Saturday, January 30, 2010

301. Aftermath 16: Australia and New Guinea

11. An especially interesting paper on the female lineages of Australia and New Guinea was presented by Max Ingman and Ulf Gyllensten in a 2003 publication, Mitochondrial Genome Variation and Evolutionary History of Australian and New Guinean Aborigines. While most such studies have traditionally concentrated on the "neutral," non-coding segment of the mtDNA "D-loop," this segment "is characterized by a high frequency of homoplasy" (i.e., it is subject to back mutations that make it more difficult to construct an accurate phylogenetic tree) not found in the coding region. They decided, therefore, to produce
a tree reconstructed using just the coding region sequences (Fig. 2). Although the topologies of the two trees were essentially the same, the tree of sequences with the D-loop removed showed generally higher bootstrap values. For this reason, in studying the phylogenetic relationships among the mitochondrial lineages, we focused solely on the coding region (1601).
Here is the tree they came up with (click to enlarge):

Since they weren't using the usual D-loop markers, they decided against the usual mtDNA haplogroup nomenclature, based on L, M, N, etc. Their results are essentially equivalent, however:
Branch 1 and branch 2 are delineated by the nucleotide positions 8701, 9540, 10398, 10400, 10873, 14783, 15043, and 15301 relative to the Cambridge reference sequence (CRS; Anderson et al. 1981), consistent with what are sometimes referred to as haplogroups N (branch 1) and M (branch 2) (1601).
Those clades containing sequences from New Guinea are blocked out in green. Interestingly, there are only four basic types: 2a, a mix of highland and coastal New Guinea, plus a Nasioi speaker from Bougainville, in the Solomons -- this clade coalesces to 45,000 +- 9,000 years ago, "calculated from the deepest genetic split," suggesting that the coastal sequences are not of Austronesian descent, since this population is a relatively recent arrival; 1c and 1d, Australia and highland New Guinea; 1b, almost exclusively highland New Guinea, coalescing at 36,000 +- 8,000 ya; and 1a, coastal New Guinea and Western Polynesia, coalescing at 11,000 +- 4,000 ya, suggesting a relatively recent Austronesian origin for all. Note the many exclusively Australian clades (not marked).

An ongoing theme in the genetic story from this part of the world is a surprising male-female difference, and Australia is no exception:
Our analysis shows a striking difference between the genetic history of females and the reported history of males in the Australian Aboriginal population. As noted previously, the mitochondrial diversity in Australia is relatively high. The pattern seen in the Y-chromosome is different in that an Australia-specific haplotype (DYS390.1del/RPS4Y711T) is found in about 50% of males in Australia (Kayser et al. 2001; Redd et al. 2002). . . Kayser et al. (2001) proposed that the high frequency of a unique haplotype in Australia is the result of a population expansion that started from a few hundred individuals. In this case, the predominance of a unique Y-chromosome haplotype in Australia would be the result of a founder effect. However, there does not appear to be a corresponding loss of genetic diversity resulting from a bottleneck seen among mitochondrial lineages (1604 -- my emphasis).
In other words, the major discrepancy between Australian Y and mtDNA diversity suggests a bottleneck in the former, yet none in the latter, which seems puzzling -- unless males and females have a very different history on this continent.

Here's a summary of the author's conclusions, with some italicizing by me:
Archaeological evidence indicates that humans were present in New Guinea at least 40,000 years ago (Groube et al. 1986), at which time it was still joined with Australia. Our data show that some Australian sequences do share a closer ancestry with some New Guinean sequences than they do with other sequences on branch 1. In addition, . . . New Guinean and Australian sequences are more closely related to each other than either are to the Asian sequences. This may suggest that Australia and New Guinea were colonized jointly or that, if not, these populations have admixed since colonization. . . Our mitochondrial data imply that some lineages from the populations of Australia and New Guinea have shared a common history since the initial colonization of Sahul. . . .
The lack of a common Y-chromosome haplotype found both in Australia and in the
New Guinea highlands (or in any other Melanesian population) argues against the concept that the New Guinean and Australian populations are derived from the same migration event (Kayser et al. 2001). However, the Australia-specific Y chromosome haplotype could have arisen after the colonization of Sahul and therefore is absent in other populations.

Our mitochondrial data show no clear similarity between Australian Aborigines and the three southern Indian sequences examined, although a detailed examination of this hypothesis would require the analysis of additional individuals from the Indian Subcontinent. Nevertheless, mitochondrial DNA only provides information on the genetic history of females, and given the contrast between the mitochondrial DNA and the Y chromosome patterns, it appears that additional studies of autosomal loci are also necessary to obtain a balanced view of the evolutionary history of the peoples in this region.

I'll be discussing some of the themes raised above in my next post, when I finally try to put all the various bits and pieces of evidence together into some kind of theory.

2 comments:

German Dziebel said...

More recent genetic/biological research on the origin of Australian aborigines:

1) Revealing the prehistoric settlement of Australia by Y chromosome and mtDNA analysis, by Georgi Hudjashov. http://www.pnas.org/content/104/21/8726.abstract.

2) Y. Moodley et al. The Peopling of the Pacific from a Bacterial Perspective. Science 2009 323:527-530.

Neither finds any connection to India. The first one argues for a close relationship between Australian aborigines and PNG. The second detects an East Asian origin of Australian aborigines.

DocG said...

Thanks for the references, German. The first is significant, and I'll be discussing it in my next post. I'm glad you brought it to my attention. The second is a study of bacterial, not human DNA and it's behind a paywall so all I could read was the abstract, which didn't contain anything new, as far as I can tell. The study of the DNA of bacteria carried by humans has great potential for sure, so the article interests me, but I just can't afford to purchase every article that interests me, so I'll have to pass on this one for now.

"The second detects an East Asian origin of Australian aborigines."

Nothing new there. If they arrived via the Southern Route then they would have arrived from East Asia. Unless you mean northeast Asia? THAT would be a surprise.