Genetic Evidence on the Origins
of Indian Caste Populations
Michael Bamshad,
1,10,12
Toomas Kivisild,
2
W. Scott Watkins,
3
Mary E. Dixon,
3
Chris E. Ricker,
3
Baskara B. Rao,
4
J. Mastan Naidu,
4
B.V. Ravi Prasad,
4,5
P. Govinda Reddy,
6
Arani Rasanayagam,
7
Surinder S. Papiha,
8
Richard Villems,
2
Alan J. Redd,
7
Michael F. Hammer,
7
Son V. Nguyen,
9
Marion L. Carroll,
9
Mark A. Batzer,
9,11
and Lynn B. Jorde
3
1
Department of Pediatrics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA;
2
Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology,
Tartu University and Estonian Biocentre, Tartu 51010, Estonia;
3
Department of Human Genetics, University of Utah,
Salt Lake City, Utah 84112, USA;
4
Department of Anthropology, Andhra University, Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh, India;
5
Anthropological Survey of India, Calcutta, India;
6
Department of Anthropology, University of Madras, Madras, Tamil Nadu,
India;
7
Laboratory of Molecular Systematics and Evolution, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA;
8
Department of Human Genetics, University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK;
9
Department of Pathology, Biometry
and Genetics, Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Stanley S. Scott Cancer Center, Louisiana State University Health
Science Center, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112, USA
The origins and affinities of the ∼1 billion people living on the subcontinent of India have long been contested.
This is owing, in part, to the many different waves of immigrants that have influenced the genetic structure of
India. In the most recent of these waves, Indo-European-speaking people from West Eurasia entered India from
the Northwest and diffused throughout the subcontinent. They purportedly admixed with or displaced
indigenous Dravidic-speaking populations. Subsequently they may have established the Hindu caste system and
placed themselves primarily in castes of higher rank. To explore the impact of West Eurasians on contemporary
Indian caste populations, we compared mtDNA (400 bp of hypervariable region 1 and 14 restriction site
polymorphisms) and Y-chromosome (20 biallelic polymorphisms and 5 short tandem repeats) variation in ∼265
males from eight castes of different rank to ∼750 Africans, Asians, Europeans, and other Indians. For maternally
inherited mtDNA, each caste is most similar to Asians. However, 20%–30% of Indian mtDNA haplotypes
belong to West Eurasian haplogroups, and the frequency of these haplotypes is proportional to caste rank, the
highest frequency of West Eurasian haplotypes being found in the upper castes. In contrast, for paternally
inherited Y-chromosome variation each caste is more similar to Europeans than to Asians. Moreover, the
affinity to Europeans is proportionate to caste rank, the upper castes being most similar to Europeans,
particularly East Europeans. These findings are consistent with greater West Eurasian male admixture with castes
of higher rank. Nevertheless, the mitochondrial genome and the Y chromosome each represents only a single
haploid locus and is more susceptible to large stochastic variation, bottlenecks, and selective sweeps. Thus, to
increase the power of our analysis, we assayed 40 independent, biparentally inherited autosomal loci (1 LINE-1
and 39 Alu elements) in all of the caste and continental populations (∼600 individuals). Analysis of these data
demonstrated that the upper castes have a higher affinity to Europeans than to Asians, and the upper castes are
significantly more similar to Europeans than are the lower castes. Collectively, all five datasets show a trend
toward upper castes being more similar to Europeans, whereas lower castes are more similar to Asians. We
conclude that Indian castes are most likely to be of proto-Asian origin with West Eurasian admixture resulting
in rank-related and sex-specific differences in the genetic affinities of castes to Asians and Europeans.
Shared Indo-European languages (i.e., Hindi and most
European languages) suggested to linguists of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries that contemporary
Hindu Indians are descendants of primarily West Eurasians who migrated from Europe, the Near East, Anatolia, and the Caucasus 3000–8000 years ago (Poliakov
1974; Renfrew 1989a,b). These nomadic migrants may
Present addresses:
10
Eccles Institute of Human Genetics, 15
North 2030 East, Room 2100, Universityof Utah, Salt Lake City,
UT 84112-5330, USA.
11
Department of Biological Sciences, Biological Computation and Visualization Center, Louisiana State
University, 508 Life Sciences Building, Baton Rouge, LA 70803,
USA.
12
Corresponding author.
E-MAIL mike@genetics.utah.edu; FAX (801) 585-9148.
Article and publication are at www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/
gr.173301.
Letter
11:000–000 ©2001 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/01 $5.00; www.genome.org Genome Research 1
www.genome.orghave consolidated their power by admixing with native Dravidic-speaking (e.g., Telugu) proto-Asian populations who controlled regional access to land, labor,
and resources (Cavalli-Sforza et al. 1994), and subsequently established the Hindu caste hierarchy to legitimize and maintain this power (Poliakov 1974; CavalliSforza et al. 1994). It is plausible that these West Eura s i a n immi g r a n t s a l s o a p p o i n t e d t h ems e l v e s t o
predominantly castes of higher rank. However, archaeological evidence of the diffusion of material culture from Western Eurasia into India has been limited
(Shaffer 1982). Therefore, information on the genetic
relationships of Indians to Europeans and Asians could
contribute substantially to understanding the origins
of Indian populations.
