74 results on '"Pakendorf B"'
Search Results
2. Ethnogenetics of Yakuts from Three Regions of Republic' of Sakha (Yakutia) Inferred from the Frequencies of Biochemical Gene Markers
- Author
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Tarskaia, L. A., Makarov, S. B., Bychkovskaia, L. S., Pai, G. V., Pakendorf, B., Elchinova, G. I., Deriabin, B. E., and Spitsyn, V. A.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Distribution of the AB0 Blood Groups and the HP, TF, GC, PI and C3 Serum Proteins in Yakuts
- Author
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Tarskaia, L. A., Bychkovskaia, L. S., Pai, G. V., Makarov, S. B., Pakendorf, B., and Spitsyn, V. A.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Genetic Polymorphism of Erythrocytic Enzymes in Yakut Populations
- Author
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Tarskaya, L. A., Bychkovskaya, L. S., Pai, G. V., Makarov, S. V., Pakendorf, B., and Spitsyn, V. A.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Non-canonical possessive constructions in Negidal and other Tungusic languages: a new analysis of the so-called 'alienable possession' suffix
- Author
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Aralova Natalia and Pakendorf Brigitte
- Subjects
associative possession ,inalienable-alienable distinction ,possessive classes ,siberia ,tungusic ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 - Abstract
A distinction between inalienable and alienable possession is considered to be crosslinguistically common. For the Tungusic languages, it is generally illustrated with examples that contrast inherently possessed body parts with body parts belonging to a non-inherent possessor, with the latter being formally marked with a suffix -ŋ(V). However, as we argue here for Negidal (Northern Tungusic), rather than marking ‘alienable’ or ‘indirect’ possession, the suffix -ŋ(i) flags the occurrence of non-canonical possessive constructions; the supposedly straightforward interpretation of the oft-cited examples involving body parts is merely a secondary effect of the particular kind of non-canonical construction involved. This analysis unifies the diverse constructions in which -ŋ(i) occurs, namely with obligatorily possessed body parts, with non-possessible items such as nouns denoting humans or environment terms as well as demonstratives or adjectives, and with other modifiers when the possessee is elided. We complement our investigation with the analysis of the cognate suffix -ŋi, whose main function is to mark the possessor in possessive constructions with an elided head. The function of both suffixes can thus be subsumed under the marking of non-canonical possessive constructions. This analysis can be extended to several Tungusic languages, as the comparison with Negidal’s sister languages shows.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Unraveling the complex maternal history of Southern African Khoisan populations
- Author
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Barbieri, C., Güldemann, T., Naumann, C., Gerlach, L., Berthold, F., Nakagawa, H., Mpoloka, S., Stoneking, M., and Pakendorf, B.
- Published
- 2014
7. Contact in the prehistory of the Sakha (Yakuts): Linguistic and genetic perspectives
- Author
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Pakendorf, B., Kortlandt, F.H.H., Comrie, B., and Leiden University
- Subjects
sah - Yakut ,Molecular Anthropology ,Turkic languages ,Language contact ,Siberian languages - Abstract
This study analyses the prehistory of a northeastern Siberian population, the Sakha (Yakuts), from both a linguistic and a molecular-genetic perspective. The Sakha, who are a Turkic-speaking group of cattle- and horse-breeders, migrated to the Lena river from an area further to the south several hundred years ago. This investigation elucidates the extent to which the Sakha interacted with the indigenous populations of the territory that they migrated to, both from the perspective of language contact and from the perspective of genetic admixture. The results show that the Sakha were in contact with two different groups during their history: with speakers of a Mongolic language and with speakers of Evenki. The contact with the Mongolic-speaking group took place during the period of the Mongol Empire, when the Sakha introduced a large number of Mongolic substance copies into their language. In contrast, the contact with the Evenks led to the introduction of a number of schematic copies, but only a relatively small amount of substance copies from Evenki into Sakha. The nature of the copies from Evenki implies that the Sakha were dominantly bilingual in Evenki; surprisingly, however, there is no genetic evidence for the shift of entire Evenk communities to the Sakha language and identity. One explanation for the discrepancy between the linguistic and the genetic results is that the schematic copies entered the language through frequent social interaction of Evenks and Sakha during the initial period after the migration, when the Sakha were few in number. This is an interdisciplinary study that combines both molecular anthropological as well as linguistic methods to elucidate the prehistoric contacts undergone by a northeastern Siberian group of cattle and horse pastoralists
- Published
- 2007
8. [Ethnogenetics of yakuts from three regions of Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) inferred from the frequencies of biochemical gene markers]
- Author
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La, Tarskaia, Sv, Makarov, Ls, Bychkovskaia, Gv, Paĭ, Pakendorf B, Gi, El Chinova, Ve, Deriabin, and Viktor Spitsyn
- Subjects
Genetic Markers ,Erythrocytes ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Haptoglobins ,Acid Phosphatase ,Transferrin ,Blood Proteins ,Complement C3 ,ABO Blood-Group System ,Carboxylesterase ,Enzymes ,Siberia ,Genetics, Population ,Asian People ,Gene Frequency ,Phosphoglucomutase ,alpha 1-Antitrypsin ,Humans ,Carboxylic Ester Hydrolases ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Comparative data on the distribution of immunological markers (AB0 and RH), serum proteins (HP, TF, GC, PI, and C3), and red cell enzymes (PGM1, ACP1, ESD, and GLO1) polymorphisms in Yakut populations from three regions of the Republic are presented. Close genetic affinities of Yakuts to Altaians, Mongols, and Buryats along with their notable difference from Evenks, Evens, and Chukchi were demonstrated.
- Published
- 2002
9. [Distribution of the ABO blood groups and the HP, TF, GC, PI and C3 serum proteins in Yakuts]
- Author
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La, Tarskaia, Ls, Bychkovskaia, Gv, Paĭ, Sv, Makarov, Pakendorf B, and Viktor Spitsyn
- Subjects
Siberia ,Genetics, Population ,Gene Frequency ,Haptoglobins ,Vitamin D-Binding Protein ,alpha 1-Antitrypsin ,Transferrin ,Humans ,Blood Proteins ,Complement C3 ,ABO Blood-Group System - Abstract
In Yakut populations examined, polymorphisms of immunological and serum protein markers, including AB0 and Rhesus blood groups, HP, TF, GC, PI and C3, were revealed. Gene frequencies for the systems studied fell into the following ranges: AB0 system: r, 0.514 to 0.663; p, 0.136 to 0.306; q, 0.110 to 0.337; haptoglobin HP*1: 0.214 to 0.431; transferrin TF*C: 0.700 to 1.0; group specific component GC*1: 0.821 to 0.978; PI*M1 proteinase inhibitor (or alpha 1-antitrypsin) PIM1: 0.860 to 0.946; and third component of the complement C3*F: 0.031 to 0.143.
- Published
- 2002
10. Molecular perspectives on the Bantu expansion: a critical appraisal
- Author
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Pakendorf, B., Bostoen, Koen, de Filippo, C., Pakendorf, B., Bostoen, Koen, and de Filippo, C.
- Abstract
(submitted in Augstus 2010, accepted), info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2011
11. Y-chromosomal variation in Sub-Saharan Africa: insights into the history of Niger-Congo groups
- Author
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de Filippo, C., Barbieri, Carlo, Whitten, M., Gunnarsdottir, E., Bostoen, Koen, Nyambe, T., Beyer, K., Schreiber, H., de Knijff, P., Luiselli, D., Stoneking, M., Pakendorf, B., de Filippo, C., Barbieri, Carlo, Whitten, M., Gunnarsdottir, E., Bostoen, Koen, Nyambe, T., Beyer, K., Schreiber, H., de Knijff, P., Luiselli, D., Stoneking, M., and Pakendorf, B.
