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Different population histories of the Mundari- and Mon-Khmer-speaking Austro-Asiatic tribes inferred from the mtDNA 9-bp deletion/insertion polymorphism in Indian populations

Authors :
Gyaneshwer Chaubey
Alla G. Reddy
Arif Khan
Rashmi Kumar
Thrimulaisamy P. Velavan
Suminder Kaur
Divi Udaykumar
Kumarasamy Thangaraj
Pooja Agarawal
Rajanbabu Suganthan
Lalji Singh
Amit Rai
C. Annapurna
Vijay Kumar Singh
Rachana Mishra
Toomas Kivisild
Niraj Kumar
Chandana Basu Mallick
Jalaj Gupta
Vempati Sridhar
Source :
Human genetics. 119(1-2)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Length variation in the human mtDNA intergenic region between the cytochrome oxidase II (COII) and tRNA lysine (tRNA(lys)) genes has been widely studied in world populations. Specifically, Austronesian populations of the Pacific and Austro-Asiatic populations of southeast Asia most frequently carry the 9-bp deletion in that region implying their shared common ancestry in haplogroup B. Furthermore, multiple independent origins of the 9-bp deletion at the background of other mtDNA haplogroups has been shown in populations of Africa, Europe, Australia, and India. We have analyzed 3293 Indian individuals belonging to 58 populations, representing different caste, tribal, and religious groups, for the length variation in the 9-bp motif. The 9-bp deletion (one copy) and insertion (three copies) alleles were observed in 2.51% (2.15% deletion and 0.36% insertion) of the individuals. The maximum frequency of the deletion (45.8%) was observed in the Nicobarese in association with the haplogroup B5a D-loop motif that is common throughout southeast Asia. The low polymorphism in the D-loop sequence of the Nicobarese B5a samples suggests their recent origin and a founder effect, probably involving migration from southeast Asia. Interestingly, none of the 302 (except one Munda sample, which has 9-bp insertion) from Mundari-speaking Austro-Asiatic populations from the Indian mainland showed the length polymorphism of the 9-bp motif, pointing either to their independent origin from the Mon-Khmeric-speaking Nicobarese or to an extensive admixture with neighboring Indo-European-speaking populations. Consistent with previous reports, the Indo-European and Dravidic populations of India showed low frequency of the 9-bp deletion/insertion. More than 18 independent origins of the deletion or insertion mutation could be inferred in the phylogenetic analysis of the D-loop sequences.

Details

ISSN :
14321203
Volume :
119
Issue :
1-2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3a7bf8e1f7c7479c441127dc7631d645