首页> 外文期刊>Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America >Y-chromosome analysis reveals genetic divergence and new founding native lineages in Athapaskan- and Eskimoan-speaking populations
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Y-chromosome analysis reveals genetic divergence and new founding native lineages in Athapaskan- and Eskimoan-speaking populations

机译:Y染色体分析揭示了说阿塔帕斯坎语和爱斯基摩语的人群的遗传差异和新建立的本地血统

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For decades, the peopling of the Americas has been explored through the analysis of uniparentally inherited genetic systems in Native American populations and the comparison of these genetic data with current linguistic groupings. In northern North America, two language families predominate: Eskimo-Aleut and Na-Dene. Although the genetic evidence from nuclear and mtDNA loci suggest that speakers of these language families share a distinct biological origin, this model has not been examined using data from paternally inherited Y chromosomes. To test this hypothesis and elucidate the migration histories of Eskimoan- and Athapaskan-speaking populations, we analyzed Y-chromosomal data from Inuvialuit, Gwich'in, and Ttjcho populations living in the Northwest Territories of Canada. Over 100 biallelic markers and 19 chromosome short tandem repeats (STRs) were genotyped to produce a high-resolution dataset of Y chromosomes from these groups. Among these markers is an SNP discovered in the Inuvialuit that differentiates them from other Aboriginal and Native American populations. The data suggest that Canadian Eskimoan- and Atha-paskan-speaking populations are genetically distinct from one another and that the formation of these groups was the result of two population expansions that occurred after the initial movement of people into the Americas. In addition, the population history of Athapaskan speakers is complex, with the Ttjch? being distinct from other Athapaskan groups. The high-resolution biallelic data also make clear that Y-chromosomal diversity among the first Native Americans was greater than previously recognized.
机译:几十年来,通过分析美洲原住民群体中单亲遗传的遗传系统,并将这些遗传数据与当前的语言分组进行比较,探索了美洲的种群数量。在北美北部,两个语言家族占主导地位:爱斯基摩人-阿留特(Eskimo-Aleut)和纳丹(Na-Dene)。尽管来自核和mtDNA位点的遗传证据表明这些语言家族的说话者具有不同的生物学起源,但尚未使用来自父系继承的Y染色体的数据来检验此模型。为了检验此假设并阐明爱斯基摩语和阿塔帕斯坎语人口的迁徙历史,我们分析了居住在加拿大西北地区的Inuvialuit,Gwich'in和Ttjcho人口的Y染色体数据。对100多个双等位基因标记和19个染色体短串联重复序列(STR)进行基因分型,以产生来自这些组的Y染色体的高分辨率数据集。这些标记中有一个在Inuvialuit中发现的SNP,可将其与其他原住民和美洲原住民群体区分开。数据表明,讲加拿大爱斯基摩人和说阿萨帕斯坎语的人口在遗传上是彼此不同的,这些群体的形成是人们最初进入美洲后发生的两次人口膨胀的结果。此外,使用Ttjch?与其他阿塔帕斯坎团体截然不同。高分辨率的双等位基因数据也清楚地表明,最早的美国原住民之间的Y染色体多样性要大于以前的认识。

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