The genomic history of the Middle East
Author(s) -
Mohamed A. Almarri,
Marc Haber,
Reem A. Lootah,
Pille Hallast,
Saeed Al Turki,
Hilary C. Martin,
Yali Xue,
Chris TylerSmith
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2021.07.013
Subject(s) - biology , aridification , evolutionary biology , population bottleneck , population , neanderthal , middle east , founder effect , effective population size , demographic history , ancient dna , bottleneck , genetics , genetic variation , genotype , gene , paleontology , demography , haplotype , allele , archaeology , history , microsatellite , arid , sociology , computer science , embedded system
The Middle East region is important to understand human evolution and migrations but is underrepresented in genomic studies. Here, we generated 137 high-coverage physically phased genome sequences from eight Middle Eastern populations using linked-read sequencing. We found no genetic traces of early expansions out-of-Africa in present-day populations but found Arabians have elevated Basal Eurasian ancestry that dilutes their Neanderthal ancestry. Population sizes within the region started diverging 15-20 kya, when Levantines expanded while Arabians maintained smaller populations that derived ancestry from local hunter-gatherers. Arabians suffered a population bottleneck around the aridification of Arabia 6 kya, while Levantines had a distinct bottleneck overlapping the 4.2 kya aridification event. We found an association between movement and admixture of populations in the region and the spread of Semitic languages. Finally, we identify variants that show evidence of selection, including polygenic selection. Our results provide detailed insights into the genomic and selective histories of the Middle East.
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