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Ancient genomes give insight into 160,000 years of East Asian population dynamics and biological adaptation

Guanglin He, Yuntao Sun, Shuhan Duan, Lintao Luo, Qiuxia Sun, Bowen Li, Libing Yun, Chao Liu, Mengge Wang

2025Genome biology6 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Advances in ancient DNA research have transformed our understanding of human evolution, admixture-driven adaptation, and genetic underpinnings of traits. However, the evolutionary dynamics of Paleolithic and Neolithic East Asian remain fragmented. This review synthesizes 160,000 years of population interactions, highlighting three waves of archaic introgression and extensive population admixtures. We examine how ancestral lineages and agricultural innovations shaped East Asian populations, while migrations and admixture events linked to shifting subsistence strategies contributed to genomic and phenotypic diversity. Adaptive signatures from ancient genomes further elucidate the underpinnings of high-altitude adaptation, pigmentation, and morphological traits, offering new insights into human evolutionary biology.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAncient DNAEast AsiaEvolutionary biologyAdaptation (eye)IntrogressionPopulationGenomeHuman geneticsPopulation geneticsEvolutionary dynamicsSubsistence agricultureHuman evolutionPopulation genomicsHuman evolutionary geneticsGenomicsPhylogeographyUpper PaleolithicNatural selectionAdaptive evolutionHuman genomeLineage (genetic)Genetic algorithmCladeAdaptive strategiesPhylogeneticsForensic and Genetic ResearchPleistocene-Era Hominins and ArchaeologyRace, Genetics, and Society
Ancient genomes give insight into 160,000 years of East Asian population dynamics and biological adaptation | Litcius