- Abstract
Technological and cultural innovations as well as climate changes are thought to have influenced the diffusion of major language phyla in sub-Saharan Africa. The most widespread and the richest in diversity is the Niger-Congo phylum, thought to have originated in West Africa ∼10,000 years ago (ya). The expansion of Bantu languages (a family within the Niger-Congo phylum) ∼5,000 ya represents a major event in the past demography of the continent. Many previous studies on Y chromosomal variation in Africa associated the Bantu expansion with haplogroup E1b1a (and sometimes its sublineage E1b1a7). However, the distribution of these two lineages extends far beyond the area occupied nowadays by Bantu-speaking people, raising questions on the actual genetic structure behind this expansion. To address these issues, we directly genotyped 31 biallelic markers and 12 microsatellites on the Y chromosome in 1,195 individuals of African ancestry focusing on areas that were previously poorly characterized (Botswana, Burkina Faso, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Zambia). With the inclusion of published data, we analyzed 2,736 individuals from 26 groups representing all linguistic phyla and covering a large portion of sub-Saharan Africa. Within the Niger-Congo phylum, we ascertain for the first time differences in haplogroup composition between Bantu and non-Bantu groups via two markers (U174 and U175) on the background of haplogroup E1b1a (and E1b1a7), which were directly genotyped in our samples and for which genotypes were inferred from published data using linear discriminant analysis on short tandem repeat (STR) haplotypes. No reduction in STR diversity levels was found across the Bantu groups, suggesting the absence of serial founder effects. In addition, the homogeneity of haplogroup composition and pattern of haplotype sharing between Western and Eastern Bantu groups suggests that their expansion throughout sub-Saharan Africa reflects a rapid spread followed by backward an, (submitted in July 2010, accepted), SCOPUS: ar.j, info:eu-repo/semantics/published
- Published
- 2011
12. Contrasting Maternal and Paternal Histories in the Linguistic Context of Burkina Faso
- Author
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Barbieri, C., primary, Whitten, M., additional, Beyer, K., additional, Schreiber, H., additional, Li, M., additional, and Pakendorf, B., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Bridging Near and Remote Oceania: mtDNA and NRY Variation in the Solomon Islands
- Author
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Delfin, F., primary, Myles, S., additional, Choi, Y., additional, Hughes, D., additional, Illek, R., additional, van Oven, M., additional, Pakendorf, B., additional, Kayser, M., additional, and Stoneking, M., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Y-Chromosomal Variation in Sub-Saharan Africa: Insights Into the History of Niger-Congo Groups
- Author
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de Filippo, C., primary, Barbieri, C., additional, Whitten, M., additional, Mpoloka, S. W., additional, Gunnarsdottir, E. D., additional, Bostoen, K., additional, Nyambe, T., additional, Beyer, K., additional, Schreiber, H., additional, de Knijff, P., additional, Luiselli, D., additional, Stoneking, M., additional, and Pakendorf, B., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Genetic Admixture History of Eastern Indonesia as Revealed by Y-Chromosome and Mitochondrial DNA Analysis
- Author
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Mona, S., primary, Grunz, K. E., additional, Brauer, S., additional, Pakendorf, B., additional, Castri, L., additional, Sudoyo, H., additional, Marzuki, S., additional, Barnes, R. H., additional, Schmidtke, J., additional, Stoneking, M., additional, and Kayser, M., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The endangered state of Negidal: A field report
- Author
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Pakendorf, B., Natalia Aralova, Dynamique Du Langage (DDL), Université Lumière - Lyon 2 (UL2)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Pakendorf, Brigitte
- Subjects
[SHS.LANGUE]Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics ,[SHS.LANGUE] Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics - Abstract
International audience; Negidal is a Northern Tungusic language closely related to Evenki with two recognized dialects, Upper and Lower Negidal. This nearly extinct language used to be spoken in the Lower Amur region of the Russian Far East by people whose traditional way of life was based on fishing and hunting. While the number of remaining active speakers of Upper Negidal was more or less known, the current state of Lower Negidal was still uncertain. We here report on a trip to ascertain the state of Lower Negidal and give a precise assessment of the linguistic situation of both dialects. While the Upper dialect is still represented by seven elderly female speakers, varying in proficiency from fully fluent to barely able to produce a narrative, not a single active speaker of Lower Negidal is left. The language will therefore probably be extinct in the next decade or two.
17. Genetic structure of a Sakha population from Siberia and ethnic affinities
- Author
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Pakendorf B, Viktor Spitsyn, and Rodewald A
- Subjects
Siberia ,Erythrocytes ,Phenotype ,Gene Frequency ,Genetic Carrier Screening ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Blood Proteins ,Emigration and Immigration ,Factor Analysis, Statistical - Abstract
The red cell enzymes ACP1, ESD, GLO1, PGM1 and RDS and the serum proteins GC, HP, PI, and TF were determined for samples of 150 and 144 Sakha, respectively. The Sakha, a Turkic-speaking population, inhabit the Sakha-Yakutia Republic in northeastern Siberia. High gene frequencies were found for ACP1*A, GLO1*1 and GC*1F, whereas no P1*S or P1*Z alleles were found. In addition, 1 heterozygous phenotype with ACP1*C and 2 heterozygous phenotypes with ESD*7 were found. The genetic distance measures show close affinities of the Sakha population to Buryats (especially Western Buryats), Mongols, and Evenks, whereas the genetic distance to Turkic-speaking Altay and Tuvan populations is great.
18. The endangered state of Negidal: A field report
- Author
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Pakendorf B., Aralova N., Pakendorf B., and Aralova N.
- Abstract
© 2018 University of Hawaii Press. Negidal is a Northern Tungusic language closely related to Evenki with two recognized dialects, Upper and Lower Negidal. This nearly extinct language used to be spoken in the Lower Amur region of the Russian Far East by people whose traditional way of life was based on fishing and hunting. While the number of remaining active speakers of Upper Negidal was more or less known, the current state of Lower Negidal was still uncertain. We here report on a trip to ascertain the state of Lower Negidal and give a precise assessment of the linguistic situation of both dialects. While the Upper dialect is still represented by seven elderly female speakers, varying in proficiency from fully fluent to barely able to produce a narrative, not a single active speaker of Lower Negidal is left. The language will therefore probably be extinct in the next decade or two.
19. Vowel harmony in two Even dialects: Production and perception
- Author
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Aralova, N., Pakendorf, B., Boersma, Paul, Hamann, Silke, Grawunder, S., and ACLC (FGw)
- Abstract
This dissertation analyzes vowel systems in two dialects of Even, an endangered Northern Tungusic language spoken in Eastern Siberia. The data were collected during fieldwork in the Bystraia district of Central Kamchatka and in the village of Sebian-Küöl in Yakutia. The focus of the study is the Even system of vowel harmony, which in previous literature has been assumed to be robust. The central question concerns the number of vowel oppositions and the nature of the feature underlying the opposition between harmonic sets. The results of an acoustic study show a consistent pattern for only one acoustic parameter, namely F1, which can be phonologically interpreted as a feature [±height]. This acoustic study is supplemented by perception experiments. The results of the latter suggest that perceptually there is no harmonic opposition for high vowels, i.e., the harmonic pairs of high vowels have merged. Moreover, in the dialect of the Bystraia district certain consonants function as perceptual cues for the harmonic set of a word. In other words, the Bystraia Even harmony system, which was previously based on vowels, is being transformed into new oppositions among consonants.
