Thanseem Ismail, Thangaraj Kumarasamy, Chaubey Gyaneshwer, Singh Vijay Kumar, Bhaskar Lakkakula V K S, Reddy B Mohan, Reddy Alla G, Singh Lalji
Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology, Uppal Road, Hyderabad- 500 007, India.
BMC Genet. 2006 Aug 7;7:42. doi: 10.1186/1471-2156-7-42.
India is a country with enormous social and cultural diversity due to its positioning on the crossroads of many historic and pre-historic human migrations. The hierarchical caste system in the Hindu society dominates the social structure of the Indian populations. The origin of the caste system in India is a matter of debate with many linguists and anthropologists suggesting that it began with the arrival of Indo-European speakers from Central Asia about 3500 years ago. Previous genetic studies based on Indian populations failed to achieve a consensus in this regard. We analysed the Y-chromosome and mitochondrial DNA of three tribal populations of southern India, compared the results with available data from the Indian subcontinent and tried to reconstruct the evolutionary history of Indian caste and tribal populations.
No significant difference was observed in the mitochondrial DNA between Indian tribal and caste populations, except for the presence of a higher frequency of west Eurasian-specific haplogroups in the higher castes, mostly in the north western part of India. On the other hand, the study of the Indian Y lineages revealed distinct distribution patterns among caste and tribal populations. The paternal lineages of Indian lower castes showed significantly closer affinity to the tribal populations than to the upper castes. The frequencies of deep-rooted Y haplogroups such as M89, M52, and M95 were higher in the lower castes and tribes, compared to the upper castes.
The present study suggests that the vast majority (> 98%) of the Indian maternal gene pool, consisting of Indio-European and Dravidian speakers, is genetically more or less uniform. Invasions after the late Pleistocene settlement might have been mostly male-mediated. However, Y-SNP data provides compelling genetic evidence for a tribal origin of the lower caste populations in the subcontinent. Lower caste groups might have originated with the hierarchical divisions that arose within the tribal groups with the spread of Neolithic agriculturalists, much earlier than the arrival of Aryan speakers. The Indo-Europeans established themselves as upper castes among this already developed caste-like class structure within the tribes.
由于处于众多历史和史前人类迁徙的十字路口,印度是一个社会和文化多样性极其丰富的国家。印度教社会中的等级种姓制度主导着印度人口的社会结构。印度种姓制度的起源存在争议,许多语言学家和人类学家认为它始于约3500年前从中亚而来的说印欧语系语言的人。此前基于印度人口的基因研究在这方面未能达成共识。我们分析了印度南部三个部落群体的Y染色体和线粒体DNA,将结果与印度次大陆的现有数据进行比较,并试图重建印度种姓和部落群体的进化历史。
印度部落和种姓群体的线粒体DNA没有观察到显著差异,只是在高种姓群体中,主要是印度西北部,具有更高频率的西欧亚特异性单倍群。另一方面,对印度Y染色体谱系的研究揭示了种姓和部落群体之间不同的分布模式。印度低种姓群体的父系谱系与部落群体的亲缘关系明显比与高种姓群体更近。与高种姓群体相比,诸如M89、M52和M95等根源深厚的Y单倍群在低种姓群体和部落中的频率更高。
本研究表明,由说印欧语系语言和达罗毗荼语系语言的人组成的印度母系基因库绝大多数(>98%)在基因上或多或少是统一的。晚更新世定居之后的入侵可能大多是由男性介导的。然而,Y-SNP数据为次大陆低种姓群体的部落起源提供了令人信服的基因证据。低种姓群体可能起源于随着新石器时代农业人群的扩散在部落群体中出现的等级划分,比说雅利安语的人到来要早得多。印欧语系的人在部落中这个已经发展起来的类似种姓的阶级结构中确立了自己作为高种姓的地位。