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Contrasting the ancestry patterns of three distinct population groups from the northernmost region of South America.

Fernanda Mogollón OlivaresJulie Moncada MaderoAndrea Casas-VargasSara Zea MontoyaDayana Suárez MedellínLeonor GusmãoWilliam Usaquén
Published in: American journal of physical anthropology (2020)
Colombia, located in the north of the South American subcontinent is a country of great interest for population genetic studies given its high ethnic and cultural diversity represented by the admixed population, 102 indigenous peoples and African descent populations. In this study, an analysis of the genetic structure and ancestry was performed based on 46 ancestry informative INDEL markers (AIM-INDELs) and considering the genealogical and demographic variables of 451 unrelated individuals belonging to nine Native American, two African American, and four multiple ancestry populations. Measures of genetic diversity, ancestry components, and genetic substructure were analyzed to build a population model typical of the northernmost part of the South American continent. The model suggests three types of populations: Native American, African American, and multiple ancestry. The results support hypotheses posed by other authors about issues like the peopling of South America and the existence of two types of Native American ancestry. This last finding could be crucial for future research on the peopling of Colombia and South America in that a single origin of all indigenous communities should not be assumed. It then would be necessary to consider other events that could explain their genetic variability and complexity throughout the continent.
Keyphrases
  • african american
  • genetic diversity
  • genome wide association study
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • gene expression
  • cord blood
  • current status