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1.
Heliyon ; 10(9): e29867, 2024 May 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38720733

RESUMO

Genetic and environmental factors play crucial roles in the development of esophageal cancer (EC) and contribute uniquely or cooperatively to human cancer susceptibility. Sichuan is located in the interior of southwestern China, and the northern part of Sichuan is one of the regions with a high occurrence of EC. However, the factors influencing the high incidence rate of EC in the Sichuan Han Chinese population and its corresponding genetic background and origins are still poorly understood. Here, we utilized genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and Y-chromosome short tandem repeats (Y-STRs) to characterize the genetic structure, connection, and origin of cancer groups and general populations. We generated Y-STR-based haplotype data from 214 Sichuan individuals, including the Han Chinese EC population and a control group of Han Chinese individuals. Our results, obtained from Y-STR-based population statistical methods (analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA), principal component analysis (PCA), and phylogenetic analysis), demonstrated that there was a genetic substructure difference between the EC population in the high-incidence area of northern Sichuan Province and the control population. Additionally, there was a strong genetic relationship between the EC population in the northern Sichuan high-incidence area and those at high risk in both the Fujian and Chaoshan areas. In addition, we obtained high-density SNP data from saliva samples of 60 healthy Han Chinese individuals from three high-prevalence areas of EC in China: Sichuan Nanchong, Fujian Quanzhou, and Henan Xinxiang. As inferred from the allele frequency of SNPs and sharing patterns of haplotype segments, the evolutionary history and admixture events suggested that the Han population from Nanchong in northern Sichuan Province shared a close genetic relationship with the Han populations from Xinxiang in Henan Province and Quanzhou in Fujian Province, both of which are regions with a high prevalence of EC. Our study illuminated the genetic profile and connection of the Northern Sichuan Han population and enriched the genomic resources and features of the Han Chinese populations in China, especially for the Y-STR genetic data of the Han Chinese EC population. Populations living in different regions with high incidences of EC may share similar genetic backgrounds, which offers new insights for further exploring the genetic mechanisms underlying EC.

2.
Heliyon ; 10(9): e30067, 2024 May 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38756579

RESUMO

Human Y-chromosomes are characterized by nonrecombination and uniparental inheritance, carrying traces of human history evolution and admixture. Large-scale population-specific genomic sources based on advanced sequencing technologies have revolutionized our understanding of human Y chromosome diversity and its anthropological and forensic applications. Here, we reviewed and meta-analyzed the Y chromosome genetic diversity of modern and ancient people from China and summarized the patterns of founding lineages of spatiotemporally different populations associated with their origin, expansion, and admixture. We emphasized the strong association between our identified founding lineages and language-related human dispersal events correlated with the Sino-Tibetan, Altaic, and southern Chinese multiple-language families related to the Hmong-Mien, Tai-Kadai, Austronesian, and Austro-Asiatic languages. We subsequently summarize the recent advances in translational applications in forensic and anthropological science, including paternal biogeographical ancestry inference (PBGAI), surname investigation, and paternal history reconstruction. Whole-Y sequencing or high-resolution panels with high coverage of terminal Y chromosome lineages are essential for capturing the genomic diversity of ethnolinguistically diverse East Asians. Generally, we emphasized the importance of including more ethnolinguistically diverse, underrepresented modern and spatiotemporally different ancient East Asians in human genetic research for a comprehensive understanding of the paternal genetic landscape of East Asians with a detailed time series and for the reconstruction of a reference database in the PBGAI, even including new technology innovations of Telomere-to-Telomere (T2T) for new genetic variation discovery.