Previous genetic studies of Indian castes have
failed to achieve a consensus on Indian origins and
affinities. Various results have supported closer affinity
of Indian castes either with Europeans or with Asians,
and several factors underlie this inconsistency. First,
erratic or limited sampling of populations has limited
inferences about the relationships between caste and
continental populations (i.e., Africans, Asians, Europeans). These relationships are further confounded by
the wide geographic dispersal of caste populations. Genetic affinities among caste populations are, in part,
inversely correlated with the geographic distance between them (Malhotra and Vasulu 1993), and it is
likely that affinities between caste and continental
populations are also geographically dependent (e.g.,
different between North and South Indian caste populations). Second, it has been suggested that castes of
different rank may have originated from or admixed
with different continental groups (Majumder and
Mukherjee 1993). Third, the size of caste populations
varies widely, and the effects of genetic drift on some
small, geographically isolated castes may have been
substantial. Fourth, most of the polymorphisms assayed over the last 30 years are indirect measurements
of genetic variation (e.g., ABO typing), have been
sampled from only a few loci, and may not be selectively neutral. Finally, only rarely have systematic
comparisons been made with continental populations
using a large, uniform set of DNA polymorphisms
(Majumder 1999).
To investigate the origin of contemporary castes,
we compared the genetic affinities of caste populations
of differing rank (i.e., upper, middle, and lower) to
worldwide populations. We analyzed mtDNA (hypervariable region 1 [HVR1] sequence and 14 restrictionsite polymorphisms [RSPs]), Y-chromosome (5 shorttandem repeats [STRs] and 20 biallelic polymorphisms), and autosomal (1 LINE-1 and 39 Alu inserts)
variation in ∼265 males from eight different Teluguspeaking caste populations from the state of Andhra
Pradesh in South India (Bamshad et al. 1998). Comparisons were made to ∼400 individuals from tribal and
Hindi-speaking caste and populations distributed
across the Indian subcontinent (Mountain et al. 1995;
Kivisild et al. 1999) and to ∼350 Africans, Asians, and
Europeans (Jorde et al. 1995, 2000; Seielstad et al.
1999).
RESULTS
Analysis of mtDNA Suggests a Proto-Asian Origin
of Indians
MtDNA HVR1 genetic distances between caste populations and Africans, Asians, and Europeans are significantly different from zero (p < 0.001) and reveal that,
regardless of rank, each caste group is most closely related to Asians and is most dissimilar from Africans
(Table 1). The genetic distances from major continental populations (e.g., Europeans) differ among the
three caste groups, and the comparison reveals an intriguing pattern. As one moves from lower to upper
castes, the distance from Asians becomes progressively
larger. The distance between Europeans and lower
castes is larger than the distance between Europeans
and upper castes, but the distance between Europeans
and middle castes is smaller than the upper casteEuropean distance. These trends are the same whether
the Kshatriya and Vysya are included in the upper
castes, the middle castes, or excluded from the analysis. This may be owing, in part, to the small sample size
(n = 10) of each of these castes. Among the upper castes
the genetic distance between Brahmins and Europeans
(0.10) is smaller than that between either the Kshatriya
and Europeans (0.12) or the Vysya and Europeans
(0.16). Assuming that contemporary Europeans reflect
West Eurasian affinities, these data indicate that the
amount of West Eurasian admixture with Indian populations may have been proportionate to caste rank.
Conventional estimates of the standard errors of
genetic distances assume that polymorphic sites are independent of each other, that is, unlinked. Because
mtDNA polymorphisms are in complete linkage disequilibrium (as are polymorphisms on the nonrecomTable 1. MtDNA (HVR1 Sequence) Genetic Distances
between Caste Groups from Andhra Pradesh and
Continental Populations
Caste group Africans Asians Europeans
Upper .179 .037 .100 (0.106)
a
Middle .182 .025 .086 (0.084)
b
Lower .163 .023 .113
All castes .196 .026 .077
a
Genetic distance between upper castes and Europeans if the
Kshatriya and Vysya are excluded from the analysis.
b
Genetic distance between the middle castes and Europeans if
the Kshatriya and Vysya are grouped in the middle castes.
B a m s h a d e t a l .
2 Genome Research
www.genome.orgbining portions of the Y chromosome), this assumption is violated. Alternatively, the mtDNA genome can
be treated as a single locus with multiple haplotypes.
However, even if this assumption is made, mtDNA distances do not differ significantly from one another
even at the level of the three major continental populations (Nei and Livshits 1989), the standard errors being greater than the genetic distances. Considering
that the distances between castes and continental
populations are less than those between different continental populations, the estimated mtDNA genetic
distances between upper castes and Europeans versus
lower castes and Europeans would not be significantly
different from each other. Therefore, to resolve further
the relationships of Europeans and Asians to contemporary Indian populations, we defined the identities of
specific mtDNA restriction-site haplotypes.
The pr e s enc e of the mtDNA r e s t r i c t ion s i t e s
DdeI10,394
and AluI10,397
defines a haplogroup (a group
of haplotypes that share some sequence variants), M,
that was originally identified in populations that migrated from mainland Asia to Southeast Asia and Australia (Ballinger et al. 1992; Chen et al. 1995; Passarino
et al. 1996) and is found at much lower frequency in
European and African populations. Most of the common haplotypes found in Telugu- and Hindi-speaking
caste populations belong to haplogroup M (Table 2)
and do not differentiate into language-specific clusters
in a phylogenetic reconstruction (Fig. 1). Furthermore,
these Indian haplogroup-M haplotypes are distinct
from those found in other Asian populations (Fig. 2)
and indicate the existence of Indian-specific subsets of
haplogroup M (e.g., M3). As expected if the lower
castes are more similar to Asians than to Europeans,
and the upper castes are more similar to Europeans
than to Asians, the frequencies of M and M3 haplotypes are inversely proportional to caste rank (Table 2).
