1Assistant Professor, Department of Forensic Science, Guru Ghasidas University, Bilaspur (C.G)
2UGC-SRF, School of Studies in Anthropology, Pt. Ravishankar Shukla University, Raipur (C.G)
3Professor, School of Studies in Anthropology, Pt. Ravishankar Shukla University, Raipur (C.G)
Central India is mainly constituted by two states, namely; Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh that are homeland of several caste and tribal groups speaking diverse language belongs to Indo-European, Dravidian and Austro-Asiatic thus makes it an important place for testing several language-gene interaction models. Various archaeological evidences indicated that the Narmada region has played a significant role in initial peopling of the Asian subcontinent. There is a necessity to fill the big lacuna by inclusion of this region to reveal a continuous picture of the origin and genetic affinity of the Indian population. It is hypothesized that Austro-Asiatic speaking tribes are autochthonous to India. The present study was conducted to examine the haplotype variations at Dopamine Receptor Gene (DRD2) in the Austro-Asiatic Speaking Tribal Groups of Central India. Haplotypes provide information on evolutionary histories, beyond what can be learned from individual marker. A total of 327 unrelated samples belonging to Birhor, Gadaba, Kol, Hill korwa, Saora and Baiga were analyzed for three selected
Austro-Asiatic, DRD2, Haplotype, PVTG, Polymorphic, Central India