School of Forensic Medicine, Shanxi Medical University, Jinzhong, 030600, China.
Institute of Rare Diseases, West China Hospital of Sichuan University, Sichuan University, Chengdu, 610000, China.
Hum Genomics. 2024 Sep 18;18(1):104. doi: 10.1186/s40246-024-00672-y.
High-quality genomic datasets from under-representative populations are essential for population genetic analysis and medical relevance. Although the Tujia are the most populous ethnic minority in southwestern China, previous genetic studies have been fragmented and only partially reveal their genetic diversity landscape. The understanding of their fine-scale genetic structure and potentially differentiated biological adaptive features remains nascent.
This study aims to explore the demographic history and genetic architecture related to the natural selection of the Tujia people, focusing on a meta-Tujia population from the central regions of the Yangtze River Basin.
Population genetic analyses conducted on the meta-Tujia people indicate that they occupy an intermediate position in the East Asian North-South genetic cline. A close genetic affinity was identified between the Tujia people and neighboring Sinitic-speaking populations. Admixture models suggest that the Tujia can be modeled as a mixture of northern and southern ancestries. Estimates of f/f statistics confirmed the presence of ancestral links to ancient Yellow River Basin millet farmers and the BaBanQinCen-related groups. Furthermore, population-specific natural selection signatures were explored, revealing highly differentiated functional variants between the Tujia and southern indigenous populations, including genes associated with hair morphology (e.g., EDAR) and skin pigmentation (e.g., SLC24A5). Additionally, both shared and unique selection signatures were identified among ethnically diverse but geographically adjacent populations, highlighting their extensive admixture and the biological adaptations introduced by this admixture.
The study unveils significant population movements and genetic admixture among the Tujia and other ethno-linguistically diverse East Asian groups, elucidating the differentiated adaptation processes across geographically diverse populations from the current genetic landscape.
来自代表性不足人群的高质量基因组数据集对于群体遗传分析和医学相关性至关重要。尽管土家族是中国西南部人口最多的少数民族,但之前的遗传研究较为零散,仅部分揭示了其遗传多样性景观。对于他们精细遗传结构和潜在分化的生物适应性特征的理解仍处于起步阶段。
本研究旨在探索与土家族自然选择相关的人口历史和遗传结构,重点关注来自长江流域中部地区的元土家族人群。
对元土家族人群进行的群体遗传分析表明,他们处于东亚南北遗传梯度的中间位置。土家族人与邻近的汉藏语系人群具有密切的遗传亲和力。混合模型表明,土家族可以被建模为北方和南方祖先的混合物。f/f 统计量的估计证实了与古代黄河流域小米农民和 BaBanQinCen 相关群体的祖先联系。此外,还探索了人群特异性的自然选择特征,揭示了土家族与南方土著人群之间高度分化的功能变体,包括与毛发形态相关的基因(如 EDAR)和皮肤色素沉着相关的基因(如 SLC24A5)。此外,在具有不同种族但地理位置相邻的人群中,还确定了共享和独特的选择特征,突出了他们广泛的混合以及这种混合带来的生物适应性。
该研究揭示了土家族与其他东亚语系多样的族群之间的重要人口流动和遗传混合,阐明了当前遗传景观中地理分布广泛的人群之间的分化适应过程。