Of the non-Asian mtDNA haplotypes found in Indian populations, most are of West Eurasian origin
(Table 2; Torroni et al. 1994; Richards et al. 1998).
However, most of these Indian West-Eurasian haplotypes belong to an Indian-specific subset of haplogroup U, that is, U2i (Kivisild et al. 1999), the oldest
and second most common mtDNA haplogroup found
in Europe (Torroni et al. 1994). In agreement with the
HVR1 results, the frequency of West Eurasian mtDNA
haplotypes is significantly higher in upper castes than
in lower castes (p < 0.05), the frequency of U2i haplotypes increasing as one moves from lower to higher
castes. In addition, the frequency of mtDNA haplogroups with a more recent coalescence estimate (i.e.,
H, I, J, K, T) was fivefold higher in upper castes (6.8%)
than in lower castes (1.4%). These haplotypes are derivatives of haplogroups found throughout Europe (Richards et al. 1998), the Middle East (Di Rienzo and
Wilson 1991), and to a lesser extent Central Asia (Comas et al. 1998). Collectively, the mtDNA haplotype
evidence indicate that contemporary Indian mtDNA
e v o l v e d l a r g e l y f r om p r o t o -
Asian ancestors with Western
Eurasian admixture accounting
for 20%–30% of mtDNA haplotypes.
Y-Chromosome Variation
Confirms
Indo-European Admixture
Ge n e t i c d i s t a n c e s e s t ima t e d
from Y-chromosome STR polymorphisms differ significantly
from zero (p < 0.001) and reveal
a distinctly different pattern of
population relationships (Table
3). In contrast to the mtDNA
distances, the Y-chromosome
STR data do not demonstrate a
closer affinity to Asians for each
caste group. Upper castes are
more similar to Europeans than
to As ians , middl e cas t e s ar e
e q u i d i s t a n t f r o m t h e t w o
groups, and lower castes are
most similar to Asians. The genetic distance between caste
populations and Africans is proTable 2. MtDNA Haplogroup Frequencies in Dravidic and Hindi-Speaking Indians
Haplogroup
Dravidic (%) Hindi (%)
upper middle lower total
Asian 61 (5.5) 64.6 (3.8) 71.4 (5.3) 65.7 (2.7) 55.7 (2.9)
A 0 0 0 0 0.3 (.32)
B 0 0 0 0 0
F 0 0 0 0 2.7 (.94)
M 61 (5.5) 64.6 (3.8) 71.4 (5.3) 65.7 (2.7) 52.7 (2.9)
M3 18.6 (4.4) 3.5 (1.5) 1.4 (1.4) 6.6 (1.4) 6.0 (1.4)
M-C 0 0 0 0 0.7 (.48)
M-D 0 0 0 0 1.0 (.57)
M-G 0 0.9 (.74) 0 0.4 (.36) 0
M-E 0 1.8 (1.1) 0 0.8 (.51) 0
West Eurasian 23.7 (4.8) 14.2 (2.8) 7.1 (3.0) 14.5 (2.0) 27.4 (2.6)
U2i
b
16.9 (4.2) 9.7 (2.3) 5.7 (2.7) 10.3 (1.7) 15.3 (2.1)
W 1.7 (1.5) 0 0 0.4 (.36) 3.7 (.29)
H 3.4 (2.0 0 0 1.2 (.62) 2.3 (.87)
I 0 0 0 0 1.3 (.65)
J 0 0.9 (.75) 0 0.4 (.36) 0.7 (.48)
K 1.7 (1.5) 0 0 0.4 (.36) 0
T 0 2.7 (1.3) 1.4 (1.4) 1.7 (.73) 1.7 (.75)
X 0 0 0 0 0.7 (.48)
Others 15.3 (4.1) 21.2 (1.3) 21.4 (4.8) 19.8 (2.3) 16.7 (2.2)
standard errors are in parentheses.
a
These haplotypes belong to super-haplogroup R (ancestral to haplogroups B, F, H, T, J, V,
and U) but do not belong to any previously recognized haplogroup.
b
U2i is differentiated from haplogroup U by the presence of a transition at np 16051.
G e n e t i c E v i d e n c e o n C a s t e O r i g i n s
Genome Research 3
www.genome.orggressively larger moving from lower to middle to upper
caste groups (Table 3).
Genetic distances estimated from Y-chromosome
biallelic polymorphisms differ significantly from zero
(p < 0.05), and the patterns differ from the mtDNA results even more strikingly than the Y-chromosome
STRs. For Y-chromosome biallelic polymorphism data,
each caste group is more similar to Europeans (Table 4),
and as one moves from lower to middle to higher
castes the genetic distance to Europeans diminishes
progressively. This pattern is further accentuated by
separating the European population into Northern,
Southern, and Eastern Europeans; each caste group is
most closely related to Eastern Europeans. Moreover,
the genetic distance between upper castes and Eastern
Europeans is approximately half the distance between
Eastern Europeans and middle or lower castes. These
results suggest that Indian Y chromosomes, particularly upper caste Y chromosomes, are more similar to
European than to Asian Y chromosomes. This underscores the close affinities between Hindu Indian and
Indo-European Y chromosomes based on a previously
reported analysis of three Y-chromosome polymorphisms (Quintana-Murci et al. 1999b).