- Published
- 2015
20. Y-chromosomal variation in Sub-Saharan Africa: insights into the history of Niger-Congo groups
- Author
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Brigitte Pakendorf, Donata Luiselli, Cesare de Filippo, Mark Whitten, Klaus Beyer, Koen Bostoen, Henning Schreiber, Sununguko Wata Mpoloka, Peter de Knijff, Ellen Gunnarsdóttir, Chiara Barbieri, Mark Stoneking, Terry Nyambe, Department of Evolutionary Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology [Leipzig], Max-Planck-Gesellschaft-Max-Planck-Gesellschaft, Dynamique Du Langage (DDL), Université Lumière - Lyon 2 (UL2)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), de Filippo C., Barbieri C., Whitten M., Mpoloka S.W., Gunnarsdóttir E.D., Bostoen K., Nyambe T., Beyer K., Schreiber H., de Knijff P., Luiselli D., Stoneking M., and Pakendorf B.
- Subjects
Male ,[SHS.ANTHRO-BIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropology ,DIVERSITY ,BANTU EXPANSION ,Bantu languages ,CELL-LINE PANEL ,migration ,Haplogroup ,geography ,MTDNA ,SOUTHERN AFRICA ,HUMAN-POPULATIONS ,Niger ,BANTU MIGRATIONS ,10. No inequality ,History, Ancient ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Botswana ,030305 genetics & heredity ,Haplogroup L3 ,Emigration and Immigration ,POLYNESIANS ,Phylogeography ,Congo ,Genetic structure ,Female ,Genetic Markers ,Genotype ,AFRICAN POPULATIONS ,Black People ,Zambia ,Biology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Burkina Faso ,Humans ,LANGUAGES ,human ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Demography ,030304 developmental biology ,Chromosomes, Human, Y ,language ,Y chromosome ,Phylum ,Haplotype ,Macro-haplogroup A ,Genetic Variation ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Genetics, Population ,Haplotypes ,Evolutionary biology ,ORIGINS ,Bantu ,SHORT TANDEM REPEATS ,Microsatellite Repeats ,Founder effect - Abstract
International audience; Technological and cultural innovations as well as climate changes are thought to have influenced the diffusion of major language phyla in sub-Saharan Africa. The most widespread and the richest in diversity is the Niger-Congo phylum, thought to have originated in West Africa ∼ 10,000 years ago (ya). The expansion of Bantu languages (a family within the Niger-Congo phylum) ∼ 5,000 ya represents a major event in the past demography of the continent. Many previous studies on Y chromosomal variation in Africa associated the Bantu expansion with haplogroup E1b1a (and sometimes its sublineage E1b1a7). However, the distribution of these two lineages extends far beyond the area occupied nowadays by Bantu-speaking people, raising questions on the actual genetic structure behind this expansion. To address these issues, we directly genotyped 31 biallelic markers and 12 microsatellites on the Y chromosome in 1,195 individuals of African ancestry focusing on areas that were previously poorly characterized (Botswana, Burkina Faso, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Zambia). With the inclusion of published data, we analyzed 2,736 individuals from 26 groups representing all linguistic phyla and covering a large portion of sub-Saharan Africa. Within the Niger-Congo phylum, we ascertain for the first time differences in haplogroup composition between Bantu and non-Bantu groups via two markers (U174 and U175) on the background of haplogroup E1b1a (and E1b1a7), which were directly genotyped in our samples and for which genotypes were inferred from published data using linear discriminant analysis on short tandem repeat (STR) haplotypes. No reduction in STR diversity levels was found across the Bantu groups, suggesting the absence of serial founder effects. In addition, the homogeneity of haplogroup composition and pattern of haplotype sharing between Western and Eastern Bantu groups suggests that their expansion throughout sub-Saharan Africa reflects a rapid spread followed by backward and forward migrations. Overall, we found that linguistic affiliations played a notable role in shaping sub-Saharan African Y chromosomal diversity, although the impact of geography is clearly discernible.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Investigating demic versus cultural diffusion and sex bias in the spread of Austronesian languages in Vietnam.
- Author
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Thao DH, Dinh TH, Mitsunaga S, Duy D, Phuong NT, Anh NP, Anh NT, Duc BM, Hue HTT, Ha NH, Ton ND, Hübner A, Pakendorf B, Stoneking M, Inoue I, Duong NT, and Hai NV
- Subjects
- Humans, Vietnam, Female, Male, Sexism, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Genetics, Population, Language, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics
- Abstract
Austronesian (AN) is the second-largest language family in the world, particularly widespread in Island Southeast Asia (ISEA) and Oceania. In Mainland Southeast Asia (MSEA), groups speaking these languages are concentrated in the highlands of Vietnam. However, our knowledge of the spread of AN-speaking populations in MSEA remains limited; in particular, it is not clear if AN languages were spread by demic or cultural diffusion. In this study, we present and analyze new data consisting of complete mitogenomes from 369 individuals and 847 Y-chromosomal single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from 170 individuals from all five Vietnamese Austronesian groups (VN-AN) and five neighboring Vietnamese Austroasiatic groups (VN-AA). We found genetic signals consistent with matrilocality in some, but not all, of the VN-AN groups. Population affinity analyses indicated connections between the AN-speaking Giarai and certain Taiwanese AN groups (Rukai, Paiwan, and Bunun). However, overall, there were closer genetic affinities between VN-AN groups and neighboring VN-AA groups, suggesting language shifts. Our study provides insights into the genetic structure of AN-speaking communities in MSEA, characterized by some contact with Taiwan and language shift in neighboring groups, indicating that the expansion of AN speakers in MSEA was a combination of cultural and demic diffusion., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest., (Copyright: © 2024 Thao et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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22. The genetic legacy of the expansion of Bantu-speaking peoples in Africa.
- Author
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Fortes-Lima CA, Burgarella C, Hammarén R, Eriksson A, Vicente M, Jolly C, Semo A, Gunnink H, Pacchiarotti S, Mundeke L, Matonda I, Muluwa JK, Coutros P, Nyambe TS, Cikomola JC, Coetzee V, de Castro M, Ebbesen P, Delanghe J, Stoneking M, Barham L, Lombard M, Meyer A, Steyn M, Malmström H, Rocha J, Soodyall H, Pakendorf B, Bostoen K, and Schlebusch CM
- Subjects
- Humans, Africa, Western, Datasets as Topic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Founder Effect, Gene Flow genetics, Genetic Variation genetics, History, Ancient, Linguistics history, Zambia, Geographic Mapping, DNA, Ancient analysis, Emigration and Immigration history, Genetics, Population, Language history
- Abstract
The expansion of people speaking Bantu languages is the most dramatic demographic event in Late Holocene Africa and fundamentally reshaped the linguistic, cultural and biological landscape of the continent
1-7 . With a comprehensive genomic dataset, including newly generated data of modern-day and ancient DNA from previously unsampled regions in Africa, we contribute insights into this expansion that started 6,000-4,000 years ago in western Africa. We genotyped 1,763 participants, including 1,526 Bantu speakers from 147 populations across 14 African countries, and generated whole-genome sequences from 12 Late Iron Age individuals8 . We show that genetic diversity amongst Bantu-speaking populations declines with distance from western Africa, with current-day Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo as possible crossroads of interaction. Using spatially explicit methods9 and correlating genetic, linguistic and geographical data, we provide cross-disciplinary support for a serial-founder migration model. We further show that Bantu speakers received significant gene flow from local groups in regions they expanded into. Our genetic dataset provides an exhaustive modern-day African comparative dataset for ancient DNA studies10 and will be important to a wide range of disciplines from science and humanities, as well as to the medical sector studying human genetic variation and health in African and African-descendant populations., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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23. The genomic prehistory of peoples speaking Khoisan languages.