3.
J Med Genet ; 2024 May 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38621993

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: As one of the most common congenital abnormalities in male births, cryptorchidism has been found to have a polygenic aetiology according to previous studies of common variants. However, little is known about genetic predisposition of rare variants for cryptorchidism, since rare variants have larger effective size on diseases than common variants. METHODS: In this study, a cohort of 115 Chinese probands with cryptorchidism was analysed using whole-genome sequencing, alongside 19 parental controls and 2136 unaffected men. Additionally, CRISPR-Cas9 editing of a conserved variant was performed in a mouse model, with MRI screening used to observe the phenotype. RESULTS: In 30 of 115 patients (26.1%), we identified four novel genes (ARSH, DMD, MAGEA4 and SHROOM2) affecting at least five unrelated patients and four known genes (USP9Y, UBA1, BCORL1 and KDM6A) with the candidate rare pathogenic variants affecting at least two cases. Burden tests of rare variants revealed the genome-wide significances for newly identified genes (p<2.5×10-6) under the Bonferroni correction. Surprisingly, novel and known genes were mainly found on X chromosome (seven on X and one on Y) and all rare X-chromosomal segregating variants exhibited a maternal inheritance rather than de novo origin. CRISPR-Cas9 mouse modelling of a splice donor loss variant in DMD (NC_000023.11:g.32454661C>G), which resides in a conserved site across vertebrates, replicated bilateral cryptorchidism phenotypes, confirmed by MRI at 4 and 10 weeks. The movement tests further revealed symptoms of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) in transgenic mice. CONCLUSION: Our results revealed the role of the DMD gene mutation in causing cryptorchidism. The results also suggest that maternal-X inheritance of pathogenic defects could have a predominant role in the development of cryptorchidism.

4.
Heliyon ; 10(8): e29235, 2024 Apr 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38665582

RESUMO

Pathogen‒host adaptative interactions and complex population demographical processes, including admixture, drift, and Darwen selection, have considerably shaped the Neolithic-to-Modern Western Eurasian population structure and genetic susceptibility to modern human diseases. However, the genetic footprints of evolutionary events in East Asia remain unknown due to the underrepresentation of genomic diversity and the design of large-scale population studies. We reported one aggregated database of genome-wide SNP variations from 796 Tai-Kadai (TK) genomes, including that of Bouyei first reported here, to explore the genetic history, population structure, and biological adaptative features of TK people from southern China and Southeast Asia. We found geography-related population substructure among TK people using the state-of-the-art population genetic structure reconstruction techniques based on the allele frequency spectrum and haplotype-resolved phased fragments. We found that the northern TK people from Guizhou harbored one TK-dominant ancestry maximized in the Bouyei people, and the southern TK people from Thailand were more influenced by Southeast Asians and indigenous people. We reconstructed fitted admixture models and demographic graphs, which showed that TK people received gene flow from ancient southern rice farmer-related lineages related to the Hmong-Mien and Austroasiatic people and from northern millet farmers associated with the Sino-Tibetan people. Biological adaptation focused on our identified unique TK lineages related to Bouyei, which showed many adaptive signatures conferring Malaria resistance and low-rate lipid metabolism. Further gene enrichment, the allele frequency distribution of derived alleles, and their correlation with the incidence of Malaria further confirmed that CR1 played an essential role in the resistance of Malaria in the ancient "Baiyue" tribes.

5.
BMC Biol ; 22(1): 55, 2024 Mar 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38448908

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The underrepresentation of human genomic resources from Southern Chinese populations limited their health equality in the precision medicine era and complete understanding of their genetic formation, admixture, and adaptive features. Besides, linguistical and genetic evidence supported the controversial hypothesis of their origin processes. One hotspot case was from the Chinese Guangxi Pinghua Han people (GPH), whose language was significantly similar to Southern Chinese dialects but whose uniparental gene pool was phylogenetically associated with the indigenous Tai-Kadai (TK) people. Here, we analyzed genome-wide SNP data in 619 people from four language families and 56 geographically different populations, in which 261 people from 21 geographically distinct populations were first reported here. RESULTS: We identified significant population stratification among ethnolinguistically diverse Guangxi populations, suggesting their differentiated genetic origin and admixture processes. GPH shared more alleles related to Zhuang than Southern Han Chinese but received more northern ancestry relative to Zhuang. Admixture models and estimates of genetic distances showed that GPH had a close genetic relationship with geographically close TK compared to Northern Han Chinese, supporting their admixture origin hypothesis. Further admixture time and demographic history reconstruction supported GPH was formed via admixture between Northern Han Chinese and Southern TK people. We identified robust signatures associated with lipid metabolisms, such as fatty acid desaturases (FADS) and medically relevant loci associated with Mendelian disorder (GJB2) and complex diseases. We also explored the shared and unique selection signatures of ethnically different but linguistically related Guangxi lineages and found some shared signals related to immune and malaria resistance. CONCLUSIONS: Our genetic analysis illuminated the language-related fine-scale genetic structure and provided robust genetic evidence to support the admixture hypothesis that can explain the pattern of observed genetic diversity and formation of GPH. This work presented one comprehensive analysis focused on the population history and demographical adaptative process, which provided genetic evidence for personal health management and disease risk prediction models from Guangxi people. Further large-scale whole-genome sequencing projects would provide the entire landscape of southern Chinese genomic diversity and their contributions to human health and disease traits.


