4.0 Article

Balinese Y-chromosome perspective on the peopling of Indonesia: Genetic contributions from pre-Neolithic hunter-gatherers, Austronesian farmers, and Indian traders

Journal

HUMAN BIOLOGY
Volume 77, Issue 1, Pages 93-114

Publisher

WAYNE STATE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1353/hub.2005.0030

Keywords

Bali; Indonesia; Y chromosome; Austronesian expansion; Indian traders; pre-Neolithic hunter-gatherers; Vietnamese; Malaysians; Philippinos; Taiwanese; Aboriginals; Southern Chinese; Indians; Sri Lankans; Syrians; Saudi Arabians; Melanesia; Micronesia; Polynesia; Papua New Guinea; Oceania

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The island of Bali lies near the center of the southern chain of islands in the Indonesian archipelago, which served as a stepping-stone for early migrations of hunter-gatherers to Melanesia and Australia and for more recent migrations of Austronesian farmers from mainland Southeast Asia to the Pacific. Bali is the only Indonesian island with a population that currently practices the Hindu religion and preserves various other Indian cultural, linguistic, and artistic traditions (Lansing 1983). Here, we examine genetic variation on the Y chromosomes of 551 Balinese men to investigate the relative contributions of Austronesian farmers and pre-Neolithic hunter-gatherers to the contemporary Balinese paternal gene pool and to test the hypothesis of recent paternal gene flow from the Indian subcontinent. Seventy-one Y-chromosome binary polymorphisms (single nucleotide polymorphisms, SNPs) and 10 Y-chromosome-linked short tandem repeats (STRs) were genotyped on a sample of 1,989 Y chromosomes from 20 populations representing Indonesia (including Bali), southern China, Southeast Asia, South Asia, the Near East, and Oceania. SNP genotyping revealed 22 Balinese lineages, 3 of which (O-M95, O-M119, and O-M122) account for nearly 83.7% of Balinese Y chromosomes. Phylogeographic analyses suggest that all three major Y-chromosome haplogroups migrated to Bali with the arrival of Austronesian speakers; however, STR diversity patterns associated with these haplogroups are complex and may be explained by multiple waves of Austronesian expansion to Indonesia by different routes. Approximately 2.2% of contemporary Balinese Y chromosomes (i.e., K-M9*, K-M230, and M lineages) may represent the pre-Neolithic component of the Indonesian paternal gene pool. In contrast. eight other haplogroups (c,g.. within H J. L, and R), making up approximately 12% of the Balinese paternal gene pool. appear to have migrated to Bali from India, These results indicate that the Austronesian expansion had a profound effect on the composition of the Balinese paternal gene pool and that Cultural transmission from India to Bali was accompanied by substantial levels of gene flow.

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