Hammer Michael F, Karafet Tatiana M, Park Hwayong, Omoto Keiichi, Harihara Shinji, Stoneking Mark, Horai Satoshi
Division of Biotechnology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, 85721, USA.
Anthropology Department, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, 85721, USA.
J Hum Genet. 2006;51(1):47-58. doi: 10.1007/s10038-005-0322-0. Epub 2005 Nov 18.
Historic Japanese culture evolved from at least two distinct migrations that originated on the Asian continent. Hunter-gatherers arrived before land bridges were submerged after the last glacial maximum (>12,000 years ago) and gave rise to the Jomon culture, and the Yayoi migration brought wet rice agriculture from Korea beginning approximately 2,300 years ago. A set of 81 Y chromosome single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) was used to trace the origins of Paleolithic and Neolithic components of the Japanese paternal gene pool, and to determine the relative contribution of Jomon and Yayoi Y chromosome lineages to modern Japanese. Our global sample consisted of >2,500 males from 39 Asian populations, including six populations sampled from across the Japanese archipelago. Japanese populations were characterized by the presence of two major (D and O) and two minor (C and N) clades of Y chromosomes, each with several sub-lineages. Haplogroup D chromosomes were present at 34.7% and were distributed in a U-shaped pattern with the highest frequency in the northern Ainu and southern Ryukyuans. In contrast, haplogroup O lineages (51.8%) were distributed in an inverted U-shaped pattern with a maximum frequency on Kyushu. Coalescent analyses of Y chromosome short tandem repeat diversity indicated that haplogroups D and C began their expansions in Japan approximately 20,000 and approximately 12,000 years ago, respectively, while haplogroup O-47z began its expansion only approximately 4,000 years ago. We infer that these patterns result from separate and distinct genetic contributions from both the Jomon and the Yayoi cultures to modern Japanese, with varying levels of admixture between these two populations across the archipelago. The results also support the hypothesis of a Central Asian origin of Jomonese ancestors, and a Southeast Asian origin of the ancestors of the Yayoi, contra previous models based on morphological and genetic evidence.
日本的历史文化至少源于亚洲大陆的两次不同迁徙。在上一个冰期极盛期(超过12000年前)之后陆桥被淹没之前,狩猎采集者就已抵达,他们孕育出了绳纹文化;而大约2300年前开始的弥生迁徙则从朝鲜带来了水稻种植技术。一组81个Y染色体单核苷酸多态性(SNP)被用于追溯日本父系基因库中旧石器时代和新石器时代成分的起源,并确定绳纹和弥生Y染色体谱系对现代日本人的相对贡献。我们的全球样本包括来自39个亚洲人群的2500多名男性,其中包括从日本列岛各地采集的6个群体。日本人群的特点是存在Y染色体的两个主要分支(D和O)和两个次要分支(C和N),每个分支又有几个亚谱系。单倍群D染色体的比例为34.7%,呈U形分布,在北部的阿伊努人和南部的琉球人中频率最高。相比之下,单倍群O谱系(51.8%)呈倒U形分布,在九州频率最高。对Y染色体短串联重复序列多样性的溯祖分析表明,单倍群D和C分别于约20000年前和约12000年前在日本开始扩张,而单倍群O-47z仅在约4000年前开始扩张。我们推断,这些模式是由于绳纹文化和弥生文化对现代日本人的遗传贡献各自独立且不同,且这两个人群在整个列岛的混合程度各异。研究结果还支持了绳纹人祖先起源于中亚、弥生人祖先起源于东南亚的假说,这与之前基于形态学和遗传学证据的模型相悖。