Assuntos
Aclimatação , Genômica , Humanos , China , Alelos , Idioma
6.
BMC Biol ; 22(1): 18, 2024 Jan 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38273256

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The underrepresentation of Hmong-Mien (HM) people in Asian genomic studies has hindered our comprehensive understanding of the full landscape of their evolutionary history and complex trait architecture. South China is a multi-ethnic region and indigenously settled by ethnolinguistically diverse HM, Austroasiatic (AA), Tai-Kadai (TK), Austronesian (AN), and Sino-Tibetan (ST) people, which is regarded as East Asia's initial cradle of biodiversity. However, previous fragmented genetic studies have only presented a fraction of the landscape of genetic diversity in this region, especially the lack of haplotype-based genomic resources. The deep characterization of demographic history and natural-selection-relevant genetic architecture of HM people was necessary. RESULTS: We reported one HM-specific genomic resource and comprehensively explored the fine-scale genetic structure and adaptative features inferred from the genome-wide SNP data of 440 HM individuals from 33 ethnolinguistic populations, including previously unreported She. We identified solid genetic differentiation between HM people and Han Chinese at 7.64‒15.86 years ago (kya) and split events between southern Chinese inland (Miao/Yao) and coastal (She) HM people in the middle Bronze Age period and the latter obtained more gene flow from Ancient Northern East Asians. Multiple admixture models further confirmed that extensive gene flow from surrounding ST, TK, and AN people entangled in forming the gene pool of Chinese coastal HM people. Genetic findings of isolated shared unique ancestral components based on the sharing alleles and haplotypes deconstructed that HM people from the Yungui Plateau carried the breadth of previously unknown genomic diversity. We identified a direct and recent genetic connection between Chinese inland and Southeast Asian HM people as they shared the most extended identity-by-descent fragments, supporting the long-distance migration hypothesis. Uniparental phylogenetic topology and network-based phylogenetic relationship reconstruction found ancient uniparental founding lineages in southwestern HM people. Finally, the population-specific biological adaptation study identified the shared and differentiated natural selection signatures among inland and coastal HM people associated with physical features and immune functions. The allele frequency spectrum of cancer susceptibility alleles and pharmacogenomic genes showed significant differences between HM and northern Chinese people. CONCLUSIONS: Our extensive genetic evidence combined with the historical documents supported the view that ancient HM people originated from the Yungui regions associated with ancient "Three-Miao tribes" descended from the ancient Daxi-Qujialing-Shijiahe people. Then, some have recently migrated rapidly to Southeast Asia, and some have migrated eastward and mixed respectively with Southeast Asian indigenes, Liangzhu-related coastal ancient populations, and incoming southward ST people. Generally, complex population migration, admixture, and adaptation history contributed to the complicated patterns of population structure of geographically diverse HM people.


Assuntos
População do Leste Asiático , Genética Populacional , Humanos , China , Genômica , Haplótipos , Filogenia
7.
Forensic Sci Int Genet ; 70: 103010, 2024 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38271830

RESUMO

The worldwide implementation of short tandem repeats (STR) profiles in forensic genetics necessitated establishing and expanding the CODIS core loci set to facilitated efficient data management and exchange. Currently, the mainstay CODIS STRs are adopted in most general-purpose forensic kits. However, relying solely on these loci failed to yield satisfactory results for challenging tasks, such as bio-geographical ancestry inference, complex DNA mixture profile interpretation, and distant kinship analysis. In this context, non-CODIS STRs are potent supplements to enhance the systematic discriminating power, particularly when combined with the high-throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) technique. Nevertheless, comprehensive evaluation on non-CODIS STRs in diverse populations was scarce, hindering their further application in routine caseworks. To address this gap, we investigated genetic variations of 178 historically available non-CODIS STRs from ethnolinguistically different worldwide populations and studied their characteristics and forensic potentials via high-coverage whole genome sequencing (WGS) data. Initially, we delineated the genomic properties of these non-CODIS markers through sequence searching, repeat structure scanning, and manual inspection. Subsequent population genetics analysis suggested that these non-CODIS STRs had comparable polymorphism levels and forensic utility to CODIS STRs. Furthermore, we constructed a theoretical next-generation sequencing (NGS) panel comprising 108 STRs (20 CODIS STRs and 88 non-CODIS STRs), and evaluated its performance in inferring bio-geographical ancestry origins, deconvoluting complex DNA mixtures, and differentiating distant kinships using real and simulated datasets. Our findings demonstrated that incorporating supplementary non-CODIS STRs enabled the extrapolation of multidimensional information from a single STR profile, thereby facilitating the analysis of challenging forensic tasks. In conclusion, this study presents an extensive genomic landscape of forensic non-CODIS STRs among global populations, and emphasized the imperative inclusion of additional polymorphic non-CODIS STRs in future NGS-based forensic systems.


