Qiaomei Fu
Chinese Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Qiaomei Fu.
Nature | 2010
David Reich; Richard E. Green; Martin Kircher; Johannes Krause; Nick Patterson; Eric Durand; Bence Viola; Adrian W. Briggs; Udo Stenzel; Philip L. F. Johnson; Tomislav Maricic; Jeffrey M. Good; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Can Alkan; Qiaomei Fu; Swapan Mallick; Heng Li; Matthias Meyer; Evan E. Eichler; Mark Stoneking; Michael P. Richards; Sahra Talamo; Michael V. Shunkov; Anatoli P. Derevianko; Jean-Jacques Hublin; Janet Kelso; Montgomery Slatkin; Svante Pääbo
Using DNA extracted from a finger bone found in Denisova Cave in southern Siberia, we have sequenced the genome of an archaic hominin to about 1.9-fold coverage. This individual is from a group that shares a common origin with Neanderthals. This population was not involved in the putative gene flow from Neanderthals into Eurasians; however, the data suggest that it contributed 4–6% of its genetic material to the genomes of present-day Melanesians. We designate this hominin population ‘Denisovans’ and suggest that it may have been widespread in Asia during the Late Pleistocene epoch. A tooth found in Denisova Cave carries a mitochondrial genome highly similar to that of the finger bone. This tooth shares no derived morphological features with Neanderthals or modern humans, further indicating that Denisovans have an evolutionary history distinct from Neanderthals and modern humans.
Science | 2012
Matthias Meyer; Martin Kircher; Marie Theres Gansauge; Heng Li; Fernando Racimo; Swapan Mallick; Joshua G. Schraiber; Flora Jay; Kay Prüfer; Cesare de Filippo; Peter H. Sudmant; Can Alkan; Qiaomei Fu; Ron Do; Nadin Rohland; Arti Tandon; Michael Siebauer; Richard E. Green; Katarzyna Bryc; Adrian W. Briggs; Udo Stenzel; Jesse Dabney; Jay Shendure; Jacob O. Kitzman; Michael F. Hammer; Michael V. Shunkov; Anatoli P. Derevianko; Nick Patterson; Aida M. Andrés; Evan E. Eichler
Ancient Genomics The Denisovans were archaic humans closely related to Neandertals, whose populations overlapped with the ancestors of modern-day humans. Using a single-stranded library preparation method, Meyer et al. (p. 222, published online 30 August) provide a detailed analysis of a high-quality Denisovan genome. The genomic sequence provides evidence for very low rates of heterozygosity in the Denisova, probably not because of recent inbreeding, but instead because of a small population size. The genome sequence also illuminates the relationships between humans and archaics, including Neandertals, and establishes a catalog of genetic changes within the human lineage. A close-up look provides clues to the relationships between modern humans, Denisovans, and Neandertals. We present a DNA library preparation method that has allowed us to reconstruct a high-coverage (30×) genome sequence of a Denisovan, an extinct relative of Neandertals. The quality of this genome allows a direct estimation of Denisovan heterozygosity indicating that genetic diversity in these archaic hominins was extremely low. It also allows tentative dating of the specimen on the basis of “missing evolution” in its genome, detailed measurements of Denisovan and Neandertal admixture into present-day human populations, and the generation of a near-complete catalog of genetic changes that swept to high frequency in modern humans since their divergence from Denisovans.
Nature | 2014
Kay Prüfer; Fernando Racimo; Nick Patterson; Flora Jay; Sriram Sankararaman; Susanna Sawyer; Anja Heinze; Gabriel Renaud; Peter H. Sudmant; Cesare de Filippo; Heng Li; Swapan Mallick; Michael Dannemann; Qiaomei Fu; Martin Kircher; Martin Kuhlwilm; Michael Lachmann; Matthias Meyer; Matthias Ongyerth; Michael Siebauer; Christoph Theunert; Arti Tandon; Priya Moorjani; Joseph K. Pickrell; James C. Mullikin; Samuel H. Vohr; Richard E. Green; Ines Hellmann; Philip L. F. Johnson; Hélène Blanché
We present a high-quality genome sequence of a Neanderthal woman from Siberia. We show that her parents were related at the level of half-siblings and that mating among close relatives was common among her recent ancestors. We also sequenced the genome of a Neanderthal from the Caucasus to low coverage. An analysis of the relationships and population history of available archaic genomes and 25 present-day human genomes shows that several gene flow events occurred among Neanderthals, Denisovans and early modern humans, possibly including gene flow into Denisovans from an unknown archaic group. Thus, interbreeding, albeit of low magnitude, occurred among many hominin groups in the Late Pleistocene. In addition, the high-quality Neanderthal genome allows us to establish a definitive list of substitutions that became fixed in modern humans after their separation from the ancestors of Neanderthals and Denisovans.