Overall, these results indicate that the affinities of
Indians to continental populations varies according to
Figure 1 Phylogeny of haplogroup M in India. Phylogenetic relationships between HVR1 haplotypes were estimated by constructing
reduced median networks. The size of each node is porportional to the haplotype frequency. Reticulations indicate parallel mutational
pathways or multiple mutations. The identities of HVR1 mutations (numbered according to the Cambridge reference sequence +16000;
Anderson et al. 1981) that define major haplogroup subsets are depicted along selected internodes. The coalescence estimate of Indian
haplogroup-M haplotypes is 48,000 1500 yr, suggesting that Indian-specific mtDNA haplotypes split from a proto-Asian ancestor in
the late Pleistocene.
B a m s h a d e t a l .
4 Genome Research
www.genome.orgcaste rank and depends on whether mtDNA or Ychromosome data are analyzed. However, conclusions
drawn from these data are limited because mtDNA and
the Y chromosome is each effectively a single haploid
locus and is more sensitive to genetic drift, bottlenecks,
and selective sweeps compared to autosomal loci.
These limitations of our analysis can be overcome, in
part, by analyzing a larger set of independent autosomal loci. Consequently, we assayed 1 LINE-1 and 39
unlinked Alu polymorphisms.
Affinities to Europeans and Asians Stratified
by Caste Rank
Genetic distances estimated from autosomal Alu elements correspond to caste rank, the genetic distance
between the upper and lower castes being more than
2.5 times larger than the distance between upper and
middle or middle and lower castes (upper to middle,
0.0069; uppe r to lowe r , 0.018; middl e to lowe r ,
0.0071). These trends are the same whether the Kshatriya and Vysya are included in the upper castes, the
middle castes, or excluded from the analysis (data not
shown). Furthermore, a neighbor-joining network of
genetic distances between separate castes (Fig. 3)
clearly differentiates castes of different rank into separate clusters. This is similar to the relationship between
genetic distances and caste rank estimated from
Table 3. Y Chromosome (STRs) Genetic Distances
between Caste Groups from Andhra Pradesh and
Continental Populations
Caste group Africans Asians Europeans
Upper .0166 .0104 .0092
Middle .0156 .0110 .0108
Lower .0131 .0088 .0108
All castes .0151 .0101 .0102
Figure 2 Major subsets of haplogroup M. Phylogenetic relationships of HVR1 haplotypes assigned to haplogroup M were estimated for:
(a) 343 Indians (Quintana-Murci et al. 1999a; this study); (b) 16 Turks and 78 Central Asians (Comas et al. 1998; this study); (c) 60
Mongolians (Kolman et al. 1996); (d) 25 Ethiopians (Quintana-Murci et al. 1999a); (e) 56 Chinese (Horai et al. 1996; this study); (f) 103
Japanese (Horai et al. 1996; Seo et al. 1998). The founding node of each network (M*) differs from the CRS (Anderson et al. 1981) by
transitions at np 10398, 10400, and 16223. The frequency of each subset of haplogroup M is indicated. Each phylogenetic network was
pruned by eliminating branches containing haplotypes summing to a frequency of <5% (these branches were binned with the founder
haplotype, M*). The identities of HVR1 mutations (numbered according to the CRS 16,000; Anderson et al. 1981) that define major
haplotype subsets are depicted along selected internodes.
G e n e t i c E v i d e n c e o n C a s t e O r i g i n s
Genome Research 5
www.genome.orgmtDNA (Bamshad et al. 1998). It is important to note,
however, that the autosomal genetic distances are estimated from 40 independent loci. This afforded us the
opportunity to test the statistical significance of the
correspondence between genetic distance and caste
status. The Mantel correlation between interindividual
genetic distances and distances based on social rank
was low but highly significant for individuals ranked
into uppe r , middl e , and lowe r groups (r = 0.08;
p < 0.001) and into eight separate castes (r = 0.07;
p < 0.001). Given the resolving power of this autosomal dataset, we next tested whether we could reconcile
t h e r e s u l t s o f t h e a n a l y s i s o f m t D N A a n d Y -
chromosome markers in castes and continental populations.
Genotypic differentiation was significantly different from zero (p < 0.0001) between each pair of caste
populations and between each caste and continental
population. Similar to the results of both the mtDNA
and Y-chromosome analyses, the distance between upper castes and European populations is smaller than the distance between lower castes and
Europeans (Table 5). However,
in contrast to the mtDNA res u l t s b u t s i m i l a r t o t h e Y -
chromosome results, the affinity between upper castes and
Europeans is higher than that
o f u p p e r c a s t e s a n d A s i a n s
(Table 5). If the Kshatriya and Vysya are excluded from
the analysis or included in the middle castes, the genetic distance between the upper caste (Brahmins) and
Europeans remains smaller than the distance between
the lower castes and Europeans and the distance between upper castes and Asians (Table 5). Analysis of
each caste separately reveals that the genetic distance
between the Brahmins and Europeans (0.013) is less
than the distance between Europeans and Kshatryia
(0.030) or Vysya (0.020). Nevertheless, each separate
upper caste is more similar to Europeans than to
Asians.
