驯化
史前史
基因流
田园生活
人口
旧石器时代晚期
遗传谱系
古代DNA
基因库
地理
基因组
人类迁徙
草原
牲畜
遗传变异
考古
生物
人口学
生态学
遗传多样性
基因
遗传学
社会学
作者
Anders Bergström,Laurent Frantz,Ryan Schmidt,Erik Ersmark,Ophélie Lebrasseur,Linus Girdland-Flink,Audrey T. Lin,Jan Storå,Karl-Göran Sjögren,David W. Anthony,Ekaterina Antipina,Sarieh Amiri,Guy Bar‐Oz,Vladimir I. Bazaliiskii,Jelena Bulatović,Dorcas Brown,Alberto Carmagnini,Tom Davy,Sergey Fedorov,Ivana Fiore
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2020-10-29
卷期号:370 (6516): 557-564
被引量:233
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.aba9572
摘要
Dogs were the first domestic animal, but little is known about their population history and to what extent it was linked to humans. We sequenced 27 ancient dog genomes and found that all dogs share a common ancestry distinct from present-day wolves, with limited gene flow from wolves since domestication but substantial dog-to-wolf gene flow. By 11,000 years ago, at least five major ancestry lineages had diversified, demonstrating a deep genetic history of dogs during the Paleolithic. Coanalysis with human genomes reveals aspects of dog population history that mirror humans, including Levant-related ancestry in Africa and early agricultural Europe. Other aspects differ, including the impacts of steppe pastoralist expansions in West and East Eurasia and a near-complete turnover of Neolithic European dog ancestry.
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