Human population structure, part n

I still remember when L. L. Cavalli-Sforza's The History and Geography of Human Genes was a candle in the dark, illuminating human history with slivers of genetic data laboriously gathered and analyzed over decades. We've come a long way. Dienekes points me to a new paper, Fine-scaled human genetic structure revealed by SNP microarrays:

We report an analysis of more than 240,000 loci genotyped using the Affymetrix SNP microarray in 554 individuals from 27 worldwide populations in Africa, Asia, and Europe. To provide a more extensive and complete sampling of human genetic variation, we have included caste and tribal samples from two states in South India, Daghestanis from eastern Europe, and the Iban from Malaysia. Consistent with observations made by Charles Darwin, our results highlight shared variation among human populations and demonstrate that much genetic variation is geographically continuous. At the same time, principal components analyses reveal discernible genetic differentiation among almost all identified populations in our sample, and in most cases, individuals can be clearly assigned to defined populations on the basis of SNP genotypes. All individuals are accurately classified into continental groups using a model-based clustering algorithm, but between closely related populations, genetic and self-classifications conflict for some individuals. The 250K data permitted high-level resolution of genetic variation among Indian caste and tribal populations and between highland and lowland Daghestani populations. In particular, upper-caste individuals from Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh form one defined group, lower-caste individuals from these two states form another, and the tribal Irula samples form a third. Our results emphasize the correlation of genetic and geographic distances and highlight other elements, including social factors that have contributed to population structure.

Here are a few charts from the supplement which I've reformatted and labeled for clarity:

i-3ffb70ae41c14091a8ef3245298ceb02-sups3a.png
i-ddbaf1ce821caa37c207832c9f0bac72-sups3b.png
i-55091e7edeb4d1ee68f31944f4f29868-sups3d.png
i-b71601eb4a6a1cfa63ab41827f7ed9c5-supss4.png

A few comments:

Take a look at the differences between the HGDP and non-HGDP samples. These analyses have a fine scale, but they aren't always representative. I've made the complaint before that "South Asia" in the HGDP samples oversamples from the northwest fringe of the region, and you can see that on these plots. Increased sample sizes will probably just bring into focus the coarse patterns, but fine-grained details will no doubt be unearthed in the process which surprise.

The African PC chart confirms earlier findings on Pygmies and Africa as a whole. I am intrigued though as the possibility of fine-grained differences on the "frontier" of Bantu expansion in South Africa. The Sotho-Tswana group includes populations dominant in Botswana, while the Nguni are common across South Africa. Though the Khoisan populations were extant across both regions, it seems plausible that the ratio of immigrants to the natives would be higher in the latter case than the former. In South Africa's climate, particularly the wetter east, the Bantu would have leveraged their cultural advantages (specifically, the type of agriculture which they practiced) into demographic expansion to a greater extent than in relatively arid Botswana. These particular data may, or may not, pan out in the long term, but there may be results which shed light on the ethnogenesis of the groups along the Bantu frontier of expansion, a topic which has had previous political salience (in the form of whites attempting to claim that the Bantu groups were still expanding after the Europea settlement at the Cape was founded). Due to the lack of written records genetics can serve as a critical supplement to archaeology.

In the East Asian PC chart I want to point out that L. L. Cavalli-Sforza suggested that South Chinese clustered with Southeast Asians, while North Chinese clustered with Northeast Asians, nearly two decades ago. This is obviously a controversial claim for a variety of reasons, and other avenues of data seem to contradict it (e.g., similarities of Y lineages across China proper). It seems to me that looking at this the HGDP sample, which Cavalli-Sforza used in his original analysis, might have led to this conclusion, but a larger data set exhibits more continuity. Southeast Asia groups such as the Vietnamese and Thai have a historic origin within what is today southern China, where linguistic relations of these peoples still remaining in China as national minorities. The question then is how much amalgamation with the locals these populations engaged in after their emigration, and how much amalgamation occurred in China between natives and Han who migrated from the north. Whatever the "final answer" is, I doubt we'll have a scenario where we can dispense with a quantitative qualification of admixture between putative ancestral populations in South China, or for the Thai and Vietnamese (the large scale assimilation of ethnic Chinese from Fujian into the Thai population will serve as an important confound that one must be cautious of). It is interesting to note that the Khmer, whose own cultural domain covered much of what is today Thailand and Vietnam, seem to be more genetically distant from the South Chinese populations, as you would expect, but the sample sizes here are small. Mainland Southeast Asia (Burma to Vietnam) has many relict "Mon-Khmer" populations. In Burma and Thailand the northern populations to a great extent adopted the high culture of the indigenous populations, in particular Indic flavored Therevada Buddhism. In contrast in Vietnam the northern populations retained more of their own cultural uniqueness, as evidenced by their Mahayana Buddhism (there are in Vietnam Malay speaking Chams who are Saivite Hindus, attesting to the previous ascendancy of Indian culture in that region).