Nature | 2010
Johannes Krause; Qiaomei Fu; Jeffrey M. Good; Bence Viola; Michael V. Shunkov; Anatoli P. Derevianko; Svante Pääbo
With the exception of Neanderthals, from which DNA sequences of numerous individuals have now been determined, the number and genetic relationships of other hominin lineages are largely unknown. Here we report a complete mitochondrial (mt) DNA sequence retrieved from a bone excavated in 2008 in Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains in southern Siberia. It represents a hitherto unknown type of hominin mtDNA that shares a common ancestor with anatomically modern human and Neanderthal mtDNAs about 1.0 million years ago. This indicates that it derives from a hominin migration out of Africa distinct from that of the ancestors of Neanderthals and of modern humans. The stratigraphy of the cave where the bone was found suggests that the Denisova hominin lived close in time and space with Neanderthals as well as with modern humans.
Nature | 2015
Wolfgang Haak; Iosif Lazaridis; Nick Patterson; Nadin Rohland; Swapan Mallick; Bastien Llamas; Guido Brandt; Eadaoin Harney; Kristin Stewardson; Qiaomei Fu; Alissa Mittnik; Eszter Bánffy; Christos Economou; Michael Francken; Susanne Friederich; Rafael Garrido Pena; Fredrik Hallgren; Valery Khartanovich; Aleksandr Khokhlov; Michael Kunst; Pavel Kuznetsov; Harald Meller; Oleg Mochalov; Vayacheslav Moiseyev; Nicole Nicklisch; Sandra Pichler; Roberto Risch; Manuel Ángel Rojo Guerra; Christina Roth; Anna Szécsényi-Nagy
We generated genome-wide data from 69 Europeans who lived between 8,000–3,000 years ago by enriching ancient DNA libraries for a target set of almost 400,000 polymorphisms. Enrichment of these positions decreases the sequencing required for genome-wide ancient DNA analysis by a median of around 250-fold, allowing us to study an order of magnitude more individuals than previous studies and to obtain new insights about the past. We show that the populations of Western and Far Eastern Europe followed opposite trajectories between 8,000–5,000 years ago. At the beginning of the Neolithic period in Europe, ∼8,000–7,000 years ago, closely related groups of early farmers appeared in Germany, Hungary and Spain, different from indigenous hunter-gatherers, whereas Russia was inhabited by a distinctive population of hunter-gatherers with high affinity to a ∼24,000-year-old Siberian. By ∼6,000–5,000 years ago, farmers throughout much of Europe had more hunter-gatherer ancestry than their predecessors, but in Russia, the Yamnaya steppe herders of this time were descended not only from the preceding eastern European hunter-gatherers, but also from a population of Near Eastern ancestry. Western and Eastern Europe came into contact ∼4,500 years ago, as the Late Neolithic Corded Ware people from Germany traced ∼75% of their ancestry to the Yamnaya, documenting a massive migration into the heartland of Europe from its eastern periphery. This steppe ancestry persisted in all sampled central Europeans until at least ∼3,000 years ago, and is ubiquitous in present-day Europeans. These results provide support for a steppe origin of at least some of the Indo-European languages of Europe.
Nature | 2014
Matthias Meyer; Qiaomei Fu; Ayinuer Aximu-Petri; Isabelle Glocke; Birgit Nickel; Juan Luis Arsuaga; Ignacio Martínez; Ana Gracia; José María Bermúdez de Castro; Eudald Carbonell; Svante Pääbo
Excavations of a complex of caves in the Sierra de Atapuerca in northern Spain have unearthed hominin fossils that range in age from the early Pleistocene to the Holocene. One of these sites, the ‘Sima de los Huesos’ (‘pit of bones’), has yielded the world’s largest assemblage of Middle Pleistocene hominin fossils, consisting of at least 28 individuals dated to over 300,000 years ago. The skeletal remains share a number of morphological features with fossils classified as Homo heidelbergensis and also display distinct Neanderthal-derived traits. Here we determine an almost complete mitochondrial genome sequence of a hominin from Sima de los Huesos and show that it is closely related to the lineage leading to mitochondrial genomes of Denisovans, an eastern Eurasian sister group to Neanderthals. Our results pave the way for DNA research on hominins from the Middle Pleistocene.
