Human Evolution, Department of Organismal Biology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
Palaeo-Research Institute, University of Johannesburg, Auckland Park, South Africa.
Mol Biol Evol. 2019 Sep 1;36(9):1849-1861. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msz089.
Southern African indigenous groups, traditionally hunter-gatherers (San) and herders (Khoekhoe), are commonly referred to as "Khoe-San" populations and have a long history in southern Africa. Their ancestors were largely isolated up until ∼2,000 years ago before the arrival of pastoralists and farmers in southern Africa. Assessing relationships among regional Khoe-San groups has been challenging due to admixture with immigrant populations that obscure past population affinities and gene flow among these autochthonous communities. We re-evaluate a combined genome-wide data set of previously published southern Africa Khoe-San populations in conjunction with novel data from Khoe-San individuals collected in Xade (Central Kalahari Game Reserve, Botswana) prior to their resettlement outside the reserve. After excluding regions in the genome that trace their ancestry to recent migrant groups, the genetic diversity of 20 Khoe-San groups fitted an isolation-by-distance model. Even though isolation-by-distance explained most genetic affinities between the different autochthonous groups, additional signals of contact between Khoe-San groups could be detected. For instance, we found stronger genetic affinities, than what would be explained by isolation-by-distance gene flow, between the two geographically separated Khoe-San groups, who speak branches of the Kx'a-language family (ǂHoan and Ju). We also scanned the genome-wide data for signals of adaptive gene flow from farmers/herders into Khoe-San groups and identified a number of genomic regions potentially introduced by the arrival of the new groups. This study provides a comprehensive picture of affinities among Khoe-San groups, prior to the arrival of recent migrants, and found that these affinities are primarily determined by the geographic landscape.
南非本土群体,传统上是狩猎采集者(桑人)和牧民(科伊科伊人),通常被称为“科伊桑人”群体,在南非有着悠久的历史。他们的祖先在大约 2000 年前牧民和农民到达南非之前,基本上是孤立的。由于与移民群体的混合,这些群体之间的关系评估一直具有挑战性,这掩盖了过去这些本土社区之间的种群亲缘关系和基因流动。我们重新评估了一个以前发表的南非科伊桑人群体的全基因组数据集,同时结合了在博茨瓦纳中部卡拉哈里禁猎区(Xade)的科伊桑个体的新数据,这些个体在重新安置到保护区外之前就在那里收集。在排除了基因组中追溯到最近移民群体的祖先的区域后,20 个科伊桑群体的遗传多样性符合距离隔离模型。尽管距离隔离解释了不同本土群体之间的大部分遗传亲缘关系,但仍能检测到科伊桑群体之间接触的额外信号。例如,我们发现两个地理位置上分离的科伊桑群体之间存在更强的遗传亲缘关系,这比隔离距离基因流所能解释的亲缘关系更强,这两个群体说的是 Kx'a 语系的分支(ǂHoan 和 Ju)。我们还在全基因组数据中扫描了来自农民/牧民进入科伊桑群体的适应性基因流动的信号,并确定了一些可能是由新群体到来引入的基因组区域。这项研究提供了一个全面的科伊桑人族群在最近移民到达之前的亲缘关系图,并发现这些亲缘关系主要是由地理景观决定的。