Literature DB >> 33555039

Shared paternal ancestry of Han, Tai-Kadai-speaking, and Austronesian-speaking populations as revealed by the high resolution phylogeny of O1a-M119 and distribution of its sub-lineages within China.

Jin Sun1,2, Ying-Xiang Li2, Peng-Cheng Ma3, Shi Yan4, Hui-Zhen Cheng2, Zhi-Quan Fan2, Xiao-Hua Deng2,5, Kai Ru6, Chuan-Chao Wang2, Gang Chen7, Lan-Hai Wei2,8.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this research was to explore the origin, diversification, and demographic history of O1a-M119 over the past 10,000 years, as well as its role during the formation of East Asian and Southeast Asian populations, particularly the Han, Tai-Kadai-speaking, and Austronesian-speaking populations.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Y-chromosome sequences (n = 141) of the O1a-M119 lineage, including 17 newly generated in this study, were used to reconstruct a revised phylogenetic tree with age estimates, and identify sub-lineages. The geographic distribution of 12 O1a-M119 sub-lineages was summarized, based on 7325 O1a-M119 individuals identified among 60,009 Chinese males.
RESULTS: A revised phylogenetic tree, age estimation, and distribution maps indicated continuous expansion of haplogroup O1a-M119 over the past 10,000 years, and differences in demographic history across geographic regions. We propose several sub-lineages of O1a-M119 as founding paternal lineages of Han, Tai-Kadai-speaking, and Austronesian-speaking populations. The sharing of several young O1a-M119 sub-lineages with expansion times less than 6000 years between these three population groups supports a partial common ancestry for them in the Neolithic Age; however, the paternal genetic divergence pattern is much more complex than previous hypotheses based on ethnology, archeology, and linguistics. DISCUSSION: Our analyses contribute to a better understanding of the demographic history of O1a-M119 sub-lineages over the past 10,000 years during the emergence of Han, Austronesians, Tai-Kadai-speaking populations. The data described in this study will assist in understanding of the history of Han, Tai-Kadai-speaking, and Austronesian-speaking populations from ethnology, archeology, and linguistic perspectives in the future.
© 2021 Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Keywords:  Austronesian-speaking populations; Han; O1a-M119; Tai-Kadai-speaking populations; Y chromosome

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33555039     DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.24240

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol        ISSN: 0002-9483            Impact factor:   2.868


  2 in total

1.  Fine-Scale Population Admixture Landscape of Tai-Kadai-Speaking Maonan in Southwest China Inferred From Genome-Wide SNP Data.

Authors:  Jing Chen; Guanglin He; Zheng Ren; Qiyan Wang; Yubo Liu; Hongling Zhang; Meiqing Yang; Han Zhang; Jingyan Ji; Jing Zhao; Jianxin Guo; Jinwen Chen; Kongyang Zhu; Xiaomin Yang; Rui Wang; Hao Ma; Le Tao; Yilan Liu; Qu Shen; Wenjiao Yang; Chuan-Chao Wang; Jiang Huang
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2022-02-17       Impact factor: 4.599

2.  Episodes of Diversification and Isolation in Island Southeast Asian and Near Oceanian Male Lineages.

Authors:  Monika Karmin; Rodrigo Flores; Lauri Saag; Georgi Hudjashov; Nicolas Brucato; Chelzie Crenna-Darusallam; Maximilian Larena; Phillip L Endicott; Mattias Jakobsson; J Stephen Lansing; Herawati Sudoyo; Matthew Leavesley; Mait Metspalu; François-Xavier Ricaut; Murray P Cox
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2022-03-02       Impact factor: 16.240

  2 in total

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