The story of the lost twins: decoding the genetic identities of the Kumhar and Kurcha populations from the Indian subcontinent.

IF 2.9 Q2 Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology BMC Genetics Pub Date : 2020-10-22 DOI:10.1186/s12863-020-00919-2
Ranajit Das, Vladimir A Ivanisenko, Anastasia A Anashkina, Priyanka Upadhyai
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Background: The population structure of the Indian subcontinent is a tapestry of extraordinary diversity characterized by the amalgamation of autochthonous and immigrant ancestries and rigid enforcement of sociocultural stratification. Here we investigated the genetic origin and population history of the Kumhars, a group of people who inhabit large parts of northern India. We compared 27 previously published Kumhar SNP genotype data sampled from Uttar Pradesh in north India to various modern day and ancient populations.

Results: Various approaches such as Principal Component Analysis (PCA), Admixture, TreeMix concurred that Kumhars have high ASI ancestry, minimal Steppe component and high genomic proximity to the Kurchas, a small and relatively little-known population found ~ 2500 km away in Kerala, south India. Given the same, biogeographical mapping using Geographic Population Structure (GPS) assigned most Kumhar samples in areas neighboring to those where Kurchas are found in south India.

Conclusions: We hypothesize that the significant genomic similarity between two apparently distinct modern-day Indian populations that inhabit well separated geographical areas with no known overlapping history or links, likely alludes to their common origin during or post the decline of the Indus Valley Civilization (estimated by ALDER). Thereafter, while they dispersed towards opposite ends of the Indian subcontinent, their genomic integrity and likeness remained preserved due to endogamous social practices. Our findings illuminate the genomic history of two Indian populations, allowing a glimpse into one or few of numerous of human migrations that likely occurred across the Indian subcontinent and contributed to shape its varied and vibrant evolutionary past.

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丢失的双胞胎的故事:解码来自印度次大陆的库姆哈尔和库尔查人口的基因身份。
背景:印度次大陆的人口结构是一幅具有非凡多样性的挂毯,其特点是本土和移民祖先的融合以及社会文化分层的严格执行。在这里,我们调查了居住在印度北部大部分地区的库姆哈尔人的遗传起源和人口历史。我们比较了从印度北部北方邦采样的27个先前发表的Kumhar SNP基因型数据与各种现代和古代人群。结果:主成分分析(PCA)、Admixture、TreeMix等多种方法一致认为,Kumhars具有高度的ASI血统,最小的草原成分,并且与库尔查斯(Kurchas)高度接近,库尔查斯是印度南部喀拉拉邦2500公里外的一个相对不太知名的小种群。在同样的情况下,使用地理种群结构(GPS)的生物地理制图将大多数库姆哈尔样本与印度南部发现库尔恰人的地区相邻。结论:我们假设,两个明显不同的现代印度人口之间显著的基因组相似性,居住在分开的地理区域,没有已知的重叠历史或联系,可能暗示他们在印度河流域文明衰落期间或之后的共同起源(据ALDER估计)。此后,虽然他们分散到印度次大陆的两端,但由于内婚的社会习俗,他们的基因组完整性和相似性得以保留。我们的发现阐明了两个印度人口的基因组历史,让我们得以一窥可能发生在印度次大陆的众多人类迁徙中的一个或几个,这些迁徙有助于塑造其多样化和充满活力的进化历史。
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来源期刊
BMC Genetics
BMC Genetics 生物-遗传学
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
77
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Genetics is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of inheritance and variation in individuals and among populations.
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