June 14, 2004

Sub-Saharan mtDNA and Y chromosomes

Molecular Biology and Evolution

Variation of Female and Male Lineages in Sub-Saharan Populations: The Importance of Socio-Cultural Factors

Giovanni Destro-Bisol et al.

Abstract

In this paper, we present a study regarding genetic variation in sub-Saharan Africa, which is based on published and unpublished data concerning fast-evolving (hypervariable region 1 of mitochondrial DNA and six microsatellites of Y-chromosome) and slow-evolving (haplogroup frequencies) polymorphisms of mtDNA and Y-chromosome. Our study reveals a striking difference in the genetic structure of food-producer (Bantu and Sudanic speakers) and hunter-gatherer populations (Pygmies, !Kung and Hadza). In fact, the ratio of mtDNA to Y-chromosome N is substantially higher in food-producers than in hunter-gatherers using fast evolving polymorphisms (1.76 vs 0.11). This indicates that the two population groups differ substantially in female and male migration rate and/or effective size. The difference also persists when using linguistically homogeneous populations and eliminating outlier populations (1.78 vs 0.19) or applying the jacknife procedure to a paired population dataset (1.32-7.84 vs 0.14-0.66). The higher ratio of mtDNA to Y-chromosome N in food-producers than in hunter-gatherers is further confirmed by the use of slow evolving polymorphisms (1.59-7.91 vs 0.12-0.35). To explain these results, we propose a model which integrates demographic and genetic aspects and incorporates ethnographic knowledge. In such a model the asymmetric gene flow, polyginy and patrilocality play an important role in differentiating the genetic structure of sub-Saharan populations. The existence of an asymmetric gene flow is supported by the phylogeographic features of mtDNA and Y-chromosome haplogroups found in the two population groups. The role of polyginy and patrilocality is sustained by the evidence of a differential pressure of genetic drift and gene flow on maternal and paternal lineages of food-producers and hunter-gatherers which is revealed through the analysis of mitochondrial and Y-chromosomal intra-populational variation.

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Posted by Dienekes at June 14, 2004 06:52 PM | PermaLink
Comments

This is a little off-topic, but I have found an interesting article on the possible African ancestry of some modern Scots:

http://news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/06/11/nswall11.xml

Posted by: Xguy at June 16, 2004 07:42 AM

I'm a filmamker in North Carolina and I've just started a project on tracing ancestry through DNA. I'm not going to go into too much detail but I need to talk to people who would read this blog and are interested in this subject.

People of African ancestry who have have or thought out genetic testing along with researchers and other interested people are what I'm looking for.

Please contact me at :
The Media Group
233 Scotts Lane
Angier, NC 27501

vincedclark@hotmal.com

Posted by: Vincent Clark at June 22, 2004 04:26 AM
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