The South Asian PC chart illustrates what I noted above as to the sampling of the HGDP populations; they tend to be as Iranian as they are Indian, and so skew perceptions of the relationship of South Asian populations to other groups. What is new to these data are the relationships of caste populations in Southern India. The non-Brahmin groups are Dalits, Untouchables, while the Irula are an ancient South Indian tribal population. Social historians often assert than the difference between Untouchables and tribals is a temporal one, insofar as the former are ex-tribals who have been integrated in a marginal manner into the mainstream Hindu South Asian culture, while the latter remain outside of it. The Brahmins in South India have historical memory of migration from the north of India. Physically Tamil Brahmins do seem to be different from the general population of Tamil Nadu, with a higher frequency of individuals who exhibit a phenotype more common in northern India. These data confirm previous results which show that caste stratification has a genetic reality. On the other hand they also support our intuition that there is a great deal of similarity between the South Asian groups. The Brahmins of South India have a much larger proportion of ancestry assigned to the "European"* cluster than Dalits. In fact, the Brahmin with the lowest proportion of that ancestral proportion has a higher fraction than the Dalit with the highest proportion. But the Dalits do have some of the European ancestry, while the tribals have very little. Going back to the previous model of assimilation of tribals into the Indian social structure as Dalits, after the point of integration small amounts of intermarriage would easily result in this sort of gene flow. Though the rough correlation between genetic and social structure exists, there's obviously been gene flow (e.g., Namboodiri Sambandham being a relatively recent instantiation of formalized intercaste relations), and there is also record of communities going into "uplift" in terms of caste status in the recent past, while other groups have legends of decline. Most of the legends are no doubt myths whose role is to concoct an auspicious origin for a particular group, but certainly there were likely high status individuals and groups who fell from power and eminence.

Dienekes alludes to the fact that some Southeast Asian groups seem to share more genetically with Indians than you would expect. There are two obvious explanations for this: deep common ancestry of the ancient substrate upon which was overlain the genes of populations which moved in from the north and northwest respectively for the two groups. Or, more recent gene flow. In the Indian case some Indo-Aryan South Asian groups in the northeast have obviously assimilated populations which migrated recently from Southeast Asia (the originally Tibeto-Burman Chakma of Bangladesh remain physically distinct and culturally Therevada Buddhists, but now speak a Bengali dialect). But we have strong historical evidence of trade networks between India and the Maritime Southeast Asia, as well as the powerful cultural influence on Mainland Southeast Asia. If the ancestry was recent, presumably the Indian proportion in Southeast Asia would be less diverse than than in India (a subset), while if it was deep common ancestry then it would be relatively diverse (though if serial founder effects from the Out of Africa migration were operative perhaps somewhat less diverse in any case). Obviously something for further exploration.

Update:

i-a90942cc20ecba4d6c4fa3599b1caa1e-worldstruc.png

Related: Genetic map of Europe, Genetic map of East Asia, Population Substructrure in Japan and South Indian Phylogeography.

* If this is exogenous, as Dienekes noted it might not be strictly European if the populations originated from the East of the Urals. "West Eurasian" might be more accurate.

More like this

A new paper came out in Science this week, Worldwide Human Relationships Inferred from Genome-Wide Patterns of Variation, that's getting some media play. The second-to-last author is L. L. Cavalli-Sforza, and the general combination of means and ends on display in The History and Geography of…
Why are brown people so many shades of brown? If you were raised in a South Asian family I'm sure that you've had to deal with the "color" issue somehow. This isn't a cultural blog, so I'm not going to go there, but I do think that the salience of complexion in South Asian culture makes this new…
New paper in PLOS Genetics, Low Levels of Genetic Divergence across Geographically and Linguistically Diverse Populations from India. Here's the conclusion: Populations from India, and groups from South Asia more generally, form a genetic cluster, so that individuals placed within this cluster are…
The American Journal of Human Genetics has an article up examining population substructure within Europe (or, more precisely, the varation of genes), Measuring European Population Stratification with Microarray Genotype Data. From the discussion: PC1 [the largest principle component of variance]…

The main reason the HGDP over-sampled the north-western area of South Asia is because of the Indian government's ban on taking human DNA samples out of the country. That meant for South Asian samples the HGDP had to rely on Pakistani populations - a fantastic collection, but obviously not enough to capture the full breadth of South Asian diversity.

It's great to see that despite the ban there is some solid pop genomic work being done on Indian groups.

that makes sense. seems the permit raj chilled in the 1990s, as there are lots of studies floating around now. and of course the diaspora communities are sources, but there's little representation of say tribal communities there (even the peasants recruited to farm in mauritius or trinidad were not tribals).

"In contrast in Vietnam the northern populations retained more of their own cultural uniqueness, as evidenced by their Mahayana Buddhism (there are in Vietnam Malay speaking Chams who are Saivite Hindus, attesting to the previous ascendancy of Indian culture in that region)."

I would not say this was "uniqueness" as much as maintaining much "Chinese High Culture" they were colonized by China for about a millennium and the Nam Viet (Nan Yue) lived in Guangdong, China and further NOrth, having contact with Han Chinese culture for longer than they were colonized. As far as the Cham, they were mostly assimilated as the Viet moved South, which occured relatively late (I believe the 18th century the Viet finally destroyed the Cham state).

Razib, I'm verging on desperate to see that page 4, but can't get it open. Any other way you can link it? If all else fails, I may (gasp) have to pay to subscribe.

By Sandgroper (not verified) on 04 May 2009 #permalink

Thank you.

By Sandgroper (not verified) on 04 May 2009 #permalink

Thanks, Razib. This puts

There's one thing I don't understand about these maps: is there a way to get a reasonable estimate of genetic distance from one group to another? If I understand principal component analysis (which I don't) PC1 is more "important" than PC2, so you couldn't just take the distance on the cartesian plane as an estimate, right?

CE, right. all non-africans are clustered together against africans, so if you didn't scale it would look whack. look at the Fst numbers in the supp. you're brown, right? south asians are about 1/3 of the way between europeans and east asians i think. at least representative ones. so closer to euro-mid east clade, but nontrivially distinctive.

i'm a chinese,and i read a lot of things about gene different between southern han chinese and northern han chinese,most of the southern han chinese carry the same gene of the northerners especially by the Paternal line.