Instituto de Patologia e Imunologia Molecular da Universidade do Porto, Portugal.
Am J Hum Genet. 2012 Feb 10;90(2):347-55. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2011.12.010. Epub 2012 Jan 26.
A major unanswered question regarding the dispersal of modern humans around the world concerns the geographical site of the first human steps outside of Africa. The "southern coastal route" model predicts that the early stages of the dispersal took place when people crossed the Red Sea to southern Arabia, but genetic evidence has hitherto been tenuous. We have addressed this question by analyzing the three minor west-Eurasian haplogroups, N1, N2, and X. These lineages branch directly from the first non-African founder node, the root of haplogroup N, and coalesce to the time of the first successful movement of modern humans out of Africa, ∼60 thousand years (ka) ago. We sequenced complete mtDNA genomes from 85 Southwest Asian samples carrying these haplogroups and compared them with a database of 300 European examples. The results show that these minor haplogroups have a relict distribution that suggests an ancient ancestry within the Arabian Peninsula, and they most likely spread from the Gulf Oasis region toward the Near East and Europe during the pluvial period 55-24 ka ago. This pattern suggests that Arabia was indeed the first staging post in the spread of modern humans around the world.
一个关于现代人在世界各地扩散的重大未解决问题是,第一次走出非洲的人类在地理上的地点。“南部沿海路线”模型预测,扩散的早期阶段发生在人们穿过红海到达阿拉伯半岛南部时,但遗传证据迄今为止一直很薄弱。我们通过分析三个次要的西欧亚单倍群 N1、N2 和 X 来解决这个问题。这些谱系直接从第一个非非洲创始节点分支,即单倍群 N 的根,汇聚到现代人第一次成功走出非洲的时间,约 6 万年前。我们从携带这些单倍群的 85 个西南亚样本中测序了完整的 mtDNA 基因组,并将其与 300 个欧洲样本的数据库进行了比较。结果表明,这些次要的单倍群具有古老的分布,表明它们在阿拉伯半岛有古老的祖先,它们很可能在 5.5 万至 2.4 万年前的降雨期从海湾绿洲地区向近东和欧洲传播。这种模式表明,阿拉伯半岛确实是现代人在世界各地扩散的第一个中转站。