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自然杂志文章:Genetic evidence supports
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Letters to Nature

Nature 431, 302-305 (16 September 2004) | doi:10.1038/nature02878; Received 28 April 2004; Accepted 20 July 2004


Genetic evidence supports demic diffusion of Han culture

Bo Wen1,2, Hui Li1, Daru Lu1, Xiufeng Song1, Feng Zhang1, Yungang He1, Feng Li1, Yang Gao1, Xianyun Mao1, Liang Zhang1, Ji Qian1, Jingze Tan1, Jianzhong Jin1, Wei Huang2, Ranjan Deka3, Bing Su1,3,4, Ranajit Chakraborty3 & Li Jin1,3

  1. State Key Laboratory of Genetic Engineering and Center for Anthropological Studies, School of Life Sciences and Morgan-Tan International Center for Life Sciences, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China
  2. Chinese National Human Genome Center, Shanghai 201203, China
  3. Center for Genome Information, Department of Environmental Health, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio 45267, USA
  4. Key Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Evolution, Kunming Institute of Zoology, the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Kunming 650223, China

Correspondence to: Li Jin1,3 Email: lijin@fudan.edu.cn or li.jin@uc.edu
The mtDNA HVS-1 sequences of 711 individuals from 15 Han populations were submitted to GenBank with accession numbers AY594701–AY595411.


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The spread of culture and language in human populations is explained by two alternative models: the demic diffusion model, which involves mass movement of people; and the cultural diffusion model, which refers to cultural impact between populations and involves limited genetic exchange between them1. The mechanism of the peopling of Europe has long been debated, a key issue being whether the diffusion of agriculture and language from the Near East was concomitant with a large movement of farmers1, 2, 3. Here we show, by systematically analysing Y-chromosome and mitochondrial DNA variation in Han populations, that the pattern of the southward expansion of Han culture is consistent with the demic diffusion model, and that males played a larger role than females in this expansion. The Han people, who all share the same culture and language, exceed 1.16 billion (2000 census), and are by far the largest ethnic group in the world. The expansion process of Han culture is thus of great interest to researchers in many fields.

According to the historical records, the Hans were descended from the ancient Huaxia tribes of northern China, and the Han culture (that is, the language and its associated cultures) expanded into southern China—the region originally inhabited by the southern natives, including those speaking Daic, Austro-Asiatic and Hmong-Mien languages—in the past two millennia4, 5. Studies on classical genetic markers and microsatellites show that the Han people, like East Asians, are divided into two genetically differentiated groups, northern Han and southern Han6, 7, 8, separated approximately by the Yangtze river9. Differences between these groups in terms of dialect and customs have also been noted10. Such observations seem to support a mechanism involving primarily cultural diffusion and assimilation (the cultural diffusion model) in Han expansion towards the south. However, the substantial sharing of Y-chromosome and mitochondrial lineages between the two groups11, 12 and the historical records describing the expansion of Han people5 contradict the cultural diffusion model hypothesis of Han expansion. In this study, we aim to examine the alternative hypothesis; that is, that substantial population movements occurred during the expansion of Han culture (the demic diffusion model).

To test this hypothesis, we compared the genetic profiles of southern Hans with their two parental population groups: northern Hans and southern natives, which include the samples of Daic, Hmong-Mien and Austro-Asiatic speaking populations currently residing in China, and in some cases its neighbouring countries. Genetic variation in both the non-recombining region of the Y chromosome (NRY) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)13, 14, 15, 16 were surveyed in 28 Han populations from most of the provinces in China (see Fig. 1and Supplementary Table 1 for details).

Figure 1: Geographic distribution of sampled populations.
Figure 1 : Geographic distribution of sampled populations. Unfortunately we are unable to provide accessible alternative text for this. If you require assistance to access this image, or to obtain a text description, please contact npg@nature.com

Shown are the three waves of north-to-south migrations according to historical record. The identifications of populations are given in Supplementary Table 1. Populations 1–14 are northern Hans, and 15–28 are southern Hans. The solid, dashed and dotted arrows refer to the first, second and third waves of migrations, respectively. The first wave involving 0.9 million (approximately one-sixth of the southern population at that time) occurred during the Western Jin Dynasty (ad265–316); the second migration, more extensive than the first, took place during the Tang Dynasty (ad618–907); and the third wave, including ~5 million immigrants, occurred during the Southern Song Dynasty (ad1127–1279).