- Author
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Pakendorf B and Stoneking M
- Subjects
- Africa, Southern ethnology, Genetic Variation, Genetics, Population, Genomics, History, Ancient, Humans, Black People genetics, DNA history, Language history
- Abstract
Peoples speaking so-called Khoisan languages-that is, indigenous languages of southern Africa that do not belong to the Bantu family-are culturally and linguistically diverse. They comprise herders, hunter-gatherers as well as groups of mixed modes of subsistence, and their languages are classified into three distinct language families. This cultural and linguistic variation is mirrored by extensive genetic diversity. We here review the recent genomics literature and discuss the genetic evidence for a formerly wider geographic spread of peoples with Khoisan-related ancestry, for the deep divergence among populations speaking Khoisan languages overlaid by more recent gene flow among these groups and for the impact of admixture with immigrant food-producers in their prehistory., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The extent and degree of utterance-final word lengthening in spontaneous speech from 10 languages.
- Author
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Seifart F, Strunk J, Danielsen S, Hartmann I, Pakendorf B, Wichmann S, Witzlack-Makarevich A, Himmelmann NP, and Bickel B
- Abstract
Words in utterance-final positions are often pronounced more slowly than utterance-medial words, as previous studies on individual languages have shown. This paper provides a systematic cross-linguistic comparison of relative durations of final and penultimate words in utterances in terms of the degree to which such words are lengthened. The study uses time-aligned corpora from 10 genealogically, areally, and culturally diverse languages, including eight small, under-resourced, and mostly endangered languages, as well as English and Dutch. Clear effects of lengthening words at the end of utterances are found in all 10 languages, but the degrees of lengthening vary. Languages also differ in the relative durations of words that precede utterance-final words. In languages with on average short words in terms of number of segments, these penultimate words are also lengthened. This suggests that lengthening extends backwards beyond the final word in these languages, but not in languages with on average longer words. Such typological patterns highlight the importance of examining prosodic phenomena in diverse language samples beyond the small set of majority languages most commonly investigated so far., (© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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25. Extensive Ethnolinguistic Diversity in Vietnam Reflects Multiple Sources of Genetic Diversity.
- Author
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Liu D, Duong NT, Ton ND, Van Phong N, Pakendorf B, Van Hai N, and Stoneking M
- Subjects
- History, Ancient, Humans, Male, Phylogeography, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Vietnam, Cultural Diversity, Genetic Variation, Language history
- Abstract
Vietnam features extensive ethnolinguistic diversity and occupies a key position in Mainland Southeast Asia. Yet, the genetic diversity of Vietnam remains relatively unexplored, especially with genome-wide data, because previous studies have focused mainly on the majority Kinh group. Here, we analyze newly generated genome-wide single-nucleotide polymorphism data for the Kinh and 21 additional ethnic groups in Vietnam, encompassing all five major language families in Mainland Southeast Asia. In addition to analyzing the allele and haplotype sharing within the Vietnamese groups, we incorporate published data from both nearby modern populations and ancient samples for comparison. In contrast to previous studies that suggested a largely indigenous origin for Vietnamese genetic diversity, we find that Vietnamese ethnolinguistic groups harbor multiple sources of genetic diversity that likely reflect different sources for the ancestry associated with each language family. However, linguistic diversity does not completely match genetic diversity: There have been extensive interactions between the Hmong-Mien and Tai-Kadai groups; different Austro-Asiatic groups show different affinities with other ethnolinguistic groups; and we identified a likely case of cultural diffusion in which some Austro-Asiatic groups shifted to Austronesian languages during the past 2,500 years. Overall, our results highlight the importance of genome-wide data from dense sampling of ethnolinguistic groups in providing new insights into the genetic diversity and history of an ethnolinguistically diverse region, such as Vietnam., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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26. The paternal and maternal genetic history of Vietnamese populations.
- Author
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Macholdt E, Arias L, Duong NT, Ton ND, Van Phong N, Schröder R, Pakendorf B, Van Hai N, and Stoneking M
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Pedigree, Polymorphism, Genetic, Vietnam, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, Population genetics
- Abstract
Vietnam exhibits great cultural and linguistic diversity, yet the genetic history of Vietnamese populations remains poorly understood. Previous studies focused mostly on the majority Kinh group, and thus the genetic diversity of the many other groups has not yet been investigated. Here we analyze complete mtDNA genome sequences and ~2.3 Mb sequences of the male-specific portion of the Y chromosome from the Kinh and 16 minority populations, encompassing all five language families present in Vietnam. We find highly variable levels of diversity within and between groups that do not correlate with either geography or language family. In particular, the Mang and Sila have undergone recent, independent bottlenecks, while the majority group, Kinh, exhibits low levels of differentiation with other groups. The two Austronesian-speaking groups, Giarai and Ede, show a potential impact of matrilocality on their patterns of variation. Overall, we find that isolation, coupled with limited contact involving some groups, has been the major factor influencing the genetic structure of Vietnamese populations, and that there is substantial genetic diversity that is not represented by the Kinh.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The role of matrilineality in shaping patterns of Y chromosome and mtDNA sequence variation in southwestern Angola.
- Author
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Oliveira S, Hübner A, Fehn AM, Aço T, Lages F, Pakendorf B, Stoneking M, and Rocha J
- Subjects
- Angola, Female, Humans, Male, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Polymorphism, Genetic, Population genetics
- Abstract
Southwestern Angola is a region characterized by contact between indigenous foragers and incoming food-producers, involving genetic and cultural exchanges between peoples speaking Kx'a, Khoe-Kwadi, and Bantu languages. Although present-day Bantu speakers share a patrilocal residence pattern and matrilineal principle of clan and group membership, a highly stratified social setting divides dominant pastoralists from marginalized groups that subsist on alternative strategies and have previously been thought to have pre-Bantu origins. Here, we compare new high-resolution sequence data from 2.3 Mb of the male-specific region of the Y chromosome (MSY) from 170 individuals with previously reported mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genomes, to investigate the population history of seven representative southwestern Angolan groups (Himba, Kuvale, Kwisi, Kwepe, Twa, Tjimba, !Xun), and to study the causes and consequences of sex-biased processes in their genetic variation. We found no clear link between the formerly Kwadi-speaking Kwepe and pre-Bantu eastern African migrants, and no pre-Bantu MSY lineages among Bantu-speaking groups, except for small amounts of "Khoisan" introgression. We therefore propose that irrespective of their subsistence strategies, all Bantu-speaking groups of the area share a male Bantu origin. Additionally, we show that in Bantu-speaking groups, the levels of among-group and between-group variation are higher for mtDNA than for MSY. These results, together with our previous demonstration that the matriclanic systems of southwestern Angolan Bantu groups are genealogically consistent, suggest that matrilineality strongly enhances both female population sizes and interpopulation mtDNA variation.
- Published
- 2019
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28. Cultural Innovations Influence Patterns of Genetic Diversity in Northwestern Amazonia.
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Arias L, Schröder R, Hübner A, Barreto G, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Agriculture, Female, Humans, Indians, South American ethnology, Male, Sex Characteristics, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, Culture, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Indians, South American genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
- Abstract
Human populations often exhibit contrasting patterns of genetic diversity in the mtDNA and the nonrecombining portion of the Y-chromosome (NRY), which reflect sex-specific cultural behaviors and population histories. Here, we sequenced 2.3 Mb of the NRY from 284 individuals representing more than 30 Native American groups from Northwestern Amazonia (NWA) and compared these data to previously generated mtDNA genomes from the same groups, to investigate the impact of cultural practices on genetic diversity and gain new insights about NWA population history. Relevant cultural practices in NWA include postmarital residential rules and linguistic exogamy, a marital practice in which men are required to marry women speaking a different language. We identified 2,969 SNPs in the NRY sequences, only 925 of which were previously described. The NRY and mtDNA data showed different sex-specific demographic histories: female effective population size has been larger than that of males through time, which might reflect larger variance in male reproductive success. Both markers show an increase in lineage diversification beginning ∼5,000 years ago, which may reflect the intensification of agriculture, technological innovations, and the expansion of regional trade networks documented in the archaeological evidence. Furthermore, we find similar excesses of NRY versus mtDNA between-population divergence at both the local and continental scale, suggesting long-term stability of female versus male migration. We also find evidence of the impact of sociocultural practices on diversity patterns. Finally, our study highlights the importance of analyzing high-resolution mtDNA and NRY sequences to reconstruct demographic history, since this can differ considerably between sexes.
