50,000 years of evolutionary history of India: Impact on health and disease variation
Author | Skov, Laurits |
Author | Patterson, Nick |
Author | Banerjee, Joyita |
Author | Khobragade, Pranali |
Author | Chakrabarti, Sankha S. |
Author | Chakrawarty, Avinash |
Author | Chatterjee, Prasun |
Author | Dhar, Minakshi |
Author | Gupta, Monica |
Author | John, John P. |
Author | Koul, Parvaiz A. |
Author | Lehl, Sarabmeet S. |
Author | Mohanty, Rashmi R. |
Author | Padmaja, Mekala |
Author | Perianayagam, Arokiasamy |
Author | Rajguru, Chhaya |
Author | Sankhe, Lalit |
Author | Talukdar, Arunansu |
Author | Varghese, Mathew |
Author | Yadati, Sathyanarayana Raju |
Author | Zhao, Wei |
Author | Leung, Yuk Yee |
Author | Schellenberg, Gerard D. |
Author | Wang, Yi Zhe |
Author | Smith, Jennifer A. |
Author | Dey, Sharmistha |
Author | Ganna, Andrea |
Author | Dey, Aparajit Ballav |
Author | Kardia, Sharon L.R. |
Author | Lee, Jinkook |
Author | Moorjani, Priya |
Author | Kerdoncuff, Elise |
Available date | 2025-07-29T11:48:44Z |
Publication Date | 2025-06-26 |
Publication Name | Cell |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2025.04.027 |
Citation | Kerdoncuff, E., Skov, L., Patterson, N., Banerjee, J., Khobragade, P., Chakrabarti, S. S., ... & Moorjani, P. (2025). 50,000 years of evolutionary history of India: Impact on health and disease variation. Cell, 188(13), 3389-3404. |
ISSN | 0092-8674 |
Abstract | India has been underrepresented in genomic surveys. We generated whole-genome sequences from 2,762 individuals in India, capturing the genetic diversity across most geographic regions, linguistic groups, and historically underrepresented communities. We find most Indians harbor ancestry primarily from three ancestral groups: South Asian hunter-gatherers, Eurasian Steppe pastoralists, and Neolithic farmers related to Iranian and Central Asian cultures. The extensive homozygosity and identity-by-descent sharing among individuals reflects strong founder events due to a recent shift toward endogamy. We uncover that most of the genetic variation in Indians stems from a single major migration out of Africa that occurred around 50,000 years ago, followed by 1%–2% gene flow from Neanderthals and Denisovans. Notably, Indians exhibit the largest variation and possess the highest amount of population-specific Neanderthal ancestry segments among worldwide groups. Finally, we discuss how this complex evolutionary history has shaped the functional and disease variation on the subcontinent. |
Sponsor | This work was supported by: - the National Institute on Aging (grant number R01AG051125 , RF1AG055273 , and U01AG065958 ). - the NIA U01AG065958 and NIH R35GM142978. - the NovoNordisk Hallas-M\u00F8ller Emerging Investigator NNF23OC0081723 and U01AG065958. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Subject | genomic diversity in India South Asian evolutionary history ancient gene flow founder events Neanderthal ancestry Denisovan ancestry functional variation adaptation disease susceptibility peopling of India |
Type | Article |
Pagination | 3389-3404 |
Issue Number | 13 |
Volume Number | 188 |
Open Access user License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ |
ESSN | 1097-4172 |
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