Abstract
The natural cycles of night and day, and their length, remain stable in near-equatorial African regions but they vary with latitude and season in Eurasia. This new environmental factor might shape the adaptation of circadian rhythms of Eurasians after the out-of-African dispersal of their African ancestors. To identify the genetic-based signatures of this adaptation, geographic variation in allele frequencies of more than 2300 genetic variants was analyzed using data from 5 African and 11 Eurasian populations of the 1000 Genomes Project. The genetic signatures of latitude-dependent polygenic selection were found more frequently within non-coding DNA regions associated with morningness–eveningness in genome-wide association studies (GWASs) than among polymorphisms hinted by GWASs of other traits/diseases and among polymorphisms sampled from pseudogenes and from protein-coding regions in either circadian clock genes or reference genes. Some of such variants were located within the introgressions of the Neanderthal’s genome into the genomes of Eurasians.