Because historical evidence suggests greater affinity between upper castes and Europeans than between
lower castes and Europeans (Balakrishnan 1978, 1982;
Cavalli-Sforza et al. 1994), it is appropriate to use a
one-tailed test of the difference between the corresponding genetic distances. The 90% confidence limits
of Nei's standard distances estimated between upper
castes and Europeans (0.006–0.016) versus lower castes
and Europeans (0.017–0.037) do not overlap, indicating statistical significance at the 0.05 level. Significance at 0.05 is not achieved if the Kshatriya and Vysya
are excluded. These results offer statistical support for
differences in the genetic affinity of Europeans to caste
populations of differing rank, with greater European
affinity to upper castes than to lower castes.
DISCUSSION
Previous genetic studies have found evidence to support either a European or an Asian origin of Indian
caste populations, with occasional indications of admixture with African or proto-Australoid populations
(Chen et al. 1995; Mountain et al. 1995; Bamshad et al.
1996, 1997; Majumder et al. 1999; Quintana-Murci et
al. 1999a). Our results demonstrate that for biparentally inherited autosomal markers, genetic distances
between upper, middle, and lower castes are significantly correlated with rank; upper castes are more similar to Europeans than to Asians; and upper castes are
significantly more similar to Europeans than are lower
castes. This result appears to be owing to the amalgamation of two different patterns of sex-specific genetic
variation.
The majority of Indian mtDNA restriction-site
haplotypes belong to Indian-specific subsets (e.g., M3)
Table 4. Y Chromosome (Bi-Allelic Polymorphisms) Genetic Distances between
Caste Groups from Andhra Pradesh and Continental Populations
a
Caste group Asians Europeans W. Europeans S. Europeans E. Europeans
Upper .388 .135 .265 .168 .073
Middle .291 .146 .249 .156 .133
Lower .376 .173 .283 .189 .155
a
Includes comparisons to unpublished data of M.F.H.
Figure 3 Neighbor-joining network of genetic distances
among caste communities estimated from 40 Alu polymorphisms. Distances between upper castes (U; Brahmin, Vysya,
Kshatriya), middle castes (M; Yadava, Kapu), and lower castes (L;
Mala, Madiga, Relli) are significantly correlated with social rank.
B a m s h a d e t a l .
6 Genome Research
www.genome.orgof a predominantly Asian haplogroup M, although a
substantial minority of mtDNA restriction site haplotypes belong to West Eurasian haplogroups. A higher
proportion of proto-Asian mtDNA restriction-site haplotypes is found in lower castes compared to middle or
upper castes, whereas the frequency of West Eurasian
haplotypes is positively correlated with caste rank, that
is, is highest in the upper castes. For Y-chromosome
STR variation the upper castes exhibit greatest similarity with Europeans, whereas the lower caste groups are
most similar to Asians. For Y biallelic polymorphism
variation, each caste group is more similar to Europeans than to Asians, and the affinity to Europeans is
proportional to caste rank, that is, is highest in the
upper castes.
Importantly, five different types of data (mtDNA
HVR1 sequence, mtDNA RSPs, Y-chromosome STRs, Ychromosome biallelic polymorphisms, and autosomal
Alu polymorphisms) support the same general pattern:
relatively smaller genetic distances from European
populations as one moves from lower to middle to upper caste populations. Genetic distances from Asian
populations become larger as one moves from lower to
middle to upper caste populations. It is especially noteworthy that the analysis of Y biallelic polymorphisms,
which involved an independent set of comparative
Asian, European, and African populations, again indicated the same pattern. Additional support is offered
by the fact that the autosomal polymorphisms yielded
a statistically significant difference between the uppercaste–European and lower-caste–European genetic distances. With additional loci, other differences (e.g., the
distances between different caste groups and Asians)
may also reach statistical significance.
The most likely explanation for these findings,
and the one most consistent with archaeological data,
is that contemporary Hindu Indians are of proto-Asian
origin with West Eurasian admixture. However, admixture with West Eurasian males was greater than admixture with West Eurasian females, resulting in a higher
affinity to European Y chromosomes. This supports an
earlier suggestion of Passarino
et al. (1996), which was based
on a comparison of mtDNA and
blood group results. Furthermore, the degree of West Eurasian admixture was proportional to caste rank. This explanation is consistent with either
the hypothesis that proportionately more West Eurasians became members of the upper
castes at the inception of the
caste hierarchy or that social
stratification preceded the West
Euras ian incur s ion and that
West Eurasians tended to insert themselves into
higher-ranking positions. One consequence is that
shared Indo-European languages may not reflect a
common origin of Europeans and most Indians, but
rather underscores the transfer of language mediated
by contact between West Eurasians and native protoIndians.
West Eurasian admixture in Indian populations
may have been the result of more than one wave of
immigration into India. Kivisild et al. (1999) determined the coalescence (∼50,000 years before present)
of the Indian-specific subset of the West Eurasian haplotypes (i.e., U2i) and suggested that West Eurasian admixture may have been much older than the purported Dravidian and Indo-European incursions. Our
analysis of Indian mtDNA restriction-site haplotypes
that do not belong to the U2i subset of West Eurasian
haplotypes (i.e., H, I, J, K, T) is consistent with more
recent West Eurasian admixture. It is also possible that
haplotypes with an older coalescence were introduced
by Dravidians, whereas haplotypes with a more recent
coalescence belonged to Indo-Europeans. This hypothesis can be tested by a more detailed comparison to
West Eurasian mtDNA haplotypes from Iran, Anatolia,
and the Caucasus. Alternatively, the coalescence dates
of these haplotypes may predate the entry of West Eurasians populations into India. Regardless of their origin, West Eurasian admixture resulted in rank-related
differences in the genetic affinities of castes to Europeans and Asians. Furthermore, the frequency of West
Eurasian haplotypes in the founding middle and upper
castes may be underestimated because of the upward
social mobility of women from lower castes (Bamshad
et al. 1998). These women were presumably more
likely to introduce proto-Asian mtDNA haplotypes
into the middle and upper castes.
