| Literature DB >> 32183622 |
Manyu Ding1,2,3,4, Tianyi Wang1,5, Albert Min-Shan Ko1, Honghai Chen5, Hui Wang6,7, Guanghui Dong8, Hongliang Lu9, Wei He10, Shargan Wangdue10, Haibing Yuan11, Yuanhong He9, Linhai Cai12, Zujun Chen10, Guangliang Hou13, Dongju Zhang8, Zhaoxia Zhang1, Peng Cao1, Qingyan Dai1, Xiaotian Feng1, Ming Zhang1, Hongru Wang1, Melinda A Yang1,14, Qiaomei Fu1,3,4.
Abstract
The clarification of the genetic origins of present-day Tibetans requires an understanding of their past relationships with the ancient populations of the Tibetan Plateau. Here we successfully sequenced 67 complete mitochondrial DNA genomes of 5200 to 300-year-old humans from the plateau. Apart from identifying two ancient plateau lineages (haplogroups D4j1b and M9a1a1c1b1a) that suggest some ancestors of Tibetans came from low-altitude areas 4750 to 2775 years ago and that some were involved in an expansion of people moving between high-altitude areas 2125 to 1100 years ago, we found limited evidence of recent matrilineal continuity on the plateau. Furthermore, deep learning of the ancient data incorporated into simulation models with an accuracy of 97% supports that present-day Tibetan matrilineal ancestry received partial contribution rather than complete continuity from the plateau populations of the last 5200 years.Entities:
Keywords: Tibetan prehistory; ancient DNA; population genetics of humans
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32183622 PMCID: PMC7126037 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2019.2968
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349