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Detailed mtDNA genotypes permit a reassessment of the settlement and population structure of the Andaman Islands

โœ Scribed by S.S. Barik; R. Sahani; B.V.R. Prasad; P. Endicott; M. Metspalu; B.N. Sarkar; S. Bhattacharya; P.C.H. Annapoorna; J. Sreenath; D. Sun; J.J. Sanchez; S.Y.W. Ho; A. Chandrasekar; V.R. Rao


Book ID
102703886
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
618 KB
Volume
136
Category
Article
ISSN
0002-9483

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

The population genetics of the Indian subcontinent is central to understanding early human prehistory due to its strategic location on the proposed corridor of human movement from Africa to Australia during the late Pleistocene. Previous genetic research using mtDNA has emphasized the relative isolation of the late Pleistocene colonizers, and the physically isolated Andaman Island populations of Island Southโ€East Asia remain the source of claims supporting an early split between the populations that formed the patchy settlement pattern along the coast of the Indian Ocean. Using wholeโ€genome sequencing, combined with multiplexed SNP typing, this study investigates the deep structure of mtDNA haplogroups M31 and M32 in India and the Andaman Islands. The identification of a so far unnoticed rare polymorphism shared between these two lineages suggests that they are actually sister groups within a single haplogroup, M31โ€ฒ32. The enhanced resolution of M31 allows for the inference of a more recent colonization of the Andaman Islands than previously suggested, but cannot reject the very early peopling scenario. We further demonstrate a widespread overlap of mtDNA and cultural markers between the two major language groups of the Andaman archipelago. Given the โ€œcompletenessโ€ of the genealogy based on whole genome sequences, and the multiple scenarios for the peopling of the Andaman Islands sustained by this inferred genealogy, our study hints that further mtDNA based phylogeographic studies are unlikely to unequivocally support any one of these possibilities. Am J Phys Anthropol, 2008. ยฉ 2008 Wileyโ€Liss, Inc.


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