追溯苗族--苗语人群的精细人口历史和近期混血情况。

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Zi-Yang Xia, Xingcai Chen, Chuan-Chao Wang, Qiongying Deng
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引用次数: 0

摘要

讲苗语的人(HM)在语言、历史和生存方面的独特性为研究这些因素如何影响遗传结构提供了绝佳的机会。讲苗语的人之间的遗传分化及其种群历史还没有得到很好的描述。在此,我们从 65 个瑶族样本中生成了全基因组数据,并与已发表的数据进行了分析,特别是利用了基于单倍型的方法。我们发现,HM 说话者的精细遗传亚结构与语言分类的对应关系比与地理位置的对应关系更好。特别是,在西苗族人中可以观察到系列创始事件与语言分化之间的相似性。多种证据表明,距今约 500 年的高句丽人与讲西苗语的布努人关系最为密切。一些讲苗语的族群,尤其是布努族,出现了严重的基因瓶颈,这可能在一定程度上与他们长期从事烧垦农业有关。大多数讲 HM 语的人的推断混血时间与明朝统治时期(公元 1368-1644 年)重叠。除了共同的遗传起源外,讲河姆渡话的人的遗传祖先主要与邻近的汉族人和中国南方的泰开语族人共享。总之,我们的分析表明,最近的隔离和混杂事件促成了今天讲河姆渡话的人的遗传种群历史。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Tracing the fine-scale demographic history and recent admixture in Hmong–Mien speakers

The linguistic, historical, and subsistent uniqueness of Hmong–Mien (HM) speakers offers a wonderful opportunity to investigate how these factors impact the genetic structure. The genetic differentiation among HM speakers and their population history are not well characterized. Here, we generate genome-wide data from 65 Yao ethnicity samples and analyze them with published data, particularly by leveraging haplotype-based methods. We determined that the fine-scale genetic substructure of HM speakers corresponds better with linguistic classification than with geography. Particularly, parallels between serial founder events and language differentiations can be observed in West Hmongic speakers. Multiple lines of evidence indicate that ~500-year-old GaoHuaHua individuals are most closely related to West Hmongic-speaking Bunu. The strong genetic bottleneck of some HM-speaking groups, especially Bunu, could potentially be associated with their long-term practice of swidden agriculture to some degree. The inferred admixture dates for most of the HM speakers overlap with the reign of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644 CE). Besides a common genetic origin for HM speakers, their genetic ancestry is shared primarily with neighboring Han Chinese and Tai-Kadai speakers in south China. In conclusion, our analyses reveal that recent isolation and admixture events have contributed to the genetic population history of present-day HM speakers.

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