Lertrit Patcharee, Poolsuwan Samerchai, Thosarat Rachanie, Sanpachudayan Thitima, Boonyarit Hathaichanoke, Chinpaisal Chatchai, Suktitipat Bhoom
Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine, Mahidol University, Bangkok 10700, Thailand.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2008 Dec;137(4):425-40. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20884.
The 360 base-pair fragment in HVS-1 of the mitochondrial genome were determined from ancient human remains excavated at Noen U-loke and Ban Lum-Khao, two Bronze and Iron Age archaeological sites in Northeastern Thailand, radio-carbon dated to circa 3,500-1,500 years BP and 3,200-2,400 years BP, respectively. These two neighboring populations were parts of early agricultural communities prevailing in northeastern Thailand from the fourth millennium BP onwards. The nucleotide sequences of these ancient samples were compared with the sequences of modern samples from various ethnic populations of East and Southeast Asia, encompassing four major linguistic affiliations (Altaic, Sino-Tibetan, Tai-Kadai, and Austroasiatic), to investigate the genetic relationships and history among them. The two ancient samples were most closely related to each other, and next most closely related to the Chao-Bon, an Austroasiatic-speaking group living near the archaeological sites, suggesting that the genetic continuum may have persisted since prehistoric times in situ among the native, perhaps Austroasiatic-speaking population. Tai-Kadai groups formed close affinities among themselves, with a tendency to be more closely related to other Southeast Asian populations than to populations from further north. The Tai-Kadai groups were relatively distant from all groups that have presumably been in Southeast Asia for longer-that is, the two ancient groups and the Austroasiatic-speaking groups, with the exception of the Khmer group. This finding is compatible with the known history of the Thais: their late arrival in Southeast Asia from southern China after the 10th-11th century AD, followed by a period of subjugation under the Khmers.
线粒体基因组高变区1(HVS-1)的360个碱基对片段是从泰国东北部的诺恩乌洛克和班卢姆考这两个青铜时代和铁器时代考古遗址出土的古代人类遗骸中测定的,经放射性碳测定,其年代分别约为公元前3500 - 1500年和公元前3200 - 2400年。这两个相邻的群体是公元前四千年起在泰国东北部盛行的早期农业社区的一部分。将这些古代样本的核苷酸序列与来自东亚和东南亚不同民族群体的现代样本序列进行比较,这些现代样本涵盖四个主要语言分支(阿尔泰语系、汉藏语系、台-卡岱语系和南亚语系),以研究它们之间的遗传关系和历史。这两个古代样本彼此之间关系最为密切,其次与居住在考古遗址附近说南亚语系的超邦群体关系最为密切,这表明遗传连续性可能自史前时代起就在当地、可能是说南亚语系的原住民中持续存在。台-卡岱语系群体内部形成了密切的亲缘关系,与其他东南亚群体的关系往往比与更北方的群体更为密切。台-卡岱语系群体与所有可能在东南亚存在时间更长的群体相对较远,即这两个古代群体和说南亚语系的群体,但高棉群体除外。这一发现与泰国已知的历史相符:他们在公元10至11世纪后从中国南方晚些时候抵达东南亚,随后经历了一段被高棉人征服的时期。