Why Europeans have less Neanderthal DNA than East Asians

Tautalus

Regular Member
Messages
225
Reaction score
235
Points
43
Ethnic group
Portuguese
Y-DNA haplogroup
I2-M223 / I-FTB15368
mtDNA haplogroup
H6a1b2
New study in the journal Science Advances on why do some groups of people today have more Neanderthal DNA than others.

Past human expansions shaped the spatial pattern of Neanderthal ancestry

Abstract
The worldwide expansion of modern humans (Homo sapiens) started before the extinction of Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis). Both species coexisted and interbred, leading to slightly higher introgression in East Asians than in Europeans. This distinct ancestry level has been argued to result from selection, but range expansions of modern humans could provide an alternative explanation. This hypothesis would lead to spatial introgression gradients, increasing with distance from the expansion source. We investigate the presence of Neanderthal introgression gradients after past human expansions by analyzing Eurasian paleogenomes. We show that the out-of-Africa expansion resulted in spatial gradients of Neanderthal ancestry that persisted through time. While keeping the same gradient orientation, the expansion of early Neolithic farmers contributed decisively to reducing the Neanderthal introgression in European populations compared to Asian populations. This is because Neolithic farmers carried less Neanderthal DNA than preceding Paleolithic hunter-gatherers. This study shows that inferences about past human population dynamics can be made from the spatiotemporal variation in archaic introgression.



mKqKkF3.jpg
 
the Neanderthal DNA of the Dzudzuana people was diluted with Basal Eurasian DNA
this Dzudzuana DNA had spread all over SW Asia
 

This thread has been viewed 803 times.

Back
Top