Study rewrites understanding of modern Japan's genetic ancestry
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[September 18, 2021]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - An analysis of ancient DNA is
transforming the understanding of the genetic ancestry of Japan's
modern-day population, identifying a crucial contribution from people
who arrived about 1,700 years ago and helped revolutionize Japanese
culture.
Research published on Friday showed that the people of Japan bear
genetic signatures from three ancient populations rather than just two
as previously thought - a more complex ancestry for the archipelago
nation of roughly 125 million.
The researchers analyzed genetic information from 17 ancient Japanese
people - DNA extracted from the bones of 12 specifically for this study
and five done previously - and compared it to genomic data for modern
Japanese people.
Previously documented genetic contributions were confirmed from two
ancient groups. The first was Japan's indigenous culture of
hunter-gatherers dating to roughly 15,000 years ago, the start of what
is called the Jomon period. The second was a population of Northeast
Asian origins who arrived at about 900 BC, bringing wet-rice farming
during the subsequent Yayoi period.
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Modern Japanese possess approximately 13% and 16% genetic ancestry from
those two groups, respectively, the researchers determined.
But 71% of their ancestry was found to come from a third ancient
population with East Asian origins that arrived at roughly 300 AD to
launch what is called the Kofun period, bringing various cultural
advances and developing centralized leadership. These migrants appear to
have had ancestry mainly resembling the Han people who make up most of
China's population.
"We are very excited about our findings on the tripartite structure of
Japanese populations. This finding is significant in terms of rewriting
the origins of modern Japanese by taking advantage of the power of
ancient genomics," said geneticist Shigeki Nakagome of Trinity College
Dublin in Ireland, co-leader of the study published in the journal
Science Advances.
The research demonstrates the ability of ancient DNA to uncover new
ancestral components that could not be seen using modern genetic data,
added study co-leader Daniel Bradley, also of Trinity College Dublin.
The study showed that people from Japan's ancient foraging, agrarian and
state-formation cultural phases each provided a significant contribution
to the ancestry of today's Japanese population, Nakagome said.
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Geishas, traditional Japanese female entertainers, perform their
dance during a press preview of the annual Azuma Odori Dance
Festival at the Shinbashi Enbujo Theater in Tokyo, Japan May 23,
2018. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File Photo
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The oldest of the skeletons from which DNA was
extracted was a female dating to around 9,000 years ago from a Jomon
period site in Ehime Prefecture, while the most recent were three
skeletons from about 1,500 years ago from a Kofun period site in
Ishikawa Prefecture, according to geneticist and study co-leader
Takashi Gakuhari of Kanazawa University in Japan.
The Kofun period is named after the large earthen tombs built for
members of the new ruling class at a time of the importation of
technology and culture from China by way of the Korean peninsula.
"Chinese characters started to be used in this period, such as
Chinese characters inscribed on metal implements, for example
swords," Nakagome said.
Insularity was a byproduct of Japan's island geography, surrounded
by oceans that made migration in ancient times difficult. The first
people to reach Japan arrived more than 30,000 years ago at a time
of lower sea levels when there may have been a land bridge to the
Asian mainland.
The researchers also said the genetics of Japan's population have
remained largely stable since the Kofun period, which lasted from
around 300-700 AD.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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