Hollfelder Nina, Schlebusch Carina M, Günther Torsten, Babiker Hiba, Hassan Hisham Y, Jakobsson Mattias
Dept. of Organismal Biology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Dept. of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena, Germany.
PLoS Genet. 2017 Aug 24;13(8):e1006976. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006976. eCollection 2017 Aug.
Northeast Africa has a long history of human habitation, with fossil-finds from the earliest anatomically modern humans, and housing ancient civilizations. The region is also the gate-way out of Africa, as well as a portal for migration into Africa from Eurasia via the Middle East and the Arabian Peninsula. We investigate the population history of northeast Africa by genotyping ~3.9 million SNPs in 221 individuals from 18 populations sampled in Sudan and South Sudan and combine this data with published genome-wide data from surrounding areas. We find a strong genetic divide between the populations from the northeastern parts of the region (Nubians, central Arab populations, and the Beja) and populations towards the west and south (Nilotes, Darfur and Kordofan populations). This differentiation is mainly caused by a large Eurasian ancestry component of the northeast populations likely driven by migration of Middle Eastern groups followed by admixture that affected the local populations in a north-to-south succession of events. Genetic evidence points to an early admixture event in the Nubians, concurrent with historical contact between North Sudanese and Arab groups. We estimate the admixture in current-day Sudanese Arab populations to about 700 years ago, coinciding with the fall of Dongola in 1315/1316 AD, a wave of admixture that reached the Darfurian/Kordofanian populations some 400-200 years ago. In contrast to the northeastern populations, the current-day Nilotic populations from the south of the region display little or no admixture from Eurasian groups indicating long-term isolation and population continuity in these areas of northeast Africa.
东北非有着悠久的人类居住历史,有最早解剖学意义上的现代人类的化石发现,还孕育了古老文明。该地区也是走出非洲的门户,同时也是经由中东和阿拉伯半岛从欧亚大陆迁入非洲的通道。我们通过对来自苏丹和南苏丹18个群体的221名个体中的约390万个单核苷酸多态性(SNP)进行基因分型,来研究东北非的人口历史,并将这些数据与周边地区已发表的全基因组数据相结合。我们发现该地区东北部的人群(努比亚人、阿拉伯中部人群和贝贾人)与西部和南部的人群(尼罗特人、达尔富尔人和科尔多凡人群)之间存在强烈的基因差异。这种分化主要是由于东北部人群中大量的欧亚血统成分,这可能是由中东群体的迁移驱动的,随后是混合过程,该过程以从北到南的连续事件影响了当地人群。基因证据表明努比亚人存在早期混合事件,这与北苏丹人和阿拉伯群体之间的历史接触同时发生。我们估计当今苏丹阿拉伯人群体中的混合事件发生在大约700年前,这与公元1315/1316年栋古拉的衰落相吻合,这股混合浪潮在大约400 - 200年前波及到达尔富尔/科尔多凡人群体。与东北部人群形成对比的是,该地区南部当今的尼罗特人群体几乎没有或没有来自欧亚群体的混合,这表明在东北非这些地区长期存在隔离和人口连续性。