Quintana-Murci Lluís, Quach Hélène, Harmant Christine, Luca Francesca, Massonnet Blandine, Patin Etienne, Sica Lucas, Mouguiama-Daouda Patrick, Comas David, Tzur Shay, Balanovsky Oleg, Kidd Kenneth K, Kidd Judith R, van der Veen Lolke, Hombert Jean-Marie, Gessain Antoine, Verdu Paul, Froment Alain, Bahuchet Serge, Heyer Evelyne, Dausset Jean, Salas Antonio, Behar Doron M
Human Evolutionary Genetics Unit, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique URA3012, Institut Pasteur, 75015 Paris, France.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Feb 5;105(5):1596-601. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0711467105. Epub 2008 Jan 23.
Two groups of populations with completely different lifestyles-the Pygmy hunter-gatherers and the Bantu-speaking farmers-coexist in Central Africa. We investigated the origins of these two groups and the interactions between them, by analyzing mtDNA variation in 1,404 individuals from 20 farming populations and 9 Pygmy populations from Central Africa, with the aim of shedding light on one of the most fascinating cultural transitions in human evolution (the transition from hunting and gathering to agriculture). Our data indicate that this region was colonized gradually, with an initial L1c-rich ancestral population ultimately giving rise to current-day farmers, who display various L1c clades, and to Pygmies, in whom L1c1a is the only surviving clade. Detailed phylogenetic analysis of complete mtDNA sequences for L1c1a showed this clade to be autochthonous to Central Africa, with its most recent branches shared between farmers and Pygmies. Coalescence analyses revealed that these two groups arose through a complex evolutionary process characterized by (i) initial divergence of the ancestors of contemporary Pygmies from an ancestral Central African population no more than approximately 70,000 years ago, (ii) a period of isolation between the two groups, accounting for their phenotypic differences, (iii) long-standing asymmetric maternal gene flow from Pygmies to the ancestors of the farming populations, beginning no more than approximately 40,000 years ago and persisting until a few thousand years ago, and (iv) enrichment of the maternal gene pool of the ancestors of the farming populations by the arrival and/or subsequent demographic expansion of L0a, L2, and L3 carriers.
在中非,生活方式截然不同的两类人群——俾格米狩猎采集者和说班图语的农民——共存。我们通过分析来自中非20个农业群体和9个俾格米群体的1404名个体的线粒体DNA(mtDNA)变异,研究了这两类人群的起源以及他们之间的相互作用,旨在阐明人类进化过程中最引人入胜的文化转变之一(从狩猎采集到农业的转变)。我们的数据表明,该地区是逐步被殖民的,最初富含L1c的祖先群体最终衍生出了如今的农民,他们呈现出各种L1c分支,同时也衍生出了俾格米人,在俾格米人中L1c1a是唯一留存的分支。对L1c1a完整mtDNA序列的详细系统发育分析表明,这个分支原产于中非,其最近的分支在农民和俾格米人之间共享。溯祖分析表明,这两类人群是通过一个复杂的进化过程形成的,其特征包括:(i)当代俾格米人的祖先在不超过约7万年前从一个中非祖先群体中初步分化出来;(ii)这两类人群之间存在一段隔离期,这解释了他们的表型差异;(iii)从大约4万年前开始,一直持续到几千年前,俾格米人向农业群体的祖先长期存在不对称的母系基因流动;(iv)L0a、L2和L3携带者的到来和/或随后的人口扩张丰富了农业群体祖先的母系基因库。