Exploring the genetic diversity of the Japanese population: Insights from a large-scale whole genome sequencing analysis.
Yosuke KawaiYusuke WatanabeYosuke OmaeReiko MiyaharaSeik-Soon KhorEisei NoiriKoji KitajimaHideyuki ShimanukiHiroyuki GatanagaKenichiro HataKotaro HattoriAritoshi IidaHatsue Ishibashi-UedaTadashi KanameTatsuya KantoRyo MatsumuraKengo MiyoMichio NoguchiKouichi OzakiMasaya SugiyamaAyako TakahashiHaruhiko TokudaTsutomu TomitaAkihiro UmezawaHiroshi WatanabeSumiko YoshidaYu-Ichi GotoYutaka MaruokaYoichi MatsubaraShumpei NiidaMasashi MizokamiKatsushi TokunagaPublished in: PLoS genetics (2023)
The Japanese archipelago is a terminal location for human migration, and the contemporary Japanese people represent a unique population whose genomic diversity has been shaped by multiple migrations from Eurasia. We analyzed the genomic characteristics that define the genetic makeup of the modern Japanese population from a population genetics perspective from the genomic data of 9,287 samples obtained by high-coverage whole-genome sequencing (WGS) by the National Center Biobank Network. The dataset comprised populations from the Ryukyu Islands and other parts of the Japanese archipelago (Hondo). The Hondo population underwent two episodes of population decline during the Jomon period, corresponding to the Late Neolithic, and the Edo period, corresponding to the Early Modern era, while the Ryukyu population experienced a population decline during the shell midden period of the Late Neolithic in this region. Haplotype analysis suggested increased allele frequencies for genes related to alcohol and fatty acid metabolism, which were reported as loci that had experienced positive natural selection. Two genes related to alcohol metabolism were found to be 12,500 years out of phase with the time when they began to increase in the allele frequency; this finding indicates that the genomic diversity of Japanese people has been shaped by events closely related to agriculture and food production.