Assuntos
Genética Populacional , Polimorfismo Genético , Humanos , DNA/genética , Genômica , Impressões Digitais de DNA/métodos , Análise de Sequência de DNA/métodos , Repetições de Microssatélites
8.
Sci Bull (Beijing) ; 69(1): 103-113, 2024 Jan 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37914610

RESUMO

The southward expansion of East Asian farmers profoundly influenced the social evolution of Southeast Asia by introducing cereal agriculture. However, the timing and routes of cereal expansion in key regions are unclear due to limited empirical evidence. Here we report macrofossil, microfossil, multiple isotopic (C/N/Sr/O) and paleoproteomic data directly from radiocarbon-dated human samples, which were unearthed from a site in Xingyi in central Yunnan and which date between 7000 and 3300 a BP. Dietary isotopes reveal the earliest arrival of millet ca. 4900 a BP, and greater reliance on plant and animal agriculture was indicated between 3800 and 3300 a BP. The dietary differences between hunter-gatherer and agricultural groups are also evident in the metabolic and immune system proteins analysed from their skeletal remains. The results of paleoproteomic analysis indicate that humans had divergent biological adaptations, with and without farming. The combined application of isotopes, archaeobotanical data and proteomics provides a new approach to documenting dietary and health changes across major subsistence transitions.


Assuntos
Agricultura , Fazendeiros , Animais , Humanos , China , Agricultura/métodos , Sudeste Asiático , Grão Comestível , Isótopos
9.
BMC Genomics ; 24(1): 672, 2023 Nov 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37936086

RESUMO

Sino-Tibetan is the most prominent language family in East Asia. Previous genetic studies mainly focused on the Tibetan and Han Chinese populations. However, due to the sparse sampling, the genetic structure and admixture history of Tibeto-Burman-speaking populations in the low-altitude region of Southwest China still need to be clarified. We collected DNA from 157 individuals from four Tibeto-Burman-speaking groups from the Guizhou province in Southwest China. We genotyped the samples at about 700,000 genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms. Our results indicate that the genetic variation of the four Tibeto-Burman-speaking groups in Guizhou is at the intermediate position in the modern Tibetan-Tai-Kadai/Austronesian genetic cline. This suggests that the formation of Tibetan-Burman groups involved a large-scale gene flow from lowland southern Chinese. The southern ancestry could be further modelled as deriving from Vietnam's Late Neolithic-related inland Southeast Asia agricultural populations and Taiwan's Iron Age-related coastal rice-farming populations. Compared to the Tibeto-Burman speakers in the Tibetan-Yi Corridor reported previously, the Tibeto-Burman groups in the Guizhou region received additional gene flow from the southeast coastal area of China. We show a difference between the genetic profiles of the Tibeto-Burman speakers of the Tibetan-Yi Corridor and the Guizhou province. Vast mountain ranges and rivers in Southwest China may have decelerated the westward expansion of the southeast coastal East Asians. Our results demonstrate the complex genetic profile in the Guizhou region in Southwest China and support the multiple waves of human migration in the southern area of East Asia.


