
Global scientists develop South-East Asian population genome data
A group of international researchers has constructed a comprehensive South-East Asian population genome variation dataset, according to the Kunming Institute of Zoology (KIZ) under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Mainland South-East Asia (MSEA) has rich ethnic and cultural diversity with a population of nearly 300 million. However, people from MSEA are underrepresented in the current human genomic databases.
The researchers from countries including China, Thailand and Cambodia have spent more than 10 years venturing deep into the rainforests of South-East Asian countries and collecting samples from South-East Asian populations covering five major language families in six countries. They successfully completed whole-genome deep sequencing of 3,023 samples.
The international researchers have, for the first time, comprehensively mapped the genetic variation and genomic structure of South-East Asian populations, revealing how the genomic landscape of the region has been shaped by the combined effects of ancient population differentiation, admixture, adaptation, changes in population size and gene flow from archaic humans, according to their research article published in the journal Nature.
Additionally, the study has revealed the genetic mechanisms underlying phenotypic traits related to adaptation to tropical rainforests, such as skin color, body height and malaria resistance. This provides important evidence for understanding how natural selection has shaped modern human phenotypic diversity.
The study has also detected multiple traces of Denisovan gene flow in South-East Asian indigenous populations. — Xinhua

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A group of international researchers has constructed a comprehensive South-East Asian population genome variation dataset, according to the Kunming Institute of Zoology (KIZ) under the Chinese Academy of Sciences. Mainland South-East Asia (MSEA) has rich ethnic and cultural diversity with a population of nearly 300 million. However, people from MSEA are underrepresented in the current human genomic databases. The researchers from countries including China, Thailand and Cambodia have spent more than 10 years venturing deep into the rainforests of South-East Asian countries and collecting samples from South-East Asian populations covering five major language families in six countries. They successfully completed whole-genome deep sequencing of 3,023 samples. The international researchers have, for the first time, comprehensively mapped the genetic variation and genomic structure of South-East Asian populations, revealing how the genomic landscape of the region has been shaped by the combined effects of ancient population differentiation, admixture, adaptation, changes in population size and gene flow from archaic humans, according to their research article published in the journal Nature. Additionally, the study has revealed the genetic mechanisms underlying phenotypic traits related to adaptation to tropical rainforests, such as skin color, body height and malaria resistance. This provides important evidence for understanding how natural selection has shaped modern human phenotypic diversity. The study has also detected multiple traces of Denisovan gene flow in South-East Asian indigenous populations. — Xinhua


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