PlumX Metrics
Embed PlumX Metrics

Genomic insights into the population history and biological adaptation of Southwestern Chinese Hmong-Mien people

bioRxiv, ISSN: 2692-8205
2021
  • 0
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 0
    Captures
  • 0
    Mentions
  • 5
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Social Media
    5
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      5
      • Facebook
        5

Article Description

Hmong-Mien-speaking (HM) populations, widely distributed in South China, North of Thailand, Laos and Vietnam, have experienced different settlement environments, dietary habits and pathogen exposure. However, their specific biological adaptation also remained largely uncharacterized, which is important in the population evolutionary genetics and Trans-Omics for regional Precision Medicine. Besides, the origin and genetic diversity of HM people and their phylogenetic relationship with surrounding modern and ancient populations are unknown. Here, we reported genome-wide SNPs in 52 representative Miao people and combined them with 144 HM people from 13 geographically representative populations to characterize the full genetic admixture and adaptive landscape of HM speakers. We found that obvious genetic substructures existed in geographically different HM populations and also identified one new ancestral lineage specifically exited in HM people, which spatially distributed from Sichuan and Guizhou in the North to Thailand in the South and temporally dated to at least 500 years. The sharing patterns of the newly-identified homogeneous ancestry component combined the estimated admixture times via the decay of Linkage Disequilibrium and haplotype sharing in GLOBETROTTER suggested that the modern HM-speaking populations originated from Southwest China and migrated southward recently, which is consistent with the reconstructed phenomena of linguistic and archeological documents. Additionally, we identified specific adaptive signatures associated with several important human nervous system biological functions. Our pilot work emphasized the importance of anthropologically-informed sampling and deeply genetic structure reconstruction via whole-genome sequencing in the next step in the deep Chinese population genomic diversity project (CPGDP), especially in the ethnolinguistic regions.

Bibliographic Details

Hui Yuan Yeh; Guanglin He; Xing Zou; Mengge Wang; Changhui Liu; Quyi Xu; Chao Liu; Jingrong Zhu; Yan Liu; Jie Xie; Xiaohong Wen; Wenshan Li; Cuo Leng; Lin Wang; Chuan Chao Wang

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology; Agricultural and Biological Sciences; Immunology and Microbiology; Neuroscience; Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics

Provide Feedback

Have ideas for a new metric? Would you like to see something else here?Let us know