Assuntos
Povo Asiático , Fluxo Gênico , Humanos , China , Povo Asiático/genética , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Genômica , Genética Populacional
10.
J Genet Genomics ; 2023 Oct 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37827489

RESUMO

Tibeto-Burman (TB) people have endeavored to adapt to the hypoxic, cold, and high-UV high-altitude environments in the Tibetan Plateau and complex disease exposures in lowland rainforests since the late Paleolithic period. However, the full landscape of genetic history and biological adaptation of geographically diverse TB-speaking people, as well as their interaction mechanism, remain unknown. Here, we generate a whole-genome meta-database of 500 individuals from 39 TB-speaking populations and present a comprehensive landscape of genetic diversity, admixture history, and differentiated adaptative features of geographically different TB-speaking people. We identify genetic differentiation related to geography and language among TB-speaking people, consistent with their differentiated admixture process with incoming or indigenous ancestral source populations. A robust genetic connection between the Tibetan-Yi corridor and the ancient Yellow River people supports their Northern China origin hypothesis. We finally report substructure-related differentiated biological adaptative signatures between highland Tibetans and Loloish speakers. Adaptative signatures associated with the physical pigmentation (EDAR and SLC24A5) and metabolism (ALDH9A1) are identified in Loloish people, which differed from the high-altitude adaptative genetic architecture in Tibetan. TB-related genomic resources provide new insights into the genetic basis of biological adaptation and better reference for the anthropologically informed sampling design in biomedical and genomic cohort research.

11.
BMC Genomics ; 24(1): 611, 2023 Oct 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37828453

RESUMO

Uniparental-inherited haploid genetic marker of Y-chromosome single nucleotide polymorphisms (Y-SNP) have the power to provide a deep understanding of the human evolutionary past, forensic pedigree, and bio-geographical ancestry information. Several international cross-continental or regional Y-panels instead of Y-whole sequencing have recently been developed to promote Y-tools in forensic practice. However, panels based on next-generation sequencing (NGS) explicitly developed for Chinese populations are insufficient to represent the Chinese Y-chromosome genetic diversity and complex population structures, especially for Chinese-predominant haplogroup O. We developed and validated a 639-plex panel including 633 Y-SNPs and 6 Y-Insertion/deletions, which covered 573 Y haplogroups on the Y-DNA haplogroup tree. In this panel, subgroups from haplogroup O accounted for 64.4% of total inferable haplogroups. We reported the sequencing metrics of 354 libraries sequenced with this panel, with the average sequencing depth among 226 individuals being 3,741×. We illuminated the high level of concordance, accuracy, reproducibility, and specificity of the 639-plex panel and found that 610 loci were genotyped with as little as 0.03 ng of genomic DNA in the sensitivity test. 94.05% of the 639 loci were detectable in male-female mixed DNA samples with a mix ratio of 1:500. Nearly all of the loci were genotyped correctly when no more than 25 ng/µL tannic acid, 20 ng/µL humic acid, or 37.5 µM hematin was added to the amplification mixture. More than 80% of genotypes were obtained from degraded DNA samples with a degradation index of 11.76. Individuals from the same pedigree shared identical genotypes in 11 male pedigrees. Finally, we presented the complex evolutionary history of 183 northern Chinese Hans and six other Chinese populations, and found multiple founding lineages that contributed to the northern Han Chinese gene pool. The 639-plex panel proved an efficient tool for Chinese paternal studies and forensic applications.


Assuntos
População do Leste Asiático , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Humanos , Genótipo , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Genética Populacional , Haplótipos , Cromossomos Humanos Y/genética , DNA
12.
BMC Genomics ; 24(1): 317, 2023 Jun 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37308851

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Yungui Plateau in Southwest China is characterized by multi-language and multi-ethnic communities and is one of the regions with the wealthiest ethnolinguistic, cultural and genetic diversity in East Asia. There are numerous Tai-Kadai (TK)-speaking populations, but their detailed evolutionary history and biological adaptations are still unclear. RESULTS: Here, we genotyped genome-wide SNP data of 77 unrelated TK-speaking Zhuang and Dong individuals from the Yungui Plateau and explored their detailed admixture history and adaptive features using clustering patterns, allele frequency differentiation and sharing haplotype patterns. TK-speaking Zhuang and Dong people in Guizhou are closely related to geographically close TK and Hmong-Mien (HM)-speaking populations. Besides, we identified that Guizhou TK-speaking people have a close genetic relationship with Austronesian (AN)-speaking Atayal and Paiwan people, which is supported by the common origin of the ancient Baiyue tribe. We additionally found subtle genetic differences among the newly studied TK people and previously reported Dais via the fine-scale genetic substructure analysis based on the shared haplotype chunks. Finally, we identified specific selection candidate signatures associated with several essential human immune systems and neurological disorders, which could provide evolutionary evidence for the allele frequency distribution pattern of genetic risk loci. CONCLUSIONS: Our comprehensive genetic characterization of TK people suggested the strong genetic affinity within TK groups and extensive gene flow with geographically close HM and Han people. We also provided genetic evidence that supported the common origin hypothesis of TK and AN people. The best-fitted admixture models further suggested that ancestral sources from northern millet farmers and southern inland and coastal people contributed to the formation of the gene pool of the Zhuang and Dong people.


