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Research Publication

Whole-genome sequences provide insights into the formation and adaptation of human populations in the Himalayas.

Arciero Elena, E Almarri, Mohamed A MA et al.

40645174 PubMed ID
24 Authors
2025-08-04 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

AE
Arciero Elena
EA
E Almarri
MA
Mohamed A MA
MM
Mezzavilla Massimo
MX
M Xue
YY
Yali Y
HP
Hallast Pille
PH
P Hammoud
CC
Cidra C
CY
Chen Yuan
YS
Y Skov
LL
Laurits L
KT
Kraaijenbrink Thirsa
TA
T Ayub
QQ
Qasim Q
YH
Yang Huanming
HV
H van Driem
GG
George G
JM
Jobling Mark A
MD
MA de Knijff
PP
Peter P
TC
Tyler-Smith Chris
CA
C Asan
HM
Haber Marc
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

High-altitude environments pose significant challenges to human survival and reproduction, drawing considerable attention to the demographic and adaptive histories of populations in these regions. Here, we present whole-genome sequences from diverse Himalayan populations, offering new insights into the genomic history of this region. We find that population structure in the Himalayas began as early as 10,000 years ago, predating archaeological evidence of permanent habitation above 2,500 meters by ∼6,000 years. The widespread presence of the introgressed adaptive EPAS1 haplotype across all high-altitude populations highlights a shared genetic origin and its importance for survival in this region. We identify additional selection signals in genes linked to hypoxia, physical activity, immunity, and metabolism, all of which could have facilitated adaptation to the harsh environment. Over time, increasing genetic structure led to the emergence of the strongly differentiated ethnic groups observed today, many of which maintained small effective population sizes throughout their history or experienced severe bottlenecks. Between 6,000 and 3,000 years ago, with the advent of agriculture, a few uniparental lineages became predominant; however, significant population growth was not observed in the Himalayas except in the Tibetans. In recent history, we detect bidirectional gene flow between high-altitude and lowland groups on both sides of the Himalayan range, coinciding with the rise and expansion of historical regional powers, particularly during the Tibetan and northern Indian Gupta Empires. In the past few centuries, migrations to the Himalayas seem to have occurred alongside conflicts and population displacements in nearby regions and show some sex bias.

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