The population genomic landscape of human genetic structure, admixture history and local adaptation in Peninsular Malaysia

Peninsular Malaysia is a strategic region which might have played an important role in the initial peopling and subsequent human migrations in Asia. However, the genetic diversity and history of human populations—especially indigenous populations—inhabiting this area remain poorly understood. Here,...

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Published in:Human Genetics
Main Author: Deng L.; Hoh B.P.; Lu D.; Fu R.; Phipps M.E.; Li S.; Nur-Shafawati A.R.; Hatin W.I.; Ismail E.; Mokhtar S.S.; Jin L.; Zilfalil B.A.; Marshall C.R.; Scherer S.W.; Al-Mulla F.; Xu S.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer Verlag 2014
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84907424878&doi=10.1007%2fs00439-014-1459-8&partnerID=40&md5=3a277a71a3fe7a887284d4fb869d611c
id 2-s2.0-84907424878
spelling 2-s2.0-84907424878
Deng L.; Hoh B.P.; Lu D.; Fu R.; Phipps M.E.; Li S.; Nur-Shafawati A.R.; Hatin W.I.; Ismail E.; Mokhtar S.S.; Jin L.; Zilfalil B.A.; Marshall C.R.; Scherer S.W.; Al-Mulla F.; Xu S.
The population genomic landscape of human genetic structure, admixture history and local adaptation in Peninsular Malaysia
2014
Human Genetics
133
9
10.1007/s00439-014-1459-8
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84907424878&doi=10.1007%2fs00439-014-1459-8&partnerID=40&md5=3a277a71a3fe7a887284d4fb869d611c
Peninsular Malaysia is a strategic region which might have played an important role in the initial peopling and subsequent human migrations in Asia. However, the genetic diversity and history of human populations—especially indigenous populations—inhabiting this area remain poorly understood. Here, we conducted a genome-wide study using over 900,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in four major Malaysian ethnic groups (MEGs; Malay, Proto-Malay, Senoi and Negrito), and made comparisons of 17 world-wide populations. Our data revealed that Peninsular Malaysia has greater genetic diversity corresponding to its role as a contact zone of both early and recent human migrations in Asia. However, each single Orang Asli (indigenous) group was less diverse with a smaller effective population size (Ne) than a European or an East Asian population, indicating a substantial isolation of some duration for these groups. All four MEGs were genetically more similar to Asian populations than to other continental groups, and the divergence time between MEGs and East Asian populations (12,000—6,000 years ago) was also much shorter than that between East Asians and Europeans. Thus, Malaysian Orang Asli groups, despite their significantly different features, may share a common origin with the other Asian groups. Nevertheless, we identified traces of recent gene flow from non-Asians to MEGs. Finally, natural selection signatures were detected in a batch of genes associated with immune response, human height, skin pigmentation, hair and facial morphology and blood pressure in MEGs. Notable examples include SYN3 which is associated with human height in all Orang Asli groups, a height-related gene (PNPT1) and two blood pressure-related genes (CDH13 and PAX5) in Negritos. We conclude that a long isolation period, subsequent gene flow and local adaptations have jointly shaped the genetic architectures of MEGs, and this study provides insight into the peopling and human migration history in Southeast Asia. © 2014, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
Springer Verlag
03406717
English
Article

author Deng L.; Hoh B.P.; Lu D.; Fu R.; Phipps M.E.; Li S.; Nur-Shafawati A.R.; Hatin W.I.; Ismail E.; Mokhtar S.S.; Jin L.; Zilfalil B.A.; Marshall C.R.; Scherer S.W.; Al-Mulla F.; Xu S.
spellingShingle Deng L.; Hoh B.P.; Lu D.; Fu R.; Phipps M.E.; Li S.; Nur-Shafawati A.R.; Hatin W.I.; Ismail E.; Mokhtar S.S.; Jin L.; Zilfalil B.A.; Marshall C.R.; Scherer S.W.; Al-Mulla F.; Xu S.
The population genomic landscape of human genetic structure, admixture history and local adaptation in Peninsular Malaysia
author_facet Deng L.; Hoh B.P.; Lu D.; Fu R.; Phipps M.E.; Li S.; Nur-Shafawati A.R.; Hatin W.I.; Ismail E.; Mokhtar S.S.; Jin L.; Zilfalil B.A.; Marshall C.R.; Scherer S.W.; Al-Mulla F.; Xu S.
author_sort Deng L.; Hoh B.P.; Lu D.; Fu R.; Phipps M.E.; Li S.; Nur-Shafawati A.R.; Hatin W.I.; Ismail E.; Mokhtar S.S.; Jin L.; Zilfalil B.A.; Marshall C.R.; Scherer S.W.; Al-Mulla F.; Xu S.
title The population genomic landscape of human genetic structure, admixture history and local adaptation in Peninsular Malaysia
title_short The population genomic landscape of human genetic structure, admixture history and local adaptation in Peninsular Malaysia
title_full The population genomic landscape of human genetic structure, admixture history and local adaptation in Peninsular Malaysia
title_fullStr The population genomic landscape of human genetic structure, admixture history and local adaptation in Peninsular Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed The population genomic landscape of human genetic structure, admixture history and local adaptation in Peninsular Malaysia
title_sort The population genomic landscape of human genetic structure, admixture history and local adaptation in Peninsular Malaysia
publishDate 2014
container_title Human Genetics
container_volume 133
container_issue 9
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00439-014-1459-8
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84907424878&doi=10.1007%2fs00439-014-1459-8&partnerID=40&md5=3a277a71a3fe7a887284d4fb869d611c
description Peninsular Malaysia is a strategic region which might have played an important role in the initial peopling and subsequent human migrations in Asia. However, the genetic diversity and history of human populations—especially indigenous populations—inhabiting this area remain poorly understood. Here, we conducted a genome-wide study using over 900,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in four major Malaysian ethnic groups (MEGs; Malay, Proto-Malay, Senoi and Negrito), and made comparisons of 17 world-wide populations. Our data revealed that Peninsular Malaysia has greater genetic diversity corresponding to its role as a contact zone of both early and recent human migrations in Asia. However, each single Orang Asli (indigenous) group was less diverse with a smaller effective population size (Ne) than a European or an East Asian population, indicating a substantial isolation of some duration for these groups. All four MEGs were genetically more similar to Asian populations than to other continental groups, and the divergence time between MEGs and East Asian populations (12,000—6,000 years ago) was also much shorter than that between East Asians and Europeans. Thus, Malaysian Orang Asli groups, despite their significantly different features, may share a common origin with the other Asian groups. Nevertheless, we identified traces of recent gene flow from non-Asians to MEGs. Finally, natural selection signatures were detected in a batch of genes associated with immune response, human height, skin pigmentation, hair and facial morphology and blood pressure in MEGs. Notable examples include SYN3 which is associated with human height in all Orang Asli groups, a height-related gene (PNPT1) and two blood pressure-related genes (CDH13 and PAX5) in Negritos. We conclude that a long isolation period, subsequent gene flow and local adaptations have jointly shaped the genetic architectures of MEGs, and this study provides insight into the peopling and human migration history in Southeast Asia. © 2014, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
publisher Springer Verlag
issn 03406717
language English
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