Mountain J L, Hebert J M, Bhattacharyya S, Underhill P A, Ottolenghi C, Gadgil M, Cavalli-Sforza L L
Department of Genetics, Stanford University, CA, USA.
Am J Hum Genet. 1995 Apr;56(4):979-92.
The demographic history of India was examined by comparing mtDNA sequences obtained from members of three culturally divergent Indian subpopulations (endogamous caste groups). While an inferred tree revealed some clustering according to caste affiliation, there was no clear separation into three genetically distinct groups along caste lines. Comparison of pairwise nucleotide difference distributions, however, did indicate a difference in growth patterns between two of the castes. The Brahmin population appears to have undergone either a rapid expansion or steady growth. The low-ranking Mukri caste, however, may have either maintained a roughly constant population size or undergone multiple bottlenecks during that period. Comparison of the Indian sequences to those obtained from other populations, using a tree, revealed that the Indian sequences, along with all other non-African samples, form a starlike cluster. This cluster may represent a major expansion, possibly originating in southern Asia, taking place at some point after modern humans initially left Africa.
通过比较从三个文化差异较大的印度亚群体(内婚制种姓群体)成员那里获得的线粒体DNA序列,对印度的人口统计学历史进行了研究。虽然推断出的系统树显示出一些根据种姓归属的聚类,但并没有沿着种姓界限清晰地分为三个基因上不同的群体。然而,成对核苷酸差异分布的比较确实表明了两个种姓之间在增长模式上的差异。婆罗门群体似乎经历了快速扩张或稳定增长。然而,低等级的穆克里种姓在那个时期可能保持了大致恒定的人口规模,或者经历了多次瓶颈。使用系统树将印度序列与从其他群体获得的序列进行比较,结果显示印度序列与所有其他非非洲样本一起形成了一个星状聚类。这个聚类可能代表了一次主要的扩张,可能起源于南亚,发生在现代人类最初离开非洲之后的某个时间点。