| Literature DB >> 32234956 |
Ozgur Taskent1, Yen Lung Lin2, Ioannis Patramanis3, Pavlos Pavlidis3, Omer Gokcumen4.
Abstract
The time, extent, and genomic effect of the introgressions from archaic humans into ancestors of extant human populations remain some of the most exciting venues of population genetics research in the past decade. Several studies have shown population-specific signatures of introgression events from Neanderthals, Denisovans, and potentially other unknown hominin populations in different human groups. Moreover, it was shown that these introgression events may have contributed to phenotypic variation in extant humans, with biomedical and evolutionary consequences. In this study, we present a comprehensive analysis of the unusually divergent haplotypes in the Eurasian genomes and show that they can be traced back to multiple introgression events. In parallel, we document hundreds of deletion polymorphisms shared with Neanderthals. A locus-specific analysis of one such shared deletion suggests the existence of a direct introgression event from the Altai Neanderthal lineage into the ancestors of extant East Asian populations. Overall, our study is in agreement with the emergent notion that various Neanderthal populations contributed to extant human genetic variation in a population-specific manner.Entities:
Keywords: Copy number variation; genomic structural variation; haplotype blocks; introgression; selection
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32234956 PMCID: PMC7268982 DOI: 10.1534/genetics.120.303167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genetics ISSN: 0016-6731 Impact factor: 4.562