4.5 Article

New insights into the fine-scale history of western-eastern admixture of the northwestern Chinese population in the Hexi Corridor via genome-wide genetic legacy

Journal

MOLECULAR GENETICS AND GENOMICS
Volume 296, Issue 3, Pages 631-651

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00438-021-01767-0

Keywords

Genetic structure; Admixture history; Genome-wide data; Trans-Eurasian exchange; Hexi Corridor; Short tandem repeat (STR)

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31760309, 31801040]
  2. Foundation for Humanities and Social Sciences Research Of the Ministry of Education [18YJAZH116]
  3. Scientific research project of Colleges and universities in Gansu Province [2017B-34]
  4. Gansu University of Political Science and Law major scientific research projects [2017XZD10]
  5. Lanzhou Talent Innovation and Entrepreneurship Project [2018-RC-113]
  6. Gansu province guides science and technology innovation special project [2018ZX03]
  7. Nanqiang Outstanding Young Talents Program of Xiamen University [X2123302]
  8. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [ZK1144]
  9. National Postdoctoral Program for Innovative Talents [BX20180180]

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Genetic studies show that northwestern Han Chinese individuals have higher genetic homogeneity compared to other ethnic groups in the region. The primary ancestry of this population comes from northern millet farmer ancestors, supporting the hypothesis of their origin in North China and northwestward population expansion. Interestingly, there is evidence of western Eurasian admixture in northwestern Han individuals dating back to around 1000 CE.
Trans-Eurasian cultural and genetic exchanges have significantly influenced the demographic dynamics of Eurasian populations. The Hexi Corridor, located along the southeastern edge of the Eurasian steppe, served as an important passage of the ancient Silk Road in Northwest China and intensified the transcontinental exchange and interaction between populations on the Central Plain and in Western Eurasia. Historical and archeological records indicate that the Western Eurasian cultural elements were largely brought into North China via this geographical corridor, but there is debate on the extent to which the spread of barley/wheat agriculture into North China and subsequent Bronze Age cultural and technological mixture/shifts were achieved by the movement of people or dissemination of ideas. Here, we presented higher-resolution genome-wide autosomal and uniparental Y/mtDNA SNP or STR data for 599 northwestern Han Chinese individuals and conducted 2 different comprehensive genetic studies among Neolithic-to-present-day Eurasians. Genetic studies based on lower-resolution STR markers via PCA, STRUCTURE, and phylogenetic trees showed that northwestern Han Chinese individuals had increased genetic homogeneity relative to northern Mongolic/Turkic/Tungusic speakers and Tibeto-Burman groups. The genomic signature constructed based on modern/ancient DNA further illustrated that the primary ancestry of the northwestern Han was derived from northern millet farmer ancestors, which was consistent with the hypothesis of Han origin in North China and more recent northwestward population expansion. This was subsequently confirmed via excess shared derived alleles in f(3)/f(4) statistical analyses and by more northern East Asian-related ancestry in the qpAdm/qpGraph models. Interestingly, we identified one western Eurasian admixture signature that was present in northwestern Han but absent from southern Han, with an admixture time dated to approximately 1000 CE (Tang and Song dynasties). Generally, we provided supporting evidence that historic Trans-Eurasian communication was primarily maintained through population movement, not simply cultural diffusion. The observed population dynamics in northwestern Han Chinese not only support the North China origin hypothesis but also reflect the multiple sources of the genetic diversity observed in this population.

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