High resolution image and legend (54K)

On the paternal side, southern Hans and northern Hans share similar frequencies of Y-chromosome haplogroups (Supplementary Table 2), which are characterized by two haplogroups carrying the M122-C mutations (O3-M122 and O3e-M134) that are prevalent in almost all Han populations studied (mean and range: 53.8%, 37–71%; 54.2%, 35–74%, for northern and southern Hans, respectively). Haplogroups carrying M119-C (O1* and O1b) and/or M95-T (O2a*and O2a1) (following the nomenclature of the Y Chromosome Consortium) which are prevalent in southern natives, are more frequent in southern Hans (19%, 3–42%) than in northern Hans (5%, 1–10%). In addition, haplogroups O1b-M110, O2a1-M88 and O3d-M7, which are prevalent in southern natives17, were only observed in some southern Hans (4% on average), but not in northern Hans. Therefore, the contribution of southern natives in southern Hans is limited, if we assume that the frequency distribution of Y lineages in southern natives represents that before the expansion of Han culture that started 2,000yr ago5. The results of analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) further indicate that northern Hans and southern Hans are not significantly different in their Y haplogroups (FST = 0.006, P > 0.05), demonstrating that southern Hans bear a high resemblance to northern Hans in their male lineages.

On the maternal side, however, the mtDNA haplogroup distribution showed substantial differentiation between northern Hans and southern Hans (Supplementary Table 3). The overall frequencies of the northern East Asian-dominating haplogroups (A, C, D, G, M8a, Y and Z) are much higher in northern Hans (55%, 49–64%) than are those in southern Hans (36%, 19–52%). In contrast, the frequency of the haplogroups that are dominant lineages (B, F, R9a, R9b and N9a) in southern natives12, 14, 18 is much higher in southern (55%, 36–72%) than it is in northern Hans (33%, 18–42%). Northern and southern Hans are significantly different in their mtDNA lineages (FST =0.006, P < 10-5). Although the FST values between northern and southern Hans are similar for mtDNA and the Y chromosome, FST accounts for 56% of the total among-population variation for mtDNA but only accounts for 18% for the Y chromosome.

A principal component analysis is consistent with the observation based on the distribution of the haplogroups in Han populations. For the NRY, almost all Han populations cluster together in the upper right-hand part of Fig. 2a. Northern Hans and southern natives are separated by the second principal component (PC2) and southern Hans' PC2 values lie between northern Hans and southern natives but are much closer to northern Hans (northern Han, 0.58 ± 0.01; southern Han, 0.46 ± 0.03; southern native, -0.32 ± 0.05), implying that the southern Hans are paternally similar to northern Hans, with limited influence from southern natives. In contrast, for mtDNA, northern Hans and southern natives are distinctly separated by PC2 (Fig. 2b), and southern Hans are located between them but are closer to southern natives (northern Han, 0.56 ± 0.02; southern Han, 0.09 ± 0.06; southern native, -0.23 ± 0.04), indicating a much more substantial admixture in southern Hans' female gene pool than in its male counterpart.

Figure 2: Principal component plot.
Figure 2 : Principal component plot. Unfortunately we are unable to provide accessible alternative text for this. If you require assistance to access this image, or to obtain a text description, please contact npg@nature.com

ab, Plots are of Y-chromosome (a) and mtDNA (b) haplogroup frequency. Population groups: H-M, Hmong-Mien; DAC, Daic; A-A, Austro-Asiatic; SH, southern Han; NH, northern Han.

High resolution image and legend (98K)

The relative contribution of the two parental populations (northern Hans and southern natives) in southern Hans was estimated by two different statistics19,20, which are less biased than other statistics for single-locus data21 (Table 1). The estimations of the admixture coefficient (M, proportion of northern Han contribution) from the two methods are highly consistent (for the Y chromosome, r = 0.922, P < 0.01; for mtDNA, r = 0.970, P < 0.01). For the Y chromosome, all southern Hans showed a high proportion of northern Han contribution (MBE: 0.82 ± 0.14, range from 0.54 to 1; MRH: 0.82 ± 0.12, range from 0.61 to 0.97) (see refs 20 and 19 for definitions of MBE and MRH, respectively) indicating that males from the northern Hans are the primary contributor to the gene pool of the southern Hans. In contrast, northern Hans and southern natives contributed almost equally to the southern Hans' mtDNA gene pool (MBE: 0.56 ± 0.24 [0.15, 0.95]; MRH: 0.50 ± 0.26 [0.07, 0.91]). The contribution of northern Hans to southern Hans is significantly higher in the paternal lineage than in the maternal lineage collectively (t-test, P < 0.01) or individually (11 out of 13 populations for MBE, and 13 out of 13 populations forMRHP < 0.01, assuming a null binomial distribution with equal male and female contributions), indicating a strong sex-biased population admixture in southern Hans. The proportions of northern Han contribution (M) in southern Hans showed a clinal geographic pattern, which decreases from north to south. The Ms in southern Hans are positively correlated with latitude (r2 = 0.569, P < 0.01) for mtDNA, but are not significant for the Y chromosome (r2 = 0.072, P > 0.05), because the difference of Ms in the paternal lineage among southern Hans is too small to create a statistically significant trend.


