The Genetic Diversification of Human Populations
A special issue of Genes (ISSN 2073-4425). This special issue belongs to the section "Population and Evolutionary Genetics and Genomics".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (25 August 2022) | Viewed by 13133
Special Issue Editor
Interests: human genetic diversification; gene environment disease coevolution; gene association of human phenotype
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Modern humans dispersed to most regions of the world in the last 70,000 years. Along with this dispersal, their genomes diversified under various mechanisms, which warrant sufficient investigation and analysis in order to reveal the history of human evolution as well as future developments.
The genetic diversification of human populations is a wide topic about the origin and genetic structure of populations both historically and in the present day, as well as the adaptation, selection, phenomic association, and other relevant aspects. The field began very early in the middle of the last century, represented by the works of Luca Cavalisforza etc., and soon revealed the genetic diversity of the classical markers among world populations. In 1987, the discovery of mitochondrial Eva initiated the phylogeny research of human genetic markers. The most outstanding findings about population history and relationship were contributed by Y-chromosome phylogenetic studies, which have strong expressions of the long history of patriarchy. After the Human Genomic Project, more papers on whole genomes have told us many stories under the horizon of our history records. Furthermore, in the last two decades, developments in ancient DNA analyses provided an increasingly clear view of human evolution. Linking the diversities in human genomes and phenomes is ongoing, allowing us to continue further in this direction.
This Special Issue will collect reviews and original contributions regarding whole genome diversity of the world population, Y chromosome resequencing and high-resolution phylogeny, ancient DNA studies, phenomic-related genetic diversity, and other studies about the genetic diversity of human populations.
Prof. Dr. Hui Li
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- human populations
- genome diversity
- ancient DNA
- genetic diversity
- Y chromosome resequencing
- high-resolution phylogeny