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Terminal Pleistocene Alaskan genome reveals first founding population of Native Americans

机译:终端更新世阿拉斯加的基因组揭示了美洲原住民的第一个创始种群

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Despite broad agreement that the Americas were initially populated via Beringia, the land bridge that connected far northeast Asia with northwestern North America during the Pleistocene epoch, when and how the peopling of the Americas occurred remains unresolved(1-5). Analyses of human remains from Late Pleistocene Alaska are important to resolving the timing and dispersal of these populations. The remains of two infants were recovered at Upward Sun River (USR), and have been dated to around 11.5 thousand years ago (ka)(6). Here, by sequencing the USR1 genome to an average coverage of approximately 17 times, we show that USR1 is most closely related to Native Americans, but falls basal to all previously sequenced contemporary and ancient Native Americans(1,7,8). As such, USR1 represents a distinct Ancient Beringian population. Using demographic modelling, we infer that the Ancient Beringian population and ancestors of other Native Americans descended from a single founding population that initially split from East Asians around 36 +/- 1.5 ka, with gene flow persisting until around 25 +/- 1.1 ka. Gene flow from ancient north Eurasians into all Native Americans took place 25-20 ka, with Ancient Beringians branching off around 22-18.1 ka. Our findings support a long-term genetic structure in ancestral Native Americans, consistent with the Beringian 'standstill model'(9). We show that the basal northern and southern Native American branches, to which all other Native Americans belong, diverged around 17.5-14.6 ka, and that this probably occurred south of the North American ice sheets. We also show that after 11.5 ka, some of the northern Native American populations received gene flow from a Siberian population most closely related to Koryaks, but not Palaeo-Eskimos(1), Inuits or Kets(10), and that Native American gene flow into Inuits was through northern and not southern Native American groups(1). Our findings further suggest that the far-northern North American presence of northern Native Americans is from a back migration that replaced or absorbed the initial founding population of Ancient Beringians.
机译:尽管人们普遍认为美洲最初是通过白令海(Beringia)居住的,但在更新世时期,连接远东北亚与西北西北地区的陆桥尚未解决(1-5)。对阿拉斯加晚更新世的人类遗体进行分析对于解决这些种群的时间分布和传播非常重要。在Upward Sun River(USR)上发现了两个婴儿的遗体,其历史可追溯到大约1.15万年前(ka)(6)。在这里,通过对USR1基因组测序的平均覆盖率约为17倍,我们表明USR1与美国原住民关系最密切,但属于所有先前测序的当代和古代美国原住民(1,7,8)。因此,USR1代表着独特的古代白令人口。使用人口模型,我们可以推断出古代白令人口和其他美洲原住民的祖先是从一个创始人口衍生而来的,最初是与东亚人分开的,大约在36 +/- 1.5 ka左右,基因流一直持续到25 +/- 1.1 ka左右。基因从古代北欧亚大陆流向所有美洲原住民,发生时间为25-20 ka,而古代白令人则在22-18.1 ka左右分支。我们的发现支持祖先美洲原住民的长期遗传结构,与白令主义的“停滞模型”相一致(9)。我们显示,所有其他美洲原住民所属的北部和南部原住民基础分支大约在17.5-14.6 ka处分叉,并且这可能发生在北美冰原以南。我们还显示,在11.5 ka之后,一些北美原住民种群从与Koryaks关系最密切的西伯利亚种群中获得了基因流,但从Palaeo-Eskimos(1),因纽特人或Kets(10)中获得的却不是,而美国原住民基因流进入因纽特人的途径是通过北部而非南部美洲原住民组织(1)。我们的发现进一步表明,北美洲原住民在北美洲的存在源于向后迁徙,该迁徙替代或吸收了最初的远古伯灵顿人。

著录项

  • 来源
    《Nature》 |2018年第7687期|203-207|共5页
  • 作者单位

    Univ Copenhagen, Ctr GeoGenet, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, DK-1350 Copenhagen, Denmark;

    Univ Alaska, Dept Anthropol, Fairbanks, AK 99775 USA;

    Univ Copenhagen, Ctr GeoGenet, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, DK-1350 Copenhagen, Denmark;

    Univ Massachusetts, Dept Biostat & Epidemiol, Amherst, MA 01003 USA|Univ Chicago, Dept Ecol & Evolut, 940 E 57Th St, Chicago, IL 60637 USA;

    Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Syst Biol, Ctr Biol Sequence Anal, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark;

    Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Stat, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA|Univ Michigan, Dept Stat, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA;

    Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Stat, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA|Wellcome Trust Sanger Inst, Wellcome Genome Campus, Cambridge CB10 1SA, England;

    Univ Copenhagen, Dept Biol, Bioinformat Ctr, DK-2200 Copenhagen, Denmark;

    Univ Copenhagen, Ctr GeoGenet, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, DK-1350 Copenhagen, Denmark|Univ Lausanne, Dept Computat Biol, Lausanne, Switzerland|Swiss Inst Bioinformat, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland;

    Univ Copenhagen, Ctr GeoGenet, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, DK-1350 Copenhagen, Denmark;

    Univ Alaska, Dept Anthropol, Fairbanks, AK 99775 USA;

    Liverpool John Moores Univ, Res Ctr Evolutionary Anthropol & Palaeoecol, Liverpool L3 3AF, Merseyside, England;

    Univ Illinois, Dept Anthropol, Urbana, IL 61801 USA|Univ Illinois, Carle R Woese Inst Genom Biol, Urbana, IL 61801 USA;

    Univ Copenhagen, Ctr GeoGenet, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, DK-1350 Copenhagen, Denmark;

    Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Stat, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA|Univ Calif Berkeley, Div Comp Sci, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA|Chan Zuckerberg Biohub, San Francisco, CA 94158 USA;

    Univ Copenhagen, Ctr GeoGenet, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, DK-1350 Copenhagen, Denmark|Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Stat, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA|Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Integrat Biol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA;

    Univ Copenhagen, Ctr GeoGenet, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, DK-1350 Copenhagen, Denmark|Southern Methodist Univ, Dept Anthropol, Dallas, TX 75275 USA;

    Univ Copenhagen, Ctr GeoGenet, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, DK-1350 Copenhagen, Denmark|Wellcome Trust Sanger Inst, Wellcome Genome Campus, Cambridge CB10 1SA, England|Univ Cambridge, Dept Zool, Downing St, Cambridge CB2 3EJ, England;

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  • 入库时间 2022-08-18 02:51:26

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