- Published
- 2018
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29. Genetic structure and sex-biased gene flow in the history of southern African populations.
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Bajić V, Barbieri C, Hübner A, Güldemann T, Naumann C, Gerlach L, Berthold F, Nakagawa H, Mpoloka SW, Roewer L, Purps J, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Africa, Southern, Anthropology, Physical, Female, Genetics, Population, Haplotypes genetics, Human Migration, Humans, Male, Black People genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Gene Flow genetics
- Abstract
Objectives: We investigated the genetic history of southern African populations with a special focus on their paternal history. We reexamined previous claims that the Y-chromosome haplogroup E1b1b (E-M293) was brought to southern Africa by pastoralists from eastern Africa, and investigated patterns of sex-biased gene flow in southern Africa., Materials and Methods: We analyzed previously published complete mtDNA genome sequences and ∼900 kb of NRY sequences from 23 populations from Namibia, Botswana, and Zambia, as well as haplogroup frequencies from a large sample of southern African populations and 23 newly genotyped Y-linked STR loci for samples assigned to haplogroup E1b1b., Results: Our results support an eastern African origin for Y-chromosome haplogroup E1b1b (E-M293); however, its current distribution in southern Africa is not strongly associated with pastoralism, suggesting more complex demographic events and/or changes in subsistence practices in this region. The Bantu expansion in southern Africa had a notable genetic impact and was probably a rapid, male-dominated expansion. Our finding of a significant increase in the intensity of the sex-biased gene flow from north to south may reflect changes in the social dynamics between Khoisan and Bantu groups over time., Conclusions: Our study shows that the population history of southern Africa has been complex, with different immigrating groups mixing to different degrees with the autochthonous populations. The Bantu expansion led to heavily sex-biased admixture as a result of interactions between Khoisan females and Bantu males, with a geographic gradient which may reflect changes in the social dynamics between Khoisan and Bantu groups over time., (© 2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2018
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30. Complete human mtDNA genome sequences from Vietnam and the phylogeography of Mainland Southeast Asia.
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Duong NT, Macholdt E, Ton ND, Arias L, Schröder R, Van Phong N, Thi Bich Thuy V, Ha NH, Thi Thu Hue H, Thi Xuan N, Thi Phuong Oanh K, Hien LTT, Hoang NH, Pakendorf B, Stoneking M, and Van Hai N
- Subjects
- Asia, Southeastern, Asian People genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, Ethnicity genetics, Haplotypes, Humans, Mitochondria genetics, Phylogeny, Taiwan, Whole Genome Sequencing, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Genetics, Population, Phylogeography
- Abstract
Vietnam is an important crossroads within Mainland Southeast Asia (MSEA) and a gateway to Island Southeast Asia, and as such exhibits high levels of ethnolinguistic diversity. However, comparatively few studies have been undertaken of the genetic diversity of Vietnamese populations. In order to gain comprehensive insights into MSEA mtDNA phylogeography, we sequenced 609 complete mtDNA genomes from individuals belonging to five language families (Austroasiatic, Tai-Kadai, Hmong-Mien, Sino-Tibetan and Austronesian) and analyzed them in comparison with sequences from other MSEA countries and Taiwan. Within Vietnam, we identified 399 haplotypes belonging to 135 haplogroups; among the five language families, the sequences from Austronesian groups differ the most from the other groups. Phylogenetic analysis revealed 111 novel Vietnamese mtDNA lineages. Bayesian estimates of coalescence times and associated 95% HPD for these show a peak of mtDNA diversification around 2.5-3 kya, which coincides with the Dong Son culture, and thus may be associated with the agriculturally-driven expansion of this culture. Networks of major MSEA haplogroups emphasize the overall distinctiveness of sequences from Taiwan, in keeping with previous studies that suggested at most a minor impact of the Austronesian expansion from Taiwan on MSEA. We also see evidence for population expansions across MSEA geographic regions and language families.
- Published
- 2018
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31. Nouns slow down speech across structurally and culturally diverse languages.
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Seifart F, Strunk J, Danielsen S, Hartmann I, Pakendorf B, Wichmann S, Witzlack-Makarevich A, de Jong NH, and Bickel B
- Subjects
- Humans, Sound Spectrography, Speech Perception, Anthropology, Cultural, Language, Speech physiology, Terminology as Topic, Vocabulary
- Abstract
By force of nature, every bit of spoken language is produced at a particular speed. However, this speed is not constant-speakers regularly speed up and slow down. Variation in speech rate is influenced by a complex combination of factors, including the frequency and predictability of words, their information status, and their position within an utterance. Here, we use speech rate as an index of word-planning effort and focus on the time window during which speakers prepare the production of words from the two major lexical classes, nouns and verbs. We show that, when naturalistic speech is sampled from languages all over the world, there is a robust cross-linguistic tendency for slower speech before nouns compared with verbs, both in terms of slower articulation and more pauses. We attribute this slowdown effect to the increased amount of planning that nouns require compared with verbs. Unlike verbs, nouns can typically only be used when they represent new or unexpected information; otherwise, they have to be replaced by pronouns or be omitted. These conditions on noun use appear to outweigh potential advantages stemming from differences in internal complexity between nouns and verbs. Our findings suggest that, beneath the staggering diversity of grammatical structures and cultural settings, there are robust universals of language processing that are intimately tied to how speakers manage referential information when they communicate with one another., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2018 the Author(s). Published by PNAS.)
- Published
- 2018
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32. Matriclans shape populations: Insights from the Angolan Namib Desert into the maternal genetic history of southern Africa.
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Oliveira S, Fehn AM, Aço T, Lages F, Gayà-Vidal M, Pakendorf B, Stoneking M, and Rocha J
- Subjects
- Angola ethnology, Anthropology, Physical, Bayes Theorem, Genealogy and Heraldry, Genetics, Population, Human Migration, Humans, Phylogeny, Black People ethnology, Black People genetics, Black People statistics & numerical data, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics
- Abstract
Objectives: Southern Angola is a poorly studied region, inhabited by populations that have been associated with different migratory movements into southern Africa. Apart from Kx'a-speaking San foragers and Bantu-speaking pastoralists, ethnographic and linguistic studies have suggested the existence of an enigmatic array of pre-Bantu communities, like the Kwepe (formerly Khoe-Kwadi speakers), Twa and Kwisi. Here, we evaluate previous peopling hypotheses by assessing the relationships between different southern Angolan populations, based on newly collected linguistic data and complete mtDNA genomes., Materials and Methods: We analyzed 295 complete mtDNA genomes and linguistic data from seven groups from the Namib Desert (Himba, Kuvale, Tjimba, Twa, Kwisi, Kwepe) and Kunene Province (!Xun), placing special emphasis on the evaluation of the genealogical consistency of the matriclanic system that characterizes most of these groups., Results: We found that the maternal genetic structure of all groups from the Namib Desert was strongly shaped by the consistency of their matriclanic system. The tracking of the maternal heritage enhanced population differentiation by genetic drift and is likely to have caused the divergent mtDNA profiles of the Kwepe, Twa, and Kwisi, who probably formed a single population within the spectrum of Bantu genetic variation. Model-based analyses further suggest that the dominant pastoral groups Kuvale and Himba may be grouped into a Bantu proto-population which also included the ancestors of present-day Tjimba and Herero, as well as the Khoe-Kwadi speaking Damara foragers from Namibia., Discussion: The view from southwestern Angola offers a new perspective on the populating history of southern Africa and the Bantu expansions by showing that social stratification and different subsistence patterns are not always indicative of remnant groups, but may reflect Bantu-internal variation and ethnogenesis., (© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2018
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33. High-resolution mitochondrial DNA analysis sheds light on human diversity, cultural interactions, and population mobility in Northwestern Amazonia.