Assuntos
Adaptação Biológica , Povo Asiático , Humanos , Povo Asiático/genética , Evolução Biológica , China , Análise por Conglomerados , Genética Populacional
14.
Hum Genomics ; 17(1): 29, 2023 03 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36973821

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Non-recombining regions of the Y-chromosome recorded the evolutionary traces of male human populations and are inherited haplotype-dependently and male-specifically. Recent whole Y-chromosome sequencing studies have identified previously unrecognized population divergence, expansion and admixture processes, which promotes a better understanding and application of the observed patterns of Y-chromosome genetic diversity. RESULTS: Here, we developed one highest-resolution Y-chromosome single nucleotide polymorphism (Y-SNP) panel targeted for uniparental genealogy reconstruction and paternal biogeographical ancestry inference, which included 639 phylogenetically informative SNPs. We genotyped these loci in 1033 Chinese male individuals from 33 ethnolinguistically diverse populations and identified 256 terminal Y-chromosomal lineages with frequency ranging from 0.0010 (singleton) to 0.0687. We identified six dominant common founding lineages associated with different ethnolinguistic backgrounds, which included O2a2b1a1a1a1a1a1a1-M6539, O2a1b1a1a1a1a1a1-F17, O2a2b1a1a1a1a1b1a1b-MF15397, O2a2b2a1b1-A16609, O1b1a1a1a1b2a1a1-F2517, and O2a2b1a1a1a1a1a1-F155. The AMOVA and nucleotide diversity estimates revealed considerable differences and high genetic diversity among ethnolinguistically different populations. We constructed one representative phylogenetic tree among 33 studied populations based on the haplogroup frequency spectrum and sequence variations. Clustering patterns in principal component analysis and multidimensional scaling results showed a genetic differentiation between Tai-Kadai-speaking Li, Mongolic-speaking Mongolian, and other Sinitic-speaking Han Chinese populations. Phylogenetic topology inferred from the BEAST and Network relationships reconstructed from the popART further showed the founding lineages from culturally/linguistically diverse populations, such as C2a/C2b was dominant in Mongolian people and O1a/O1b was dominant in island Li people. We also identified many lineages shared by more than two ethnolinguistically different populations with a high proportion, suggesting their extensive admixture and migration history. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicated that our developed high-resolution Y-SNP panel included major dominant Y-lineages of Chinese populations from different ethnic groups and geographical regions, which can be used as the primary and powerful tool for forensic practice. We should emphasize the necessity and importance of whole sequencing of more ethnolinguistically different populations, which can help identify more unrecognized population-specific variations for the promotion of Y-chromosome-based forensic applications.


Assuntos
Cromossomos Humanos Y , População do Leste Asiático , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Humanos , China , Cromossomos Humanos Y/genética , População do Leste Asiático/genética , Genética Populacional , Haplótipos , Filogenia
15.
Hum Genomics ; 17(1): 3, 2023 01 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36721228

