TY - JOUR
T1 - Y chromosome sequences reveal a short Beringian Standstill, rapid expansion, and early population structure of Native American founders
AU - Pinotti, Thomaz
AU - Bergström, Anders
AU - Geppert, Maria
AU - Bawn, Matt
AU - Ohasi, Dominique
AU - Shi, Wentao
AU - Lacerda, Daniela R.
AU - Solli, Arne
AU - Norstedt, Jakob
AU - Reed, Kate
AU - Dawtry, Kim
AU - González-Andrade, Fabricio
AU - Paz-y-Miño, Cesar
AU - Revollo, Susana
AU - Cuellar, Cinthia
AU - Jota, Marilza S.
AU - Santos, José E.
AU - Ayub, Qasim
AU - Kivisild, Toomas
AU - Sandoval, José R.
AU - Fujita, Ricardo
AU - Xue, Yali
AU - Roewer, Lutz
AU - Santos, Fabrício R.
AU - Tyler-Smith, Chris
N1 - Funding Information:
Foremost, the authors would like to thank all Native Americans who collaborated in the Genographic Project of South America and the EQ Genetics Project, which made this historical genetics research possible. This work is dedicated to them. The authors would also like to thank Pedro Paulo R. Vieira, Oscar Acosta, Donaldo Pinedo, and Paulo Robles-Ruiz for participating in the fieldwork in Peru and Ecuador and Marc Haber, Elena Arciero, Maria Cátira Bortolini, Rafael Bisso-Machado, Tábita Hünemeier, David Comas, and Ray Banks for helpful comments and discussion. We also thank Vladimir Gurianov, Vadim Urasin, and the YFull team for their detailed phylogeny online and Rui Martiniano, Christiana Scheib, Swapan Mallick, Michelle Lee, and David Reich for facilitating access to published sequences. T.P. and F.R.S. were supported by the National Geographic Society of the United States, FAPEMIG, CAPES, and CNPq of Brazil; A.B., Y.X., and C.T.-S. were supported by Wellcome grant number 098051.
Funding Information:
Foremost, the authors would like to thank all Native Americans who collaborated in the Genographic Project of South America and the EQ Genetics Project, which made this historical genetics research possible. This work is dedicated to them. The authors would also like to thank Pedro Paulo R. Vieira, Oscar Acosta, Donaldo Pinedo, and Paulo Robles-Ruiz for participating in the fieldwork in Peru and Ecuador and Marc Haber, Elena Arciero, Maria Cátira Bortolini, Rafael Bisso-Machado, Tábita Hünemeier, David Comas, and Ray Banks for helpful comments and discussion. We also thank Vladimir Gurianov, Vadim Urasin, and the YFull team for their detailed phylogeny online and Rui Martiniano, Christiana Scheib, Swapan Mallick, Michelle Lee, and David Reich for facilitating access to published sequences. T.P. and F.R.S. were supported by the National Geographic Society of the United States, FAPEMIG , CAPES , and CNPq of Brazil ; A.B., Y.X., and C.T.-S. were supported by Wellcome grant number 098051 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 The Authors
Copyright:
Copyright 2019 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2019/1/7
Y1 - 2019/1/7
N2 - The Americas were the last inhabitable continents to be occupied by humans, with a growing multidisciplinary consensus for entry 15–25 thousand years ago (kya) from northeast Asia via the former Beringia land bridge [1–4]. Autosomal DNA analyses have dated the separation of Native American ancestors from the Asian gene pool to 23 kya or later [5, 6] and mtDNA analyses to ∼25 kya [7], followed by isolation (“Beringian Standstill” [8, 9]) for 2.4–9 ky and then a rapid expansion throughout the Americas. Here, we present a calibrated sequence-based analysis of 222 Native American and relevant Eurasian Y chromosomes (24 new) from haplogroups Q and C [10], with four major conclusions. First, we identify three to four independent lineages as autochthonous and likely founders: the major Q-M3 and rarer Q-CTS1780 present throughout the Americas, the very rare C3-MPB373 in South America, and possibly the C3-P39/Z30536 in North America. Second, from the divergence times and Eurasian/American distribution of lineages, we estimate a Beringian Standstill duration of 2.7 ky or 4.6 ky, according to alternative models, and entry south of the ice sheet after 19.5 kya. Third, we describe the star-like expansion of Q-M848 (within Q-M3) starting at 15 kya [11] in the Americas, followed by establishment of substantial spatial structure in South America by 12 kya. Fourth, the deep branches of the Q-CTS1780 lineage present at low frequencies throughout the Americas today [12] may reflect a separate out-of-Beringia dispersal after the melting of the glaciers at the end of the Pleistocene.
AB - The Americas were the last inhabitable continents to be occupied by humans, with a growing multidisciplinary consensus for entry 15–25 thousand years ago (kya) from northeast Asia via the former Beringia land bridge [1–4]. Autosomal DNA analyses have dated the separation of Native American ancestors from the Asian gene pool to 23 kya or later [5, 6] and mtDNA analyses to ∼25 kya [7], followed by isolation (“Beringian Standstill” [8, 9]) for 2.4–9 ky and then a rapid expansion throughout the Americas. Here, we present a calibrated sequence-based analysis of 222 Native American and relevant Eurasian Y chromosomes (24 new) from haplogroups Q and C [10], with four major conclusions. First, we identify three to four independent lineages as autochthonous and likely founders: the major Q-M3 and rarer Q-CTS1780 present throughout the Americas, the very rare C3-MPB373 in South America, and possibly the C3-P39/Z30536 in North America. Second, from the divergence times and Eurasian/American distribution of lineages, we estimate a Beringian Standstill duration of 2.7 ky or 4.6 ky, according to alternative models, and entry south of the ice sheet after 19.5 kya. Third, we describe the star-like expansion of Q-M848 (within Q-M3) starting at 15 kya [11] in the Americas, followed by establishment of substantial spatial structure in South America by 12 kya. Fourth, the deep branches of the Q-CTS1780 lineage present at low frequencies throughout the Americas today [12] may reflect a separate out-of-Beringia dispersal after the melting of the glaciers at the end of the Pleistocene.
KW - Beringia
KW - Native Americans
KW - phylogeography
KW - pre-Columbian settlement of Americas
KW - Y chromosome lineages
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85059608002&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.cub.2018.11.029
DO - 10.1016/j.cub.2018.11.029
M3 - Article
C2 - 30581024
AN - SCOPUS:85059608002
SN - 0960-9822
VL - 29
SP - 149-157.e3
JO - Current Biology
JF - Current Biology
IS - 1
ER -