Ancient Xinjiang mitogenomes reveal intense admixture with high genetic diversity.
Wenjun WangManyu DingJacob D GardnerYongqiang WangBo MiaoWu GuoXinhua WuQiurong RuanJianjun YuXingjun HuBo WangXiaohong WuZihua TangAlipujiang NiyaziJie ZhangXien ChangYunpeng TangMeng RenPeng CaoFeng LiuQingyan DaiXiaotian FengRuowei YangMing ZhangTianyi WangWanjing PingWeihong HouWenying LiJian MaVikas KumarQiao-Mei FuPublished in: Science advances (2021)
Xinjiang is a key region in northwestern China, connecting East and West Eurasian populations and cultures for thousands of years. To understand the genetic history of Xinjiang, we sequenced 237 complete ancient human mitochondrial genomes from the Bronze Age through Historical Era (41 archaeological sites). Overall, the Bronze Age Xinjiang populations show high diversity and regional genetic affinities with Steppe and northeastern Asian populations along with a deep ancient Siberian connection for the Tarim Basin Xiaohe individuals. In the Iron Age, in general, Steppe-related and northeastern Asian admixture intensified, with North and East Xinjiang populations showing more affinity with northeastern Asians and South Xinjiang populations showing more affinity with Central Asians. The genetic structure observed in the Historical Era of Xinjiang is similar to that in the Iron Age, demonstrating genetic continuity since the Iron Age with some additional genetic admixture with populations surrounding the Xinjiang region.