating estimates of two samples, VK201 and VK203. In the ‘Age’and ‘Finer_ age’columns both samples were listed as ‘Viking’and ‘10th century CE’, respectively, whereas they should be listed as ‘Iron Age’, with finer estimates of ‘5–6th century CE’(VK201) and ‘1–7th century CE’(VK203). The Supplementary Information of the original Article has been corrected online.

Historical population declines prompted significant genomic erosion in the northern and southern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum)

Authors

Fátima Sánchez‐Barreiro,Shyam Gopalakrishnan,Jazmín Ramos‐Madrigal,Michael V Westbury,Marc de Manuel,Ashot Margaryan,Marta M Ciucani,Filipe G Vieira,Yannis Patramanis,Daniela C Kalthoff,Zena Timmons,Thomas Sicheritz‐Pontén,Love Dalén,Oliver A Ryder,Guojie Zhang,Tomás Marquès‐Bonet,Yoshan Moodley,M Thomas P Gilbert

Journal

Molecular Ecology

Published Date

2021/12

Large vertebrates are extremely sensitive to anthropogenic pressure, and their populations are declining fast. The white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum) is a paradigmatic case: this African megaherbivore has suffered a remarkable decline in the last 150 years due to human activities. Its subspecies, the northern (NWR) and the southern white rhinoceros (SWR), however, underwent opposite fates: the NWR vanished quickly, while the SWR recovered after the severe decline. Such demographic events are predicted to have an erosive effect at the genomic level, linked to the extirpation of diversity, and increased genetic drift and inbreeding. However, there is little empirical data available to directly reconstruct the subtleties of such processes in light of distinct demographic histories. Therefore, we generated a whole‐genome, temporal data set consisting of 52 resequenced white rhinoceros genomes, representing …

Origin and diffusion of human Y chromosome haplogroup J1-M267

Authors

Hovhannes Sahakyan,Ashot Margaryan,Lauri Saag,Monika Karmin,Rodrigo Flores,Marc Haber,Alena Kushniarevich,Zaruhi Khachatryan,Ardeshir Bahmanimehr,Jüri Parik,Tatiana Karafet,Bayazit Yunusbayev,Tuuli Reisberg,Anu Solnik,Ene Metspalu,Anahit Hovhannisyan,Elza K Khusnutdinova,Doron M Behar,Mait Metspalu,Levon Yepiskoposyan,Siiri Rootsi,Richard Villems

Journal

Scientific reports

Published Date

2021/3/23

Human Y chromosome haplogroup J1-M267 is a common male lineage in West Asia. One high-frequency region—encompassing the Arabian Peninsula, southern Mesopotamia, and the southern Levant—resides ~ 2000 km away from the other one found in the Caucasus. The region between them, although has a lower frequency, nevertheless demonstrates high genetic diversity. Studies associate this haplogroup with the spread of farming from the Fertile Crescent to Europe, the spread of mobile pastoralism in the desert regions of the Arabian Peninsula, the history of the Jews, and the spread of Islam. Here, we study past human male demography in West Asia with 172 high-coverage whole Y chromosome sequences and 889 genotyped samples of haplogroup J1-M267. We show that this haplogroup evolved ~ 20,000 years ago somewhere in northwestern Iran, the Caucasus, the Armenian Highland, and …

Ancient and modern genomes unravel the evolutionary history of the rhinoceros family

Authors

Shanlin Liu,Michael V Westbury,Nicolas Dussex,Kieren J Mitchell,Mikkel-Holger S Sinding,Peter D Heintzman,David A Duchêne,Joshua D Kapp,Johanna von Seth,Holly Heiniger,Fátima Sánchez-Barreiro,Ashot Margaryan,Remi André-Olsen,Binia De Cahsan,Guanliang Meng,Chentao Yang,Lei Chen,Tom Van der Valk,Yoshan Moodley,Kees Rookmaaker,Michael W Bruford,Oliver Ryder,Cynthia Steiner,Linda GR Bruins-van Sonsbeek,Sergey Vartanyan,Chunxue Guo,Alan Cooper,Pavel Kosintsev,Irina Kirillova,Adrian M Lister,Tomas Marques-Bonet,Shyam Gopalakrishnan,Robert R Dunn,Eline D Lorenzen,Beth Shapiro,Guojie Zhang,Pierre-Olivier Antoine,Love Dalén,M Thomas P Gilbert