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Fine-scale genetic structure of ethnolinguistically diverse Chinese populations can fill the gap in the missing diversity and evolutionary landscape of East Asians, particularly for anthropologically informed Chinese minorities. Hmong-Mien (HM) people were one of the most significant indigenous populations in South China and Southeast Asia, which were suggested to be the descendants of the ancient Yangtze rice farmers based on linguistic and archeological evidence. However, their deep population history and biological adaptative features remained to be fully characterized. OBJECTIVES: To explore the evolutionary and adaptive characteristics of the Miao people, we genotyped genome-wide SNP data in Guizhou HM-speaking populations and merged it with modern and ancient reference populations via a comprehensive population genetic analysis and evolutionary admixture modeling. RESULTS: The overall genetic admixture landscape of Guizhou Miao showed genetic differentiation between them and other linguistically diverse Guizhou populations. Admixture models further confirmed that Miao people derived their primary ancestry from geographically close Guangxi Gaohuahua people. The estimated identity by descent and effective population size confirmed a plausible population bottleneck, contributing to their unique genetic diversity and population structure patterns. We finally identified several natural selection candidate genes associated with several biological pathways. CONCLUSIONS: Guizhou Miao possessed a specific genetic structure and harbored a close genetic relationship with geographically close southern Chinese indigenous populations and Guangxi historical people. Miao people derived their major ancestry from geographically close Guangxi Gaohuahua people and experienced a plausible population bottleneck which contributed to the unique pattern of their genetic diversity and structure. Future ancient DNA from Shijiahe and Qujialing will provide new insights into the origin of the Miao people.


Assuntos
Adaptação Biológica , Povo Asiático , Humanos , Haplótipos/genética , Alelos , China , Povo Asiático/genética
16.
Forensic Sci Res ; 7(3): 498-502, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36353334

RESUMO

Sichuan Province is located at the transitional junction regions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and the low-altitude plains. It also serves as the corridor of Sino-Tibetan-speaking population migration and expansion since neolithic expansion of Proto-Tibeto-Burman populations from Middle/Upper Yellow River during Majiayao period (3300-2000 BC). However, the population structure and the corresponding genetic diversity of forensic-related markers in this region remain unclear. Thus, we genotyped 30 insertion-deletion (InDel) markers in 444 samples from four ethnic groups (Han, Tibetan, Hui and Yi) from Sichuan Province using the Investigator® DIPplex kit to explore the characteristics of population genetics and forensic genetic focuses. All the loci were found to be in Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium (HWE) after applying a Bonferroni correction and no pairwise loci showed prominent linkage disequilibrium. The combined matching probability (CMP) and the combined power of discrimination (CPD) are larger than 1.8089 × 10-11 and 0.99999999995, respectively. Principal component analysis, multi-dimensional scaling plots and Neighbour-Joining tree among 65 worldwide populations indicated that Sichuan Hui and Han are genetically close to Hmong-Mien and Tai-Kadai-speaking populations, and Sichuan Tibetan and Yi bear a strong genetic affinity with Tibeto-Burman-speaking populations. The model-based genetic structure further supports the genetic affinity between the studied populations and linguistically close populations.Key PointsForensic parameters of 30 insertion-deletions (InDels) in 444 individuals from four populations are reported, which showed abundant genetic affinity and diversity among populations and high value in personal identification.Genetic similarities existed between the studied populations and ethnically, linguistically close populations.Sichuan Hui and Han are genetically close to Hmong-Mien and Tai-Kadai-speaking populations.Sichuan Tibetan and Yi bear a strong genetic affinity with Tibeto-Burman-speaking populations.

17.
Forensic Sci Int Genet ; 61: 102786, 2022 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36242887

RESUMO

Y-chromosomal haplogroups determined by Y-chromosomal single nucleotide polymorphisms (Y-SNPs) allow paternal lineage identification and paternal biogeographic ancestry inference, which has attracted a lot of interest in the forensic community. Recently, a comprehensive Y-SNP tool with dominant markers targeting haplogroups in R, E and I branches has been reported, which allows the inference of 640 Y haplogroups. It had a very good performance and could provide a high level of Y haplogroup resolution in most populations. However, the predominant haplogroups in the Chinese populations are O, C and N, suggesting that more Y-SNPs under these clades are needed to achieve the population-specific high resolution. Herein, aiming at the Chinese population, we presented a largely improved custom Y-SNP MPS panel that contains 256 carefully ascertained Y-SNPs based on our previous studies, and evaluated this panel via a series of tests, including the tests for concordance, repeatability, sensitivity, specificity, and stability, as well as the mixture, degraded and case-type sample analysis. The preliminary developmental validation demonstrated that this panel was highly reliable, sensitive, specific, and robust. In the sensitivity test, even when the DNA input was reduced to as low as 0.5 ng, the sample could still be assigned to the correct Y haplogroup. For mixture analysis, even the 1:99 (Male: Female) mixtures had no effects on the assignation of the Y haplogroup of the male contributor. In summary, this assay has provided a high-resolution Y-chromosomal haplogrouping workflow to determine a male's paternal lineage and/or paternal biogeographic ancestry and could be widely used for Chinese Y-chromosomal haplogroups dissection.


