%0 Journal Article %T Ancient DNA reveals kinship burial patterns of a pre-Columbian Andean community %A Mateusz Baca %A Karolina Doan %A Maciej Sobczyk %A Anna Stankovic %A Piotr Weglenski %J BMC Genetics %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2156-13-30 %X The remains of forty-one individuals were analyzed with both uniparental (mtDNA, Y¨Cchromosome) and biparental (autosomal microsatellites) markers. Reproducible HVRI sequences, autosomal and Y chromosomal STR profiles were obtained for 24, 16 and 11 individuals, respectively. Mitochondrial DNA diversity was comparable to that of ancient and contemporary Andean populations. The Tompullo 2 population exhibited the closest relationship with the modern population from the same region. A kinship analysis revealed complex pattern of relations within and between the graves. However mean relatedness coefficients regarding the pairs of individuals buried in the same grave were significantly higher than those regarding pairs buried in different graves. The Y chromosome profiles of 11 males suggest that only members of one male line were buried in the same grave.Genetic investigation of the population that inhabited Tompullo 2 site shows continuity between pre-Columbian and modern Native Amerindian populations inhabiting the Arequipa region. This suggests that no major demographic processes have influenced the mitochondrial DNA diversity of these populations during the past five hundred years. The kinship analysis involving uni- and biparental markers suggests that the community that inhabited the Tompullo 2 site was organized into extended family groups that were buried in different graves. This finding is in congruence with known models of social organization of Andean communities. %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2156/13/30/abstract