Our analysis of 40 autosomal markers indicates
clearly that the upper castes have a higher affinity to
Europeans than to Asians. The high affinity of caste Y
chromosomes with those of Europeans suggests that
the majority of immigrating West Eurasians may have
Table 5. Autosomal Genetic Distances
a
between Caste Groups from Andhra
Pradesh and Continental Populations
Caste group Africans Asians Europeans
Upper .140 (0.074 .018) .058 (0.024 .009) .032
b
(.011 .003)
Middle .149 (0.082 .018) .032 (0.013 .005) .057
c
(.020 .006)
Lower .147 (0.083 .017) .044 (0.017 .005) .073 (.027 .006)
All castes .147 .039 .045
a
Nei standard distances standard errors are in parentheses.
b
If the Kshatriya and Vysya are excluded, the genetic distance between the upper castes and
Europeans is 0.038.
c
If the Kshatriya and Vysya are grouped in the middle castes, the genetic distance between
the middle castes and Europeans is 0.050.
G e n e t i c E v i d e n c e o n C a s t e O r i g i n s
Genome Research 7
www.genome.orgbeen males. As might be expected if West Eurasian
males appropriated the highest positions in the caste
system, the upper caste group exhibits a lower genetic
distance to Europeans than the middle or lower castes.
This is underscored by the observation that the Kshatriya (an upper caste), whose members served as warriors, are closer to Europeans than any other caste (data
not shown). Furthermore, the 32-bp deletion polymorphism in CC chemokine receptor 5, whose frequency
peaks in populations of Eastern Europe, is found only
in two Brahmin males (M. Bamshad and S.K. Ahuja,
unpubl.). The stratification of Y-chromosome distances with Europeans could also be caused by malespecific gene flow among caste populations of different
rank. However, we and others have demonstrated that
there is little sharing of Y-chromosome haplotypes
among castes of different rank (Bamshad et al. 1998;
Bhattacharyya et al. 1999).
The affinity of caste populations to Europeans is
more apparent for Y-chromosome biallelic polymorphisms than Y-chromosome STRs. This could be attributed to the use of different European populations in
comparisons using STRs and biallelic polymorphisms.
Alternatively, it may reflect, in part, the effects of high
mutation rates for the Y-chromosome STRs, which
would tend to obscure relationships between caste and
continental populations. A lack of consistent clustering at the continental level has been observed in several studies of Y-chromosome STRs (Deka et al. 1996;
Torroni et al. 1996; de Knijff et al. 1997). The autosomal Alu and biallelic Y-chromosome polymorphisms,
in cont ras t , have a s lowe r rat e of dr i f t than Ychromosome STRs because of a higher effective population size, and their mutation rate is very low. Thus,
the Y-chromosome biallelic polymorphisms and autosomal Alu markers may serve as more stable markers of
worldwide population affinities.
Our analysis may help to explain why estimates of
the affinities of caste groups to worldwide populations
have varied so widely among different studies. Analyses of recent caste history based on only mtDNA or
Y-chromosome polymorphisms clearly would suggest
that castes are more closely related to Asians or to Europeans, respectively. Furthermore, we attempted to
minimize the confounding effect of geographic differences between populations by sampling from a highly
restricted region of South India. Because of the ubiquity of the caste system in India's history, it is reasonable to predict similar patterns in caste populations
living in other areas. Indeed, any genetic result becomes more compelling when it is replicated in other
populations. Therefore, comparable studies in caste
populations from other regions of India must be completed to test the generality of these results.
The dispersal and subsequent growth of Indian
populations since the Neolithic Age is one of the most
important events to shape the history of South Asia.
However, the origin and dispersal route of the aboriginal inhabitants of the Indian subcontinent is unclear.
Our findings suggest a proto-Asian origin of the Ind i a n - s p e c i f i c h a p l o g r o u p - M h a p l o t y p e s . H a p -
logroup-M haplotypes are also found at appreciable frequencies in some East African populations— ∼18% of
Ethiopians (Quintana-Murci et al. 1999a) and 16% of
Kenyans (M. Bamshad and L.B. Jonde, unpubl.). A
comparison of haplogroup-M haplotypes from East Africa and India has suggested that this southern route
may have been one of the original dispersal pathways
of anatomically modern humans out of Africa (Quintana-Murci et al. 1999a). Together, these data support
our previous suggestion (Kivisild et al. 1999) that India
may have been inhabited by at least two successive late
Pleistocene migrations, consistent with the hypothesis
of Lahr and Foley (1994). It also adds to the growing
evidence that the subcontinent of India has been a
major corridor for the migration of people between
Africa, Western Asia, and Southeast Asia (Cavalli-Sforza
et al. 1994).
It should be emphasized that the DNA variation
studied here is thought to be selectively neutral and
thus represents only the effects of population history.
These results permit no inferences about phenotypic
differences between populations. In addition, alleles
and haplotypes are shared by different caste populations, reflecting a shared history. Indeed, these findings underscore the longstanding appreciation that the
distribution of genetic polymorphisms in India is
highly complex. Further investigation of the spread of
anatomically modern humans throughout South Asia
will need to consider that such complex patterns may
be the norm rather than the exception.
