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Research Publication

A partial nuclear genome of the Jomons who lived 3000 years ago in Fukushima, Japan

Kanzawa-Kiriyama H, Kryukov K, Jinam TA et al.

27581845 PubMed ID
12 Authors
2017 Feb Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

KH
Kanzawa-Kiriyama H
KK
Kryukov K
JT
Jinam TA
HK
Hosomichi K
SA
Saso A
SG
Suwa G
US
Ueda S
YM
Yoneda M
TA
Tajima A
SK
Shinoda KI
II
Inoue I
SN
Saitou N
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The Jomon period of the Japanese Archipelago, characterized by cord-marked 'jomon' potteries, has yielded abundant human skeletal remains. However, the genetic origins of the Jomon people and their relationships with modern populations have not been clarified. We determined a total of 115 million base pair nuclear genome sequences from two Jomon individuals (male and female each) from the Sanganji Shell Mound (dated 3000 years before present) with the Jomon-characteristic mitochondrial DNA haplogroup N9b, and compared these nuclear genome sequences with those of worldwide populations. We found that the Jomon population lineage is best considered to have diverged before diversification of present-day East Eurasian populations, with no evidence of gene flow events between the Jomon and other continental populations. This suggests that the Sanganji Jomon people descended from an early phase of population dispersals in East Asia. We also estimated that the modern mainland Japanese inherited <20% of Jomon peoples' genomes. Our findings, based on the first analysis of Jomon nuclear genome sequence data, firmly demonstrate that the modern mainland Japanese resulted from genetic admixture of the indigenous Jomon people and later migrants.

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context

Scientific Assessment