We provide two lines of evidence supporting the demic diffusion hypothesis for the expansion of Han culture. First, almost all Han populations bear a high resemblance in Y-chromosome haplogroup distribution, and the result of principal component analysis indicated that almost all Han populations form a tight cluster in their Y chromosome. Second, the estimated contribution of northern Hans to southern Hans is substantial in both paternal and maternal lineages and a geographic cline exists for mtDNA. It is noteworthy that the expansion process was dominated by males, as is shown by a greater contribution to the Y-chromosome than the mtDNA from northern Hans to southern Hans. A sex-biased admixture pattern was also observed in Tibeto-Burman-speaking populations22.

According to the historical records, there were continuous southward movements of Han people due to warfare and famine in the north, as illustrated by three waves of large-scale migrations (Fig. 1). Aside from these three waves, other smaller southward migrations also occurred during almost all periods in the past two millennia. Our genetic observation is thus in line with the historical accounts. The massive movement of the northern immigrants led to a change in genetic makeup in southern China, and resulted in the demographic expansion of Han people as well as their culture. Except for these massive population movements, gene flow between northern Hans, southern Hans and southern natives also contributed to the admixture which shaped the genetic profile of the extant populations.

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Methods

Samples

Blood samples of 871 unrelated anonymous individuals from 17 Han populations were collected across China. Genomic DNA was extracted by the phenol-chloroform method. By integrating the additional data obtained from the literatures on the Y chromosome and on mtDNA variation, the final sample sizes for analysis expanded to 1,289 individuals (23 Han populations) for the Y chromosome and 1,119 individuals (23 Han populations) for mtDNA. These samples encompass most of the provinces in China (Fig. 1 and Supplementary Table 1).

Genetic markers

Thirteen bi-allelic Y-chromosome markers, YAP, M15, M130, M89, M9, M122, M134, M119, M110, M95, M88, M45 and M120 were typed by polymerase chain reaction-restriction-fragment length polymorphism methods11. These markers are highly informative in East Asians23 and define 13 haplogroups following the Y Chromosome Consortium nomenclature24.

The HVS-1 of mtDNA and eight coding region variations, 9-bp deletion, 10397AluI, 5176 AluI, 4831 HhaI, 13259 HincII, 663 HaeIII, 12406 HpaI and 9820HinfI were sequenced and genotyped as in our previous report22. Both the HVS-1 motif and the coding region variations were used to infer haplogroups following the phylogeny of East Asian mtDNAs18.

Data analysis

Population relationship was investigated by principal component analysis, which was conducted using mtDNA and Y-chromosome haplogroup frequencies and SPSS10.0 software (SPSS Inc.). The genetic difference between northern and southern Hans was tested by AMOVA25, using ARLEQUIN software26. ADMIX 2.0 (ref. 27) and LEADMIX21 software were used to estimate the level of admixture of the northern Hans and southern natives in the southern Han populations, using two different statistics19, 20. The selection of parental populations is critical for appropriate estimation of admixture proportion28, 29and we were careful to minimize bias by using large data sets across East Asia. In this analysis, the average haplogroup frequencies (for Y-chromosome or mtDNA markers, respectively) of northern Hans (arithmetic mean of 10 northern Hans) were taken for the northern parental population. The frequency of southern natives was estimated by the average of three groups including Austro-Asiatic (NRY, 6 populations; mtDNA, 5 populations), Daic (NRY, 22 populations; mtDNA, 11 populations) and Hmong-Mien (NRY, 18 populations; mtDNA, 14 populations). The geographic pattern of Han populations was revealed by the linear regression analysis of admixture proportion against the latitudes of samples1, 3.


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References

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