Current Biology | 2013
Qiaomei Fu; Alissa Mittnik; Philip L. F. Johnson; Kirsten I. Bos; Martina Lari; Chengkai Sun; Liane Giemsch; Ralf Schmitz; Joachim Burger; Anna Maria Ronchitelli; Fabio Martini; Renata Grifoni Cremonesi; Ji rı́ Svoboda; Peter Bauer; David Caramelli; Sergi Castellano; David Reich; Svante Pääbo; Johannes Krause
BACKGROUND Recent analyses of de novo DNA mutations in modern humans have suggested a nuclear substitution rate that is approximately half that of previous estimates based on fossil calibration. This result has led to suggestions that major events in human evolution occurred far earlier than previously thought. RESULTS Here, we use mitochondrial genome sequences from ten securely dated ancient modern humans spanning 40,000 years as calibration points for the mitochondrial clock, thus yielding a direct estimate of the mitochondrial substitution rate. Our clock yields mitochondrial divergence times that are in agreement with earlier estimates based on calibration points derived from either fossils or archaeological material. In particular, our results imply a separation of non-Africans from the most closely related sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNAs (haplogroup L3) that occurred less than 62-95 kya. CONCLUSIONS Though single loci like mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) can only provide biased estimates of population divergence times, they can provide valid upper bounds. Our results exclude most of the older dates for African and non-African population divergences recently suggested by de novo mutation rate estimates in the nuclear genome.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Qiaomei Fu; Matthias Meyer; Xing Gao; Udo Stenzel; Hernán A. Burbano; Janet Kelso; Svante Pääbo
Hominins with morphology similar to present-day humans appear in the fossil record across Eurasia between 40,000 and 50,000 y ago. The genetic relationships between these early modern humans and present-day human populations have not been established. We have extracted DNA from a 40,000-y-old anatomically modern human from Tianyuan Cave outside Beijing, China. Using a highly scalable hybridization enrichment strategy, we determined the DNA sequences of the mitochondrial genome, the entire nonrepetitive portion of chromosome 21 (∼30 Mbp), and over 3,000 polymorphic sites across the nuclear genome of this individual. The nuclear DNA sequences determined from this early modern human reveal that the Tianyuan individual derived from a population that was ancestral to many present-day Asians and Native Americans but postdated the divergence of Asians from Europeans. They also show that this individual carried proportions of DNA variants derived from archaic humans similar to present-day people in mainland Asia.
Nature | 2016
Swapan Mallick; Heng Li; Mark Lipson; Iain Mathieson; Melissa Gymrek; Fernando Racimo; Mengyao Zhao; Niru Chennagiri; Arti Tandon; Pontus Skoglund; Iosif Lazaridis; Sriram Sankararaman; Qiaomei Fu; Nadin Rohland; Gabriel Renaud; Yaniv Erlich; Thomas Willems; Carla Gallo; Jeffrey P. Spence; Yun S. Song; Giovanni Poletti; Francois Balloux; George van Driem; Peter de Knijff; Irene Gallego Romero; Aashish R. Jha; Doron M. Behar; Claudio M. Bravi; Cristian Capelli; Tor Hervig
Here we report the Simons Genome Diversity Project data set: high quality genomes from 300 individuals from 142 diverse populations. These genomes include at least 5.8 million base pairs that are not present in the human reference genome. Our analysis reveals key features of the landscape of human genome variation, including that the rate of accumulation of mutations has accelerated by about 5% in non-Africans compared to Africans since divergence. We show that the ancestors of some pairs of present-day human populations were substantially separated by 100,000 years ago, well before the archaeologically attested onset of behavioural modernity. We also demonstrate that indigenous Australians, New Guineans and Andamanese do not derive substantial ancestry from an early dispersal of modern humans; instead, their modern human ancestry is consistent with coming from the same source as that of other non-Africans.
Nature | 2015
Qiaomei Fu; Mateja Hajdinjak; Oana Teodora Moldovan; Silviu Constantin; Swapan Mallick; Pontus Skoglund; Nick Patterson; Nadin Rohland; Iosif Lazaridis; Birgit Nickel; Bence Viola; Kay Prüfer; Matthias Meyer; Janet Kelso; David Reich; Svante Pääbo
Neanderthals are thought to have disappeared in Europe approximately 39,000–41,000 years ago but they have contributed 1–3% of the DNA of present-day people in Eurasia. Here we analyse DNA from a 37,000–42,000-year-old modern human from Peştera cu Oase, Romania. Although the specimen contains small amounts of human DNA, we use an enrichment strategy to isolate sites that are informative about its relationship to Neanderthals and present-day humans. We find that on the order of 6–9% of the genome of the Oase individual is derived from Neanderthals, more than any other modern human sequenced to date. Three chromosomal segments of Neanderthal ancestry are over 50 centimorgans in size, indicating that this individual had a Neanderthal ancestor as recently as four to six generations back. However, the Oase individual does not share more alleles with later Europeans than with East Asians, suggesting that the Oase population did not contribute substantially to later humans in Europe.