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Arias L, Barbieri C, Barreto G, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Genetics, Population, Haplotypes genetics, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Saliva chemistry, South America, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Genetic Variation genetics, Indians, South American ethnology, Indians, South American genetics, Language
- Abstract
Objectives: Northwestern Amazonia (NWA) is a center of high linguistic and cultural diversity. Several language families and linguistic isolates occur in this region, as well as different subsistence patterns, with some groups being foragers and others agriculturalists. In addition, speakers of Eastern Tukanoan languages are known for practicing linguistic exogamy, a marriage system in which partners are taken from different language groups. In this study, we use high-resolution mitochondrial DNA sequencing to investigate the impact of this linguistic and cultural diversity on the genetic relationships and population structure of NWA groups., Methods: We collected saliva samples from individuals representing 40 different NWA ethnolinguistic groups and sequenced 439 complete mitochondrial genomes to an average coverage of 1,030×., Results: The mtDNA data revealed that NWA populations have high genetic diversity with extensive sharing of haplotypes among groups. Moreover, groups who practice linguistic exogamy have higher genetic diversity, while the foraging Nukak have lower genetic diversity. We also find that rivers play a more important role than either geography or language affiliation in structuring the genetic relationships of populations., Discussion: Contrary to the view of NWA as a pristine area inhabited by small human populations living in isolation, our data support a view of high diversity and contact among different ethnolinguistic groups, with movement along rivers probably facilitating this contact. Additionally, we provide evidence for the impact of cultural practices, such as linguistic exogamy, on patterns of genetic variation. Overall, this study provides new data and insights into a remote and little-studied region of the world., (© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2018
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34. The Complex Admixture History and Recent Southern Origins of Siberian Populations.
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Pugach I, Matveev R, Spitsyn V, Makarov S, Novgorodov I, Osakovsky V, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Biological Evolution, Evolution, Molecular, Gene Flow, Genetic Variation, Genomics, Haplotypes, Humans, Phylogeny, Phylogeography methods, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Siberia, Asian People genetics, Genetics, Population methods
- Abstract
Although Siberia was inhabited by modern humans at an early stage, there is still debate over whether it remained habitable during the extreme cold of the Last Glacial Maximum or whether it was subsequently repopulated by peoples with recent shared ancestry. Previous studies of the genetic history of Siberian populations were hampered by the extensive admixture that appears to have taken place among these populations, because commonly used methods assume a tree-like population history and at most single admixture events. Here we analyze geogenetic maps and use other approaches to distinguish the effects of shared ancestry from prehistoric migrations and contact, and develop a new method based on the covariance of ancestry components, to investigate the potentially complex admixture history. We furthermore adapt a previously devised method of admixture dating for use with multiple events of gene flow, and apply these methods to whole-genome genotype data from over 500 individuals belonging to 20 different Siberian ethnolinguistic groups. The results of these analyses indicate that there have been multiple layers of admixture detectable in most of the Siberian populations, with considerable differences in the admixture histories of individual populations. Furthermore, most of the populations of Siberia included here, even those settled far to the north, appear to have a southern origin, with the northward expansions of different populations possibly being driven partly by the advent of pastoralism, especially reindeer domestication. These newly developed methods to analyze multiple admixture events should aid in the investigation of similarly complex population histories elsewhere., (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.)
- Published
- 2016
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35. Refining the Y chromosome phylogeny with southern African sequences.
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Barbieri C, Hübner A, Macholdt E, Ni S, Lippold S, Schröder R, Mpoloka SW, Purps J, Roewer L, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Africa, Humans, Phylogeny, Black People genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, Genetic Variation genetics, Genetics, Population, Haplotypes genetics
- Abstract
The recent availability of large-scale sequence data for the human Y chromosome has revolutionized analyses of and insights gained from this non-recombining, paternally inherited chromosome. However, the studies to date focus on Eurasian variation, and hence the diversity of early-diverging branches found in Africa has not been adequately documented. Here, we analyze over 900 kb of Y chromosome sequence obtained from 547 individuals from southern African Khoisan- and Bantu-speaking populations, identifying 232 new sequences from basal haplogroups A and B. We identify new clades in the phylogeny, an older age for the root, and substantially older ages for some individual haplogroups. Furthermore, while haplogroup B2a is traditionally associated with the spread of Bantu speakers, we find that it probably also existed in Khoisan groups before the arrival of Bantu speakers. Finally, there is pronounced variation in branch length between major haplogroups; in particular, haplogroups associated with Bantu speakers have significantly longer branches. Technical artifacts cannot explain this branch length variation, which instead likely reflects aspects of the demographic history of Bantu speakers, such as recent population expansion and an older average paternal age. The influence of demographic factors on branch length variation has broader implications both for the human Y phylogeny and for similar analyses of other species.
- Published
- 2016
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36. New insights into the history of the C-14010 lactase persistence variant in Eastern and Southern Africa.
- Author
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Macholdt E, Slatkin M, Pakendorf B, and Stoneking M
- Subjects
- Africa, Eastern, Africa, Southern, Anthropology, Physical, Genetics, Population, Haplotypes genetics, Humans, Dairying, Human Migration, Lactase genetics, Microsatellite Repeats genetics
- Abstract
Lactase persistence (LP), the ability to digest lactose into adulthood, is strongly associated with the cultural traits of pastoralism and milk-drinking among human populations, and several different genetic variants are known that confer LP. Recent studies of LP variants in Southern African populations, with a focus on Khoisan-speaking groups, found high frequencies of an LP variant (the C-14010 allele) that also occurs in Eastern Africa, and concluded that the C-14010 allele was brought to Southern Africa via a migration of pastoralists from Eastern Africa. However, this conclusion was based on indirect evidence; to date no study has jointly analyzed data on the C-14010 allele from both Southern African Khoisan-speaking groups and Eastern Africa. Here, we combine and analyze published data on the C-14010 allele in Southern and Eastern African populations, consisting of haplotypes with the C-14010 allele and four closely-linked short tandem repeat loci. Our results provide direct evidence for the previously-hypothesized Eastern African origin of the C-14010 allele in Southern African Khoisan-speaking groups. In addition, we find evidence for a separate introduction of the C-14010 allele into the Bantu-speaking Xhosa. The estimated selection intensity on the C-14010 allele in Eastern Africa is lower than that in Southern Africa, which suggests that in Eastern Africa the dietary changes conferring the fitness advantage associated with LP occurred some time after the origin of the C-14010 allele. Conversely, in Southern Africa the fitness advantage was present when the allele was introduced, as would be expected if pastoralism was introduced concomitantly., (© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2015
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37. Coevolution of languages and genes.
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Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Geography, Humans, Linguistics classification, Models, Genetic, Models, Theoretical, Phylogeny, Biological Evolution, Gene Flow, Genetic Variation genetics, Language
- Abstract
The evolution of languages shares certain characteristics with that of genes, such as the predominantly vertical line of transmission and the retention of traces of past events such as contact. Thus, studies of language phylogenies and their correlations with genetic phylogenies can enrich our understanding of human prehistory, while insights gained from genetic studies of past population contact can help shed light on the processes underlying language contact and change. As demonstrated by recent research, these evolutionary processes are more complex than simple models of gene-language coevolution predict, with linguistic boundaries only occasionally functioning as barriers to gene flow. More frequently, admixture takes place irrespective of linguistic differences, but with a detectable impact of contact-induced changes in the languages concerned., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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38. Migration and interaction in a contact zone: mtDNA variation among Bantu-speakers in Southern Africa.
