COUSINS?The Yakut people (left) of northern Siberia share some common ancestry with Orcadians (right), people who inhabit the Orkney Islands north of Scotland.Wikimedia Commons
The Americas
may have been initially settled in two different migrations, a new method for
tracing human ancestry reveals. The analysis also suggests populations in the
Orkney Islands, a string of islands north of Scotland, share substantial common
ancestry with northern Siberian populations.
The new work by researchers in the United Kingdom and Ireland
supports most previous findings, including the “Out of Africa” hypothesis that
all humans share common ancestors who first spread from Africa
about 50,000 years ago. “The conclusions aren't all that novel, but the way
that they've reached the conclusions is extremely novel,” says Donald Conrad, a
population geneticist at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge, England,
who was not involved in the study. “It's a benchmark of what population genetic
research can look like in the coming years.”
A few surprising results emerged from the analysis,
published May 23 in PLoS Genetics.
Native Americans from North and South America
may have had different predecessors. While the North American Pima are
genetically similar to Colombian populations, the Pima also had connections to
present-day Mongolians. The genetic link to Mongolians suggests that two waves
of migrants crossed the Bering Strait into North America.
The first group probably made it all the way to South America, while a second
group mixed with the first but never made it past North America, says Garrett
Hellenthal, a statistician at OxfordUniversity in England who was involved in the
study.
The study also revealed that Orcadians from the Orkney
Islands share a common lineage with the Yakuts of northern Siberia and with the
Han of northern China.One hypothesis for this mix is that forebears
of modern-day Orcadians may have ventured across the Arctic.
To determine the genetic relationships, Daniel Falush of the
Environmental Research Institute in Cork,
Ireland, and
his colleagues analyzed a data set from the Human Genome Diversity Panel, which
contained more than 2,500 single gene variations from 927 people of 53
different ethnicities. Similar to past methods, the technique tracks variations
in the nucleotides — the building blocks of DNA — that each person carries. Unlike
other methods, however, the length of similar strips of the genetic code is
taken into account.“What it
specifically does, compared to other methods, is look for sharing of not just
individual nucleotides but of stretches of chromosomes,” Falush says.
The new technique may provide more insight than past methods
because it better captures the way DNA is passed on from parents to
children.Around the time of
fertilization, chromosomes from the mother and father crisscross and recombine
in random places on each chromosome. So a brother and sister may inherit the
same chunk of DNA, while their children and grandchildren have a greater chance
of that chunk being broken up during recombination. Thus, people who share a
recent common ancestor are likely to have long stretches of identical DNA,
while more distantly related people would be expected to have shorter strips of
identical gene sequences.
One limitation of the current study is that it can’t date
migration events or place them in chronological order, says Hellenthal. In
addition, the researchers needed to assume certain facts about human history to
interpret the model, which could skew the results, Conrad says.
“Unfortunately there is some circularity,” Conrad adds.
“They are seeing patterns in their result that match with other more simple
analyses, but the real test of this method is for somebody with no background
on human population to fit the results and try to interpret them.”
A LONG AND WINDING ROAD
The current model,
which takes into account the way chromosomes recombine, was used to reconstruct
a migration history for people around the world.The new approach found that the Americas
were peopled in two separate waves. Video courtesy of D. Falush, G. Hellenthal, and A. Auton.
so how will this effect the past, present, and future?
Melanie White-Southerland
Oct. 19, 2008 at 6:12pm
This largely supports linguistic research in the Americas, which posits an Amerindian linguistic family comprised of all the languages of South America; but within North America there are at least two and possibly three language families, one or two of which have relatives still in existence in Asia (Siberia).
Falush, D., G. Hellenthal, and D. Auton. 2008. Inferring human colonization history using a copying model.PLoS Genetics,4(May 23):e1000078. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1000078. Article available at [Go to].
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