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Genetic legacy of ancient hunter-gatherer Jomon in Japanese populations.

Yamamoto Kenichi, K Namba, Shinichi S et al.

39532881 PubMed ID
67 Authors
2024-11-12 Published
2,505 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

YK
Yamamoto Kenichi
KN
K Namba
SS
Shinichi S
SK
Sonehara Kyuto
KS
K Suzuki
KK
Ken K
SS
Sakaue Saori
SC
S Cooke
NP
Niall P NP
HS
Higashiue Shinichi
SK
S Kobayashi
SS
Shuzo S
AH
Afuso Hisaaki
HM
H Matsuura
KK
Kosho K
MY
Mitsumoto Yojiro
YF
Y Fujita
YY
Yasuhiko Y
TT
Tokuda Torao
TM
T Matsuda
KK
Koichi K
GT
Gakuhari Takashi
TY
T Yamauchi
TT
Toshimasa T
KT
Kadowaki Takashi
TN
T Nakagome
SS
Shigeki S
OY
Okada Yukinori
YY
Y Yamanashi
YY
Yuji Y
FY
Furukawa Yoichi
YM
Y Morisaki
TT
Takayuki T
MY
Murakami Yoshinori
YK
Y Kamatani
YY
Yoichiro Y
MK
Muto Kaori
KN
K Nagai
AA
Akiko A
NY
Nakamura Yusuke
YO
Y Obara
WW
Wataru W
YK
Yamaji Ken
KT
K Takahashi
KK
Kazuhisa K
AS
Asai Satoshi
ST
S Takahashi
YY
Yasuo Y
YH
Yamaguchi Hiroki
HN
H Nagata
YY
Yasunobu Y
WS
Wakita Satoshi
SN
S Nito
CC
Chikako C
IY
Iwasaki Yu-Ki
YM
YK Murayama
SS
Shigeo S
YK
Yoshimori Kozo
KM
K Miki
YY
Yoshio Y
OD
Obata Daisuke
DH
D Higashiyama
MM
Masahiko M
MA
Masumoto Akihide
AK
A Koga
YY
Yoshinobu Y
KY
Koretsune Yukihiro
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The tripartite ancestral structure is a recently proposed model for the genetic origin of modern Japanese, comprising indigenous Jomon hunter-gatherers and two additional continental ancestors from Northeast Asia and East Asia. To investigate the impact of the tripartite structure on genetic and phenotypic variation today, we conducted biobank-scale analyses by merging Biobank Japan (BBJ; n = 171,287) with ancient Japanese and Eurasian genomes (n = 22). We demonstrate the applicability of the tripartite model to Japanese populations throughout the archipelago, with an extremely strong correlation between Jomon ancestry and genomic variation among individuals. We also find that the genetic legacy of Jomon ancestry underlies an elevated body mass index (BMI). Genome-wide association analysis with rigorous adjustments for geographical and ancestral substructures identifies 132 variants that are informative for predicting individual Jomon ancestry. This prediction model is validated using independent Japanese cohorts (Nagahama cohort, n = 2993; the second cohort of BBJ, n = 72,695). We further confirm the phenotypic association between Jomon ancestry and BMI using East Asian individuals from UK Biobank (n = 2286). Our extensive analysis of ancient and modern genomes, involving over 250,000 participants, provides valuable insights into the genetic legacy of ancient hunter-gatherers in contemporary populations.

Chapter III

AI-Generated Summary

AI-generated by DNAGENICS

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Important: This summary is AI-generated by DNAGENICS for informational purposes only. It was not created by, affiliated with, or endorsed by the researchers behind the original publication, and is based solely on that published research. It may contain errors or omissions. DNAGENICS disclaims all liability for any inaccuracies or consequences arising from use of this information. Verify all information against the original publication. This is not professional scientific review or medical advice.

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