Mondal Mayukh, Bergström Anders, Xue Yali, Calafell Francesc, Laayouni Hafid, Casals Ferran, Majumder Partha P, Tyler-Smith Chris, Bertranpetit Jaume
Institute of Evolutionary Biology (CSIC-UPF), Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Doctor Aiguader 88 (PRBB), 08003, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge, CB10 1SA,, UK.
Hum Genet. 2017 May;136(5):499-510. doi: 10.1007/s00439-017-1800-0. Epub 2017 Apr 25.
We present 42 new Y-chromosomal sequences from diverse Indian tribal and non-tribal populations, including the Jarawa and Onge from the Andaman Islands, which are analysed within a calibrated Y-chromosomal phylogeny incorporating South Asian (in total 305 individuals) and worldwide (in total 1286 individuals) data from the 1000 Genomes Project. In contrast to the more ancient ancestry in the South than in the North that has been claimed, we detected very similar coalescence times within Northern and Southern non-tribal Indian populations. A closest neighbour analysis in the phylogeny showed that Indian populations have an affinity towards Southern European populations and that the time of divergence from these populations substantially predated the Indo-European migration into India, probably reflecting ancient shared ancestry rather than the Indo-European migration, which had little effect on Indian male lineages. Among the tribal populations, the Birhor (Austro-Asiatic-speaking) and Irula (Dravidian-speaking) are the nearest neighbours of South Asian non-tribal populations, with a common origin in the last few millennia. In contrast, the Riang (Tibeto-Burman-speaking) and Andamanese have their nearest neighbour lineages in East Asia. The Jarawa and Onge shared haplogroup D lineages with each other within the last ~7000 years, but had diverged from Japanese haplogroup D Y-chromosomes ~53000 years ago, most likely by a split from a shared ancestral population. This analysis suggests that Indian populations have complex ancestry which cannot be explained by a single expansion model.
我们展示了来自印度不同部落和非部落人群的42个新的Y染色体序列,包括来自安达曼群岛的贾拉瓦人和翁格人,这些序列是在一个经过校准的Y染色体系统发育树中进行分析的,该系统发育树纳入了来自1000基因组计划的南亚(共305人)和全球(共1286人)的数据。与所声称的南方比北方有更古老的祖先不同,我们在印度北方和南方的非部落人群中检测到了非常相似的合并时间。系统发育树中的最近邻分析表明,印度人群与南欧人群有亲缘关系,并且与这些人群的分化时间大大早于印欧人向印度的迁徙,这可能反映了古老的共同祖先,而不是对印度男性谱系影响很小的印欧人迁徙。在部落人群中,比尔霍尔人(说南亚语系)和伊鲁拉人(说达罗毗荼语系)是南亚非部落人群的最近邻,在过去几千年中有共同的起源。相比之下,里昂人(说藏缅语系)和安达曼人与东亚的最近邻谱系有关。贾拉瓦人和翁格人在过去约7000年内彼此共享单倍群D谱系,但在约53000年前就与日本单倍群D Y染色体分化了,很可能是从一个共同的祖先群体中分裂出来的。这项分析表明,印度人群有着复杂的祖先,无法用单一的扩张模型来解释。