Journal

Cell

Published Date

2021/9/16

Only five species of the once-diverse Rhinocerotidae remain, making the reconstruction of their evolutionary history a challenge to biologists since Darwin. We sequenced genomes from five rhinoceros species (three extinct and two living), which we compared to existing data from the remaining three living species and a range of outgroups. We identify an early divergence between extant African and Eurasian lineages, resolving a key debate regarding the phylogeny of extant rhinoceroses. This early Miocene (∼16 million years ago [mya]) split post-dates the land bridge formation between the Afro-Arabian and Eurasian landmasses. Our analyses also show that while rhinoceros genomes in general exhibit low levels of genome-wide diversity, heterozygosity is lowest and inbreeding is highest in the modern species. These results suggest that while low genetic diversity is a long-term feature of the family, it has been …

Mitochondrial genomes of Danish vertebrate species generated for the national DNA reference database, DNAmark

Authors

Ashot Margaryan,Christina Lehmkuhl Noer,Stine Raith Richter,Marlene Elise Restrup,Julie Lee Bülow‐Hansen,Frederik Leerhøi,Emilia Marie Rolander Langkjær,Shyam Gopalakrishnan,Christian Carøe,M Thomas P Gilbert,Kristine Bohmann

Journal

Environmental DNA

Published Date

2021/3

Biodiversity monitoring projects using environmental DNA techniques are becoming increasingly widespread. However, these techniques depend heavily on the quality and richness of the available DNA reference database against which the DNA sequences are queried. To create a comprehensive DNA sequence database for future DNA‐based biodiversity assessments in Denmark, a national DNA reference database, DNAmark, was established, which contains organellar and/or nuclear reference data from vouchered museum species of plants, animals, and fungi from Denmark. Here, we present full or partial mitochondrial genomes of 182 Danish vertebrate species representing ca. 22% of vertebrate species observed in Denmark. Further, we demonstrate that storage conditions of the specimens accounted for ca. 50% of the total variation in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) preservation while the age of museum …

See List of Professors in Ashot Margaryan University(Københavns Universitet)

Ashot Margaryan FAQs

What is Ashot Margaryan's h-index at Københavns Universitet?

The h-index of Ashot Margaryan has been 27 since 2020 and 27 in total.

What are Ashot Margaryan's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Population genomics of post-glacial western Eurasia

A genomic exploration of the possible de-extirpation of the Zanzibar leopard

Historic sampling of a vanishing beast: population structure and diversity in the black rhinoceros

Genomic ancestry, diet and microbiomes of Upper Palaeolithic hunter-gatherers from San Teodoro cave

The population genomic legacy of the second plague pandemic

Complete mitochondrial genomes from museum specimens clarify millipede evolution in the Eastern Arc Mountains

Population genomics of stone age eurasia

Genome-scale sequencing and analysis of human, wolf, and bison DNA from 25,000-year-old sediment

...

are the top articles of Ashot Margaryan at Københavns Universitet.

What are Ashot Margaryan's research interests?

The research interests of Ashot Margaryan are: Genetics

What is Ashot Margaryan's total number of citations?

Ashot Margaryan has 6,884 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Ashot Margaryan?

The co-authors of Ashot Margaryan are Eske Willerslev, Andrea Manica, Kristian Kristiansen, Robert A. Foley, Morten E. Allentoft, martin sikora.

    Co-Authors

    H-index: 141
    Eske Willerslev

    Eske Willerslev

    Københavns Universitet

    H-index: 79
    Andrea Manica

    Andrea Manica

    University of Cambridge

    H-index: 59
    Kristian Kristiansen

    Kristian Kristiansen

    Göteborgs universitet

    H-index: 54
    Robert A. Foley

    Robert A. Foley

    University of Cambridge

    H-index: 52
    Morten E. Allentoft

    Morten E. Allentoft

    Københavns Universitet

    H-index: 48
    martin sikora

    martin sikora

    Københavns Universitet

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