Waldman Yedael Y, Biddanda Arjun, Dubrovsky Maya, Campbell Christopher L, Oddoux Carole, Friedman Eitan, Atzmon Gil, Halperin Eran, Ostrer Harry, Keinan Alon
Department of Biological Statistics and Computational Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 14853, USA.
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, 6997801, Tel Aviv, Israel.
Hum Genet. 2016 Oct;135(10):1127-43. doi: 10.1007/s00439-016-1698-y. Epub 2016 Jul 4.
Cochin Jews form a small and unique community on the Malabar coast in southwest India. While the arrival time of any putative Jewish ancestors of the community has been speculated to have taken place as far back as biblical times (King Solomon's era), a Jewish community in the Malabar coast has been documented only since the 9th century CE. Here, we explore the genetic history of Cochin Jews by collecting and genotyping 21 community members and combining the data with that of 707 individuals from 72 other Indian, Jewish, and Pakistani populations, together with additional individuals from worldwide populations. We applied comprehensive genome-wide analyses based on principal component analysis, F ST, ADMIXTURE, identity-by-descent sharing, admixture linkage disequilibrium decay, haplotype sharing, allele sharing autocorrelation decay and contrasting the X chromosome with the autosomes. We find that, as reported by several previous studies, the genetics of Cochin Jews resembles that of local Indian populations. However, we also identify considerable Jewish genetic ancestry that is not present in any other Indian or Pakistani populations (with the exception of the Jewish Bene Israel, which we characterized previously). Combined, Cochin Jews have both Jewish and Indian ancestry. Specifically, we detect a significant recent Jewish gene flow into this community 13-22 generations (~470-730 years) ago, with contributions from Yemenite, Sephardi, and Middle-Eastern Jews, in accordance with historical records. Genetic analyses also point to high endogamy and a recent population bottleneck in this population, which might explain the increased prevalence of some recessive diseases in Cochin Jews.
科钦犹太人是印度西南部马拉巴尔海岸一个规模小且独特的群体。虽然据推测该群体任何假定的犹太祖先早在圣经时代(所罗门王时代)就已抵达,但马拉巴尔海岸的犹太群体直到公元9世纪才有文献记载。在此,我们通过收集21名群体成员的样本并进行基因分型,将这些数据与来自其他72个印度、犹太和巴基斯坦群体的707名个体的数据以及来自全球其他群体的额外个体数据相结合,来探究科钦犹太人的遗传历史。我们基于主成分分析、F ST、ADMIXTURE、同源性共享、混合连锁不平衡衰减、单倍型共享、等位基因共享自相关衰减以及将X染色体与常染色体进行对比,应用了全面的全基因组分析。我们发现,正如之前几项研究所报道的,科钦犹太人的遗传学特征与当地印度人群体相似。然而,我们也识别出相当数量的犹太遗传血统,这在任何其他印度或巴基斯坦群体中都不存在(除了我们之前描述过的贝内以色列犹太人)。综合来看,科钦犹太人同时拥有犹太和印度血统。具体而言,我们检测到在13 - 22代(约470 - 730年)前有显著的近期犹太基因流入该群体,这与历史记录相符,其贡献来自也门犹太人、西班牙系犹太人以及中东犹太人。遗传分析还指出该群体存在高度的族内通婚以及近期的种群瓶颈,这可能解释了科钦犹太人中某些隐性疾病患病率增加的原因。