METHODS
Sample Collection
All studies of South Indian populations were performed with
the approval of the Institutional Review Board of the University of Utah, Andhra University, and the government of India.
Adult males living in the district of Visakhapatnam, Andhra
Pradesh, were questioned about their caste affiliations and
surnames and the birthplaces of their parents. Those who
were unrelated to any other subject by at least three generations were considered eligible to participate.
We classified caste populations based upon the traditional ranking of these castes by varna (defined below), occupation, and socioeconomic status. According to various Sanskrit texts, Hindu populations were partitioned originally into
four categories or varna: Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vysya, and Sudra
(Tambia 1973; Elder 1996). Those in each varna performed
occupations assigned to their category. Brahmins were priests;
Kshatriya were warriors; Vysya were traders; and Sudra were to
serve the three other varna (Tambia 1973; Elder 1996). Each
varna was assigned a status; Brahmin, Kshatriya, and Vysya
were considered of higher status than the Sudra because the
Brahmin, Kshatriya, and Vysya are considered the twice-born
B a m s h a d e t a l .
8 Genome Research
www.genome.orgcastes and are differentiated from all other castes in the caste
hierarchy. This is the rationale behind classifying them as the
upper group of castes (Tambia 1973).
The Kapu and the Yadava are called once-born castes that
have traditionally been classified in the Sudra, the lowest of
the original four varna. However, the status of the Sudra was
actually higher than that of a fifth varna, the Panchama. This
fifth varna was added at a later date to include the so-called
untouchables, who were excluded from the other four varna
(Elder 1996). The untouchable varna includes the Mala and
Madiga. The position of the Relli in the caste hierarchy is
somewhat ambiguous, but they have usually been classified in
the lower caste group. Therefore, prior to the collection of any
data, males from eight different Telugu-speaking castes
(n = 265) were ranked into upper (Niyogi and Vydiki Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vysya [n = 80]), middle (Telega and Turpu
Kapu, Yadava [n = 111]), and lower (Relli, Madiga, Mala
[n = 74]) groups (Bamshad et al. 1998). This ranking has been
used by previous investigators (Krishnan and Reddy 1994).
After obtaining informed consent, ∼8 mL of whole blood
or 5 plucked scalp hairs were collected from each participant.
Extractions were performed at Andhra University using established methods (Bell et al. 1981).
MtDNA Polymorphisms
The mtDNA data consisted of 68, 116, and 73 HVR1 sequences and 79, 159, and 72 restriction-site haplotypes from
largely the same individuals in upper, middle, and lower
castes, respectively. These data were compared to data from
143 Africans (15 Sotho-Tswana, 7 Tsonga, 14 Nguni, 24 San, 5
Biaka Pygmies, 33 Mbuti Pygmies, 9 Alur, 18 Hema, and 18
Nande), 78 Asians (12 Cambodians, 17 Chinese, 19 Japanese,
6 Malay, 9 Vietnamese, 2 Koreans, and 13 Asians of mixed
ancestry), and 99 Europeans (20 unrelated males of the French
CEPH kindreds, 69 unrelated Utah males of Northern European descent, and 10 Poles) (Jorde et al. 1995, 1997). Mitochondrial sequence data from these 597 individuals are available at: http://www.genome.org/supplemental/.
In addition to our samples, the phylogenetic analyses
also included data from 98 published HVR1 sequences from
two castes (48 Havlik and 43 Mukri), and a tribal population
(7 Kadar) living in south-western India (Mountain et al. 1995)
and restriction-site haplotypes from one caste (62 Lobana)
from Northern India, three tribal populations from Northern
(12 Tharu and 18 Bhoksa) and Southern (86 Lambadi) India,
and 122 individuals from various caste populations in Uttar
Pradesh (Kivisild et al. 1999). Phylogenetic relationships of
HVR1 sequences assigned to haplogroup M were estimated for
Indians (this study), Turks (this study), Central Asian populations (Comas et al. 1998), Mongolians (Kolman et al. 1996),
Chinese (Horai et al. 1996), and Japanese (Horai et al. 1996;
Seo et al. 1998).
The mtDNA HVR1 sequence was determined by fluorescent Sanger sequencing using a Dye terminator cycle sequencing kit (Applied Biosystems) according to the manufacturer's
specifications (Bamshad et al. 1998). Sequencing reactions
were resolved on an ABI 377 automated DNA sequencer, and
sequence data were analyzed using ABI DNA analysis software
and SEQUENCHER software (Genecodes). To identify mtDNA
haplotypes and haplogroups (a group of haplotypes that share
some sequence variants), major continent-specific genotypes
(Torroni et al. 1994, 1996; Wallace 1995) for the following
polymorphic mtDNA restriction sites were determined:
HpaI3592
, DdeI10394
, AluI10397
, AluI13262
, BamHI13366
, AluI5176
,
HaeIII4830
, AluI7025
, HinfI12308
, AccI14465
, AvaII8249
, AluI10032
,
BstOI13704
, and HaeII9052
.
Y-Chromosome and Autosomal Polymorphisms
Y-chromosome-specific STRs (DYS19, DYS288, DYS388,
DYS389A, DYS390) were amplified using published conditions (Hammer et al. 1998). PCR products were separated
on an ABI 377 automated sequencer and scored using ABI
Genotyper software. Y-chromosome STR data were collected
from 622 males including 280 South Indians, ∼200 Africans
(Seielstad et al. 1999; this study), 40 Asians, and 102 Europeans. Autosomal data were collected from 608 individuals including 265 South Indians, 155 Africans, 70 Asians, and 118
Europeans.