- Author
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Barbieri C, Vicente M, Oliveira S, Bostoen K, Rocha J, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Africa South of the Sahara, DNA, Mitochondrial classification, Demography, Genetics, Population, Haplotypes, Humans, Language, Phylogeny, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Black People genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Emigration and Immigration, Genetic Variation
- Abstract
Bantu speech communities expanded over large parts of sub-Saharan Africa within the last 4000-5000 years, reaching different parts of southern Africa 1200-2000 years ago. The Bantu languages subdivide in several major branches, with languages belonging to the Eastern and Western Bantu branches spreading over large parts of Central, Eastern, and Southern Africa. There is still debate whether this linguistic divide is correlated with a genetic distinction between Eastern and Western Bantu speakers. During their expansion, Bantu speakers would have come into contact with diverse local populations, such as the Khoisan hunter-gatherers and pastoralists of southern Africa, with whom they may have intermarried. In this study, we analyze complete mtDNA genome sequences from over 900 Bantu-speaking individuals from Angola, Zambia, Namibia, and Botswana to investigate the demographic processes at play during the last stages of the Bantu expansion. Our results show that most of these Bantu-speaking populations are genetically very homogenous, with no genetic division between speakers of Eastern and Western Bantu languages. Most of the mtDNA diversity in our dataset is due to different degrees of admixture with autochthonous populations. Only the pastoralist Himba and Herero stand out due to high frequencies of particular L3f and L3d lineages; the latter are also found in the neighboring Damara, who speak a Khoisan language and were foragers and small-stock herders. In contrast, the close cultural and linguistic relatives of the Herero and Himba, the Kuvale, are genetically similar to other Bantu-speakers. Nevertheless, as demonstrated by resampling tests, the genetic divergence of Herero, Himba, and Kuvale is compatible with a common shared ancestry with high levels of drift, while the similarity of the Herero, Himba, and Damara probably reflects admixture, as also suggested by linguistic analyses.
- Published
- 2014
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39. Tracing pastoralist migrations to southern Africa with lactase persistence alleles.
- Author
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Macholdt E, Lede V, Barbieri C, Mpoloka SW, Chen H, Slatkin M, Pakendorf B, and Stoneking M
- Subjects
- Africa, Southern, Gene Frequency, Genetics, Population, Genotype, Geography, Haplotypes genetics, History, Ancient, Humans, Microsatellite Repeats genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Black People genetics, Ethnicity genetics, Human Migration history, Lactase genetics, Selection, Genetic
- Abstract
Although southern African Khoisan populations are often assumed to have remained largely isolated during prehistory, there is growing evidence for a migration of pastoralists from eastern Africa some 2,000 years ago, prior to the arrival of Bantu-speaking populations in southern Africa. Eastern Africa harbors distinctive lactase persistence (LP) alleles, and therefore LP alleles in southern African populations may be derived from this eastern African pastoralist migration. We sequenced the lactase enhancer region in 457 individuals from 18 Khoisan and seven Bantu-speaking groups from Botswana, Namibia, and Zambia and additionally genotyped four short tandem repeat (STR) loci that flank the lactase enhancer region. We found nine single-nucleotide polymorphisms, of which the most frequent is -14010(∗)C, which was previously found to be associated with LP in Kenya and Tanzania and to exhibit a strong signal of positive selection. This allele occurs in significantly higher frequency in pastoralist groups and in Khoe-speaking groups in our study, supporting the hypothesis of a migration of eastern African pastoralists that was primarily associated with Khoe speakers. Moreover, we find a signal of ongoing positive selection in all three pastoralist groups in our study, as well as (surprisingly) in two foraging groups., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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40. Unraveling the complex maternal history of Southern African Khoisan populations.
- Author
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Barbieri C, Güldemann T, Naumann C, Gerlach L, Berthold F, Nakagawa H, Mpoloka SW, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Anthropology, Physical, Botswana, Cluster Analysis, Databases, Genetic, Female, Genetic Drift, Haplotypes genetics, Humans, Male, Namibia, Black People genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Genetics, Population
- Abstract
The Khoisan populations of southern Africa are known to harbor some of the deepest-rooting lineages of human mtDNA; however, their relationships are as yet poorly understood. Here, we report the results of analyses of complete mtDNA genome sequences from nearly 700 individuals representing 26 populations of southern Africa who speak diverse Khoisan and Bantu languages. Our data reveal a multilayered history of the indigenous populations of southern Africa, who are likely to be the result of admixture of different genetic substrates, such as resident forager populations and pre-Bantu pastoralists from East Africa. We find high levels of genetic differentiation of the Khoisan populations, which can be explained by the effect of drift together with a partial uxorilocal/multilocal residence pattern. Furthermore, there is evidence of extensive contact, not only between geographically proximate groups, but also across wider areas. The results of this contact, which may have played a role in the diffusion of common cultural and linguistic features, are especially evident in the Khoisan populations of the central Kalahari., (Copyright © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2014
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41. Ancient west Eurasian ancestry in southern and eastern Africa.
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Pickrell JK, Patterson N, Loh PR, Lipson M, Berger B, Stoneking M, Pakendorf B, and Reich D
- Subjects
- Africa, Eastern, Africa, Southern, Computer Simulation, Europe ethnology, Gene Flow, Gene Frequency, Genotype, Humans, Linkage Disequilibrium, Models, Genetic, Demography, Emigration and Immigration, Ethnicity genetics, Genetics, Population methods, White People genetics
- Abstract
The history of southern Africa involved interactions between indigenous hunter-gatherers and a range of populations that moved into the region. Here we use genome-wide genetic data to show that there are at least two admixture events in the history of Khoisan populations (southern African hunter-gatherers and pastoralists who speak non-Bantu languages with click consonants). One involved populations related to Niger-Congo-speaking African populations, and the other introduced ancestry most closely related to west Eurasian (European or Middle Eastern) populations. We date this latter admixture event to ∼900-1,800 y ago and show that it had the largest demographic impact in Khoisan populations that speak Khoe-Kwadi languages. A similar signal of west Eurasian ancestry is present throughout eastern Africa. In particular, we also find evidence for two admixture events in the history of Kenyan, Tanzanian, and Ethiopian populations, the earlier of which involved populations related to west Eurasians and which we date to ∼2,700-3,300 y ago. We reconstruct the allele frequencies of the putative west Eurasian population in eastern Africa and show that this population is a good proxy for the west Eurasian ancestry in southern Africa. The most parsimonious explanation for these findings is that west Eurasian ancestry entered southern Africa indirectly through eastern Africa.
- Published
- 2014
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42. Investigating the prehistory of Tungusic peoples of Siberia and the Amur-Ussuri region with complete mtDNA genome sequences and Y-chromosomal markers.
