Genome-wide patterns of population structure and admixture in West Africans and African Americans

被引:341
作者
Bryc, Katarzyna [3 ]
Auton, Adam [3 ]
Nelson, Matthew R. [4 ]
Oksenberg, Jorge R. [5 ]
Hauser, Stephen L. [5 ]
Williams, Scott [6 ]
Froment, Alain [7 ]
Bodo, Jean-Marie [8 ]
Wambebe, Charles [9 ]
Tishkoff, Sarah A. [1 ,2 ]
Bustamante, Carlos D. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Penn, Dept Biol, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[2] Univ Penn, Dept Genet, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[3] Cornell Univ, Dept Biol Stat & Computat Biol, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
[4] GlaxoSmithKline Inc, Res Triangle Pk, NC 27709 USA
[5] Univ Calif San Francisco, Dept Neurol, San Francisco, CA 94143 USA
[6] Vanderbilt Univ, Dept Mol Physiol & Biophys, Ctr Human Genet Res, Nashville, TN 37232 USA
[7] Museum Natl Hist Nat, UMR 208, IRD, F-75116 Paris, France
[8] Minist Rech Sci & Innovat, Yaounde, Cameroon
[9] Int Biomed Res Africa, Abuja, Nigeria
基金
美国国家卫生研究院; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Africa; human genomics; population genetics; WORLDWIDE HUMAN-POPULATIONS; MODERN HUMAN ORIGINS; GENETIC-STRUCTURE; COMPLEX DISEASE; HISTORY; SUSCEPTIBILITY; DIVERSITY; HAPLOTYPE; SELECTION; EUROPE;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0909559107
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Quantifying patterns of population structure in Africans and African Americans illuminates the history of human populations and is critical for undertaking medical genomic studies on a global scale. To obtain a fine-scale genome-wide perspective of ancestry, we analyze Affymetrix GeneChip 500K genotype data from African Americans (n = 365) and individuals with ancestry from West Africa (n = 203 from 12 populations) and Europe (n = 400 from 42 countries). We find that population structure within the West African sample reflects primarily language and secondarily geographical distance, echoing the Bantu expansion. Among African Americans, analysis of genomic admixture by a principal component-based approach indicates that the median proportion of European ancestry is 18.5% (25th-75th percentiles: 11.6-27.7%), with very large variation among individuals. In the African-American sample as a whole, few autosomal regions showed exceptionally high or low mean African ancestry, but the X chromosome showed elevated levels of African ancestry, consistent with a sex-biased pattern of gene flow with an excess of European male and African female ancestry. We also find that genomic profiles of individual African Americans afford personalized ancestry reconstructions differentiating ancient vs. recent European and African ancestry. Finally, patterns of genetic similarity among inferred African segments of African-American genomes and genomes of contemporary African populations included in this study suggest African ancestry is most similar to non-Bantu Niger-Kordofanian-speaking populations, consistent with historical documents of the African Diaspora and trans-Atlantic slave trade.
引用
收藏
页码:786 / 791
页数:6
相关论文
共 49 条
[1]   Genetic structure in four West African population groups [J].
Adeyemo, AA ;
Chen, GJ ;
Chen, YX ;
Rotimi, C .
BMC GENETICS, 2005, 6 (1)
[2]   African genetic diversity: Implications for human demographic history, modern human origins, and complex disease mapping [J].
Campbell, Michael C. ;
Tishkoff, Sarah A. .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF GENOMICS AND HUMAN GENETICS, 2008, 9 :403-433
[3]  
Cavalli-Sforza LL, 1971, GENETICS HUMAN POPUL
[4]   Bantu expansions: Re-envisioning a central problem of early African history [J].
Ehret, C .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORICAL STUDIES, 2001, 34 (01) :5-41
[5]  
Falush D, 2003, GENETICS, V164, P1567
[6]   A second generation human haplotype map of over 3.1 million SNPs [J].
Frazer, Kelly A. ;
Ballinger, Dennis G. ;
Cox, David R. ;
Hinds, David A. ;
Stuve, Laura L. ;
Gibbs, Richard A. ;
Belmont, John W. ;
Boudreau, Andrew ;
Hardenbol, Paul ;
Leal, Suzanne M. ;
Pasternak, Shiran ;
Wheeler, David A. ;
Willis, Thomas D. ;
Yu, Fuli ;
Yang, Huanming ;
Zeng, Changqing ;
Gao, Yang ;
Hu, Haoran ;
Hu, Weitao ;
Li, Chaohua ;
Lin, Wei ;
Liu, Siqi ;
Pan, Hao ;
Tang, Xiaoli ;
Wang, Jian ;
Wang, Wei ;
Yu, Jun ;
Zhang, Bo ;
Zhang, Qingrun ;
Zhao, Hongbin ;
Zhao, Hui ;
Zhou, Jun ;
Gabriel, Stacey B. ;
Barry, Rachel ;
Blumenstiel, Brendan ;
Camargo, Amy ;
Defelice, Matthew ;
Faggart, Maura ;
Goyette, Mary ;
Gupta, Supriya ;
Moore, Jamie ;
Nguyen, Huy ;
Onofrio, Robert C. ;
Parkin, Melissa ;
Roy, Jessica ;
Stahl, Erich ;
Winchester, Ellen ;
Ziaugra, Liuda ;
Altshuler, David ;
Shen, Yan .
NATURE, 2007, 449 (7164) :851-U3
[7]   The structure of haplotype blocks in the human genome [J].
Gabriel, SB ;
Schaffner, SF ;
Nguyen, H ;
Moore, JM ;
Roy, J ;
Blumenstiel, B ;
Higgins, J ;
DeFelice, M ;
Lochner, A ;
Faggart, M ;
Liu-Cordero, SN ;
Rotimi, C ;
Adeyemo, A ;
Cooper, R ;
Ward, R ;
Lander, ES ;
Daly, MJ ;
Altshuler, D .
SCIENCE, 2002, 296 (5576) :2225-2229
[8]   Inferring human population sizes, divergence times and rates of gene flow from mitochondrial, X and Y chromosome resequencing data [J].
Garrigan, Daniel ;
Kingan, Sarah B. ;
Pilkington, Maya M. ;
Wilder, Jason A. ;
Cox, Murray P. ;
Soodyall, Himla ;
Strassmann, Beverly ;
Destro-Bisol, Giovanni ;
de Knijff, Peter ;
Novelletto, Andrea ;
Friedlaender, Jonathan ;
Hammer, Michael F. .
GENETICS, 2007, 177 (04) :2195-2207
[9]  
Hall GwendolynMidlo., 2005, Slavery and African Ethnicities in the Americas: Restoring the Links
[10]   Genotype, haplotype and copy-number variation in worldwide human populations [J].
Jakobsson, Mattias ;
Scholz, Sonja W. ;
Scheet, Paul ;
Gibbs, J. Raphael ;
VanLiere, Jenna M. ;
Fung, Hon-Chung ;
Szpiech, Zachary A. ;
Degnan, James H. ;
Wang, Kai ;
Guerreiro, Rita ;
Bras, Jose M. ;
Schymick, Jennifer C. ;
Hernandez, Dena G. ;
Traynor, Bryan J. ;
Simon-Sanchez, Javier ;
Matarin, Mar ;
Britton, Angela ;
van de Leemput, Joyce ;
Rafferty, Ian ;
Bucan, Maja ;
Cann, Howard M. ;
Hardy, John A. ;
Rosenberg, Noah A. ;
Singleton, Andrew B. .
NATURE, 2008, 451 (7181) :998-1003