The Y-chromosome-specific biallelic polymorphisms
t e s t e d i n c l u d e d : D Y S 1 8 87 9 2
, D Y S 1 9 44 6 9
, D Y S 2 1 11 0 5
,
DYS221136
, DYS257108
, DYS287, M3, M4, M9, M12, M15,
SRY4 0 6 4
, SRY1 0 8 3 1 . 1
, SRY1 0 8 3 1 . 2
, p12f2, PN1, PN2, PN3,
RPS4Y711
, and Tat (Hammer and Horai 1995; Hammer et al.
1997, 1998, 2000; Underhill et al. 1997; Zerjal et al. 1997;
Karafet et al. 1999). All individuals tested negative for the Y
Alu insert (DYS287). A complete description of the Ychromosome STR loci can be found in Kayser et al. (1997). A
table of the biallelic Y-chromosome haplotype frequencies in
the upper, middle, and lower castes is available at http://
For the Y-chromosome biallelic dataset, comparisons
were made to a different set of worldwide populations including: East Asians from Japan, Korea, China, and Vietnam
(n = 460); Western Europeans from Britain and Germany
(n = 77); Southern Europeans from Italy and Greece (n = 148);
and Eastern Europeans from Russia and Romania (n = 102)
(M.F. Hammer, unpubl.). The complete dataset of Indians
consisted of 55 Brahmin, 111 Yadava and Kapu, and 74 Relli,
Mala, and Madiga.
Autosomal polymorphisms were amplified using conditions specifically optimized for each system. Further information on these conditions is available at the Web site: http://
www.gene t i c s .utah. edu/∼swatkins /pub/Alu_data.htm or
http://www.genome.org/supplemental. With minor exceptions caused by typing failures or other causes, the same individuals from each population were used to create each
dataset (i.e., mtDNA, Y chromosome, and autosomal). The
complete dataset of genotypes from all 40 autosomal loci is
available at: http://www.genome.org/supplemental/.
Statistical Analyses
Genetic distances for Y-chromosome STRs were estimated using the method of Shriver et al. (1995), which assumes a stepwise mutation model. Genetic distances for mitochondrial
and autosomal markers were calculated as pairwise FST
distances, using the ARLEQUIN package (Schneider et al. 1997).
For autosomal polymorphisms, Nei's standard distances and
their standard errors were estimated using DISPAN (http://
www.bio.psu.edu/IMEG); and 90% confidence intervals were
estimated by multiplying the standard error by 1.65. The significance of the FST
distances between populations was estimated by generating a null distribution of pairwise FST
distances by permuting haplotypes between populations. The
p-value of the test is the proportion of permutations leading
to an FST
value larger than or equal to the observed one. Genotypic differentiation was estimated using GENEPOP (Raymond and Rousset 1995) vers. 3.2 (http://www.cefe.cnrsmop.fr/). The null hypothesis tested is that there is a random
G e n e t i c E v i d e n c e o n C a s t e O r i g i n s
Genome Research 9
www.genome.orgdistribution of K different haplotypes among r populations
(the contingency table). All potential states of the contingency table are explored with a Markov chain, and the probability of observing a table less than or equally likely to the
observed sample configuration is estimated.
Estimates of significance for the correlation between interindividual caste rank differences and interindividual autosomal genetic distances were made by forming two n n matrices, where n is the number of individuals. For the first matrix, interindividual genetic distances were based on the
proportion of Alu insertions/deletions shared by each pair of
individuals. To form the second matrix, each individual was
assigned a score according to his rank in the caste hierarchy
for caste groups (i.e., upper caste = 1, middle caste = 2, lower
caste = 3) and also for separate castes (i.e., Brahmin = 1, Kshatriya = 2, Vysya = 3, Kapu = 4, Yadava = 5, Relli = 6, Mala = 7,
and Madiga = 8). An interindividual matrix of score distances
was formed by comparing the absolute value of the difference
between the scores of each pair of individuals. The matrix of
genetic distances was compared to 10,000 permuted matrices
of score distances using a Mantel matrix comparison test
(Mantel 1967).
To illustrate phylogenetic relationships we constructed
reduced median (Bandelt et al. 1995) and neighbor-joining
networks (Felsenstein 1989). Coalescence times were calculated as in Forster et al. (1996), using the estimator , which is
the average transitional distance from the founder haplotype.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank all participants, the faculty and staff of Andhra
University for their discussion and technical assistance, as
well as Henry Harpending for comments and criticisms. We
acknowledge the contributions of an anonymous reviewer
who suggested that the Kshatriya and Vysya be analyzed separately from the other upper castes. Genetic distances between
STRs were estimated by the program DISTNEW, kindly provided by L. Jin. This work was supported by NSF SBR-9514733,
SBR-9700729, SBR-9818215, NIH grants GM-59290 and PHS
MO1–00064, the Estonian Science Fund (1669 and 2887), and
the Newcastle University small grants committee.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part
by payment of page charges. This article must therefore be
hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 USC
section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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Received November 29, 2000; accepted in revised form March 22, 2001.
G e n e t i c E v i d e n c e o n C a s t e O r i g i n s
Genome Research 11
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Palash Biswas
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