- Author
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Duggan AT, Whitten M, Wiebe V, Crawford M, Butthof A, Spitsyn V, Makarov S, Novgorodov I, Osakovsky V, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Siberia ethnology, Asian People ethnology, Asian People genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics
- Abstract
Evenks and Evens, Tungusic-speaking reindeer herders and hunter-gatherers, are spread over a wide area of northern Asia, whereas their linguistic relatives the Udegey, sedentary fishermen and hunter-gatherers, are settled to the south of the lower Amur River. The prehistory and relationships of these Tungusic peoples are as yet poorly investigated, especially with respect to their interactions with neighbouring populations. In this study, we analyse over 500 complete mtDNA genome sequences from nine different Evenk and even subgroups as well as their geographic neighbours from Siberia and their linguistic relatives the Udegey from the Amur-Ussuri region in order to investigate the prehistory of the Tungusic populations. These data are supplemented with analyses of Y-chromosomal haplogroups and STR haplotypes in the Evenks, Evens, and neighbouring Siberian populations. We demonstrate that whereas the North Tungusic Evenks and Evens show evidence of shared ancestry both in the maternal and in the paternal line, this signal has been attenuated by genetic drift and differential gene flow with neighbouring populations, with isolation by distance further shaping the maternal genepool of the Evens. The Udegey, in contrast, appear quite divergent from their linguistic relatives in the maternal line, with a mtDNA haplogroup composition characteristic of populations of the Amur-Ussuri region. Nevertheless, they show affinities with the Evenks, indicating that they might be the result of admixture between local Amur-Ussuri populations and Tungusic populations from the north.
- Published
- 2013
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43. Genetic perspectives on the origin of clicks in Bantu languages from southwestern Zambia.
- Author
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Barbieri C, Butthof A, Bostoen K, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, Female, Genome, Mitochondrial genetics, Human Migration, Humans, Male, Microsatellite Repeats, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Population genetics, Zambia, Black People genetics, Phonetics
- Abstract
Some Bantu languages spoken in southwestern Zambia and neighboring regions of Botswana, Namibia, and Angola are characterized by the presence of click consonants, whereas their closest linguistic relatives lack such clicks. As clicks are a typical feature not of the Bantu language family, but of Khoisan languages, it is highly probable that the Bantu languages in question borrowed the clicks from Khoisan languages. In this paper, we combine complete mitochondrial genome sequences from a representative sample of populations from the Western Province of Zambia speaking Bantu languages with and without clicks, with fine-scaled analyses of Y-chromosomal single nucleotide polymorphisms and short tandem repeats to investigate the prehistoric contact that led to this borrowing of click consonants. Our results reveal complex population-specific histories, with female-biased admixture from Khoisan-speaking groups associated with the incorporation of click sounds in one Bantu-speaking population, while concomitant levels of potential Khoisan admixture did not result in sound change in another. Furthermore, the lack of sequence sharing between the Bantu-speaking groups from southwestern Zambia investigated here and extant Khoisan populations provides an indication that there must have been genetic substructure in the Khoisan-speaking indigenous groups of southern Africa that did not survive until the present or has been substantially reduced.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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44. Ancient substructure in early mtDNA lineages of southern Africa.
- Author
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Barbieri C, Vicente M, Rocha J, Mpoloka SW, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Africa, Southern, Base Sequence, Computer Simulation, Ethnicity genetics, Genetics, Population, Geography, Human Migration, Humans, Language, Molecular Sequence Data, Open Reading Frames genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Among the deepest-rooting clades in the human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) phylogeny are the haplogroups defined as L0d and L0k, which are found primarily in southern Africa. These lineages are typically present at high frequency in the so-called Khoisan populations of hunter-gatherers and herders who speak non-Bantu languages, and the early divergence of these lineages led to the hypothesis of ancient genetic substructure in Africa. Here we update the phylogeny of the basal haplogroups L0d and L0k with 500 full mtDNA genome sequences from 45 southern African Khoisan and Bantu-speaking populations. We find previously unreported subhaplogroups and greatly extend the amount of variation and time-depth of most of the known subhaplogroups. Our major finding is the definition of two ancient sublineages of L0k (L0k1b and L0k2) that are present almost exclusively in Bantu-speaking populations from Zambia; the presence of such relic haplogroups in Bantu speakers is most probably due to contact with ancestral pre-Bantu populations that harbored different lineages than those found in extant Khoisan. We suggest that although these populations went extinct after the immigration of the Bantu-speaking populations, some traces of their haplogroup composition survived through incorporation into the gene pool of the immigrants. Our findings thus provide evidence for deep genetic substructure in southern Africa prior to the Bantu expansion that is not represented in extant Khoisan populations., (Copyright © 2013 The American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Bringing together linguistic and genetic evidence to test the Bantu expansion.
- Author
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de Filippo C, Bostoen K, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Africa South of the Sahara, Genetic Markers genetics, Humans, Black People genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Emigration and Immigration, Genetics, Population, Language
- Abstract
The expansion of Bantu languages represents one of the most momentous events in the history of Africa. While it is well accepted that Bantu languages spread from their homeland (Cameroon/Nigeria) approximately 5000 years ago (ya), there is no consensus about the timing and geographical routes underlying this expansion. Two main models of Bantu expansion have been suggested: The 'early-split' model claims that the most recent ancestor of Eastern languages expanded north of the rainforest towards the Great Lakes region approximately 4000 ya, while the 'late-split' model proposes that Eastern languages diversified from Western languages south of the rainforest approximately 2000 ya. Furthermore, it is unclear whether the language dispersal was coupled with the movement of people, raising the question of language shift versus demic diffusion. We use a novel approach taking into account both the spatial and temporal predictions of the two models and formally test these predictions with linguistic and genetic data. Our results show evidence for a demic diffusion in the genetic data, which is confirmed by the correlations between genetic and linguistic distances. While there is little support for the early-split model, the late-split model shows a relatively good fit to the data. Our analyses demonstrate that subsequent contact among languages/populations strongly affected the signal of the initial migration via isolation by distance.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Contrasting maternal and paternal histories in the linguistic context of Burkina Faso.
- Author
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Barbieri C, Whitten M, Beyer K, Schreiber H, Li M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Bayes Theorem, Burkina Faso, Female, Genetics, Population methods, Haplotypes genetics, Humans, Male, Phylogeny, Phylogeography, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Language
- Abstract
Burkina Faso is located in the heart of West Africa and is a representative of the local structured patterns of human variability. Here, different cultures and languages are found in a geographic contiguity, as a result of several waves of migration and the succession of long- and short-term empires. However, historical documentation for this area is only partial, focusing predominantly on the recent empires, and linguistic surveys lack the power to fully elucidate the social context of the contact-induced changes. In this paper, we report Y-chromosomal data and complete mtDNA genome sequences for ten populations from Burkina Faso whose languages belong to two very distantly related branches of the Niger-Congo phylum, the Gur and Mande language families. In addition, two further populations, the Mande-speaking Mandenka from Senegal and the Yoruba from Nigeria, were included for regional comparison. We focus on the different historical trajectories undergone by the maternal and paternal lineages. Our results reveal a striking structure in the paternal line, which matches the linguistic affiliation of the ethnolinguistic groups, in contrast to the near-complete homogeneity of the populations in the maternal line. However, while the ancient structure along the linguistic lines is apparent in the Y-chromosomal haplogroup affiliation, this has clearly been overlain by more recent migrations, as shown by significant correlations between the genetic distances based on Y chromosome short tandem repeats and geographic distances between the populations, as well as by the patterns of shared haplotypes. Using the complete mtDNA sequences, we are able to reconstruct population size variation in the past, showing a strong sign of expansion in the concomitance with the Holocene Climate Optimum approximately 12,000-10,000 years ago, which has been suggested as the cause of the spread of the Niger-Congo phylum in the area. However, subsequent climatic fluctuations do not appear to have had an impact on the demography of the inhabitants of West Africa, probably reflecting the adaptive advantages of cultural innovations, such as pastoralism and agriculture.
- Published
- 2012
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47. Bridging near and remote Oceania: mtDNA and NRY variation in the Solomon Islands.
- Author
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Delfin F, Myles S, Choi Y, Hughes D, Illek R, van Oven M, Pakendorf B, Kayser M, and Stoneking M
- Subjects
- Ethnicity genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Female, Gene Frequency, Genetic Variation, Genetics, Population, Haplotypes, