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Scientific News Hypotheses Historical hypotheses INDIAN CASTE GROUPS HAVE DIFFERING GENETIC RELATIONSHIPS TO EUROPEANS AND ASIANS
Indian
Caste Groups Have Differing Genetic Relationships to Europeans and Asians
A
new study of genetic data shows that the ancestors of Indian men came from
different parts of the world than those of Indian women and produced modern
upper caste Indian populations that are genetically more similar to Europeans
and lower caste populations that are more similar to Asians. These findings
support historical data suggesting that West Eurasians migrating into India
during the last 10,000 years more often left descendants in the higher rather
than lower castes. The study is to be published in the June 1 edition of the
journal Genome Research.
"The dispersal and subsequent growth of
Indian populations during the Neolithic age is one of the most important events
to have shaped the history of South Asia. Thus, it is an obvious question to ask
who are the closest relatives of Indians and are the different castes more or
less similar to the same relatives," says lead study author Michael Bamshad,
M.D., a geneticist at the University of Utah.
Previous studies by other scientists analyzing
either Y-chromosome or mitochondrial genetic data of Indian populations have
often produced conflicting results, suggesting stronger similarity to either
Europeans or Asians. The new study analyzed both types of data in more than 1000
people and showed that ancestors of Indian men and women came from different
parts of the world. The differences likely account for the different genetic
relationships shown by looking at the gender-specific Y-chromosome and
mitochondrial genetic data.
Bamshad's study showed that each caste's
mitochondrial DNA, which derives from the mother only, has a greater similarity
to Asians than to Europeans, but the upper castes show less similarity than do
the lower castes. Conversely, Y-chromosome data, derived from the father only,
show each caste more similar to Europeans, with the upper castes being most
similar, probably because more Eurasian males migrated to India than did
Eurasian females.
To increase the power of the study, Bamshad and
his co-authors also examined 40 additional genes that are inherited from the
father and the mother. All of these data strongly supported the conclusion that
upper castes have a higher genetic similarity to Europeans than do lower castes.
Overall, the study indicates that Indian caste
populations are likely to be of Asian origin with greater West Eurasian
influence on the upper castes than lower castes. These results demonstrate the
power of using genetic tools to dissect human history and suggest that such
complex patterns of relationship between genders and social groups may be more
usual than scientists had previously thought.
Lynn Jorde, Ph.D., Professor of Human Genetics at
the University of Utah, is a co-author of the study. Additional collaborators
are from the Estonian Biocentre; Andhra University, India; Anthropological
Survey of India; University of Madras, India; University of Arizona; University
of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, United Kingdom; and the Louisiana State University
Health Science Center. This work was supported by the National Science
Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the Estonian Science Fund, and
the Newcastle University small grants committee.
The study was published online on the Genome
Research website on May 15. Print publication is scheduled for June
1.
- Department of Human Genetics
Eccles Institute of Human Genetics
University of Utah
RELEASE DATE: 15 May 2001
contacts:
Michael Bamshad, M.D., 801-585-3384
Lynn Jorde, Ph.D., 801-581-4566
Kristen Kamerath, public relations, 801-585-0538
Source of the information and the copyrights to
the publication belong Department
of Human Genetics
Publishing date: May 24, 2001
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