Assuntos
Cromossomos Humanos Y , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Humanos , Masculino , Feminino , Haplótipos , DNA/análise , China , Genética Populacional
18.
Forensic Sci Res ; 7(2): 189-195, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35784419

RESUMO

With the characteristics of low mutation rate, length variation and short amplicon size, insertion/deletion polymorphisms (InDels) have the advantages of both short tandem repeats (STRs) and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Herein, people of two ethnicities from Hainan Island were genotyped for the first time using the Investigator DIPplex kit. We investigated the forensic parameters of the 30 InDels and the phylogenetic relationships among different populations. The accumulated powers of discrimination and powers of exclusion were 0.999 999 999 9646 and 0.9897 in the Hainan Han population and 0.999 999 999 9292 and 0.9861 in the Hainan Li population, respectively. Additionally, population comparisons among geographically, ethnically and linguistically diverse populations via cluster heatmap, multidimensional scaling, principal component analysis, phylogenetic tree and STRUCTURE analyses demonstrated that the Hainan Han population had genetic similarities to the other Han, She and Tujia populations, while the Hainan Li population had close genetic relationships to the Zhuang and Miao groups; both populations had a high degree of genetic differentiation from most Turkic-speaking populations. Aforementioned results suggested that the 30 autosomal InDels are highly polymorphic and informative, which are suitable for human identification and population genetics.

19.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(13)2022 Jun 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35808445

RESUMO

To address the problems of tiny objects and high resolution of object detection in remote sensing imagery, the methods with coarse-grained image cropping have been widely studied. However, these methods are always inefficient and complex due to the two-stage architecture and the huge computation for split images. For these reasons, this article employs YOLO and presents an improved architecture, NRT-YOLO. Specifically, the improvements can be summarized as: extra prediction head and related feature fusion layers; novel nested residual Transformer module, C3NRT; nested residual attention module, C3NRA; and multi-scale testing. The C3NRT module presented in this paper could boost accuracy and reduce complexity of the network at the same time. Moreover, the effectiveness of the proposed method is demonstrated by three kinds of experiments. NRT-YOLO achieves 56.9% mAP0.5 with only 38.1 M parameters in the DOTA dataset, exceeding YOLOv5l by 4.5%. Also, the results of different classifications show its excellent ability to detect small sample objects. As for the C3NRT module, the ablation study and comparison experiment verified that it has the largest contribution to accuracy increment (2.7% in mAP0.5) among the improvements. In conclusion, NRT-YOLO has excellent performance in accuracy improvement and parameter reduction, which is suitable for tiny remote sensing object detection.


Assuntos
Tecnologia de Sensoriamento Remoto , Tecnologia de Sensoriamento Remoto/métodos
20.
Ann Transl Med ; 10(10): 546, 2022 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35722438

RESUMO

Background: Laparoscopic surgery has been in great demand over the past decades; it has also brought several obstacles, such as increasing difficulty in maintaining hemostasis, changes in surgical approach, and reduced field of vision. Locating the bleeding point can help surgeons to control bleeding quickly, however, to date, there have been no tools designed for automatic bleeding tracking in laparoscopic operations. Herein, we have proposed a spatiotemporal hybrid model based on a faster region-based convolutional neural network (RCNN) for bleeding point detection in laparoscopic surgery videos. Methods: Laparoscopic videos performed at our hospital were retrieved and images containing bleeding events were extracted. Spatiotemporal features were extracted by using red-green-blue (RGB) frames and optical flow maps and a spatiotemporal hybrid model was developed based on the faster RCNN. The proposed model contributed to (I) providing real-time bleeding point detection which directly assist surgeons, (II) showing the blood's optical flow which improved bleeding point detection, and (III) detecting both arterial and venous bleeding. Results: In this study, 12 different bleeding videos were included for deep learning model training. Compared with models containing a single RGB or a single optical flow map, our model combining RGB and optical flow achieved great detection results (precision rate of 0.8373, recall rate of 0.8034, and average precision of 0.6818). Conclusions: Our approach performs well in bleeding point location and recognition, indicating its potential value in helping to maintain and re-establish hemostasis during operations.

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