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Multiple southward migrations of Neolithic Chinese farmers into Southeast Asia revealed from large-scale Y-chromosome sequences.

Wang Mengge, M Liu, Yunhui Y et al.

41706841 PubMed ID
28 Authors
2026-02-20 Published
160 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

WM
Wang Mengge
ML
M Liu
YY
Yunhui Y
LL
Luo Lintao
LW
L Wang
ZZ
Zhiyong Z
FY
Feng Yuhang
YY
Y Yang
TT
Ting T
CJ
Chen Jing
JL
J Liu
YY
Yufeng Y
HY
Huang Yuguo
YS
Y Sun
QQ
Qiuxia Q
DS
Duan Shuhan
SL
S Lin
XX
Xinyu X
ZJ
Zhong Jie
JL
J Li
BB
Bowen B
LK
Liu Kaijun
KY
K Yuan
HH
Haibing H
LC
Liu Chao
CT
C Tang
RR
Renkuan R
HG
He Guanglin
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

The scale and timing of genetic contributions from ancient millet- and rice-farming populations in China to Southeast Asian populations remain incompletely understood, particularly concerning Y-chromosome diversity. Here, a comprehensive dataset of Chinese Y-chromosome variations, including 1507 high-coverage sequences from ethnolinguistically diverse groups, was analyzed alongside 780 ancient genomes from eastern Eurasia and 1748 low-coverage sequences from Southeast Asia. We reconstructed a high-resolution, time-calibrated Y-chromosome phylogeny, revealing multiple male-biased expansions associated with Neolithic cultural innovations in South China. These expansions markedly shaped the paternal ancestry of both South China and mainland Southeast Asia. Founding lineages linked to Hmong-Mien and Tai-Kadai speakers were traced, revealing notable growth during the Middle Neolithic. Phylogeographic structure, network analyses, and haplogroup distributions indicate complex demographic interactions that established the genetic legacy of Neolithic farmers in Southeast Asia. These findings highlight recurrent southward migrations of Chinese farmer-related groups and their enduring influence on the paternal genetic landscape of ancient and present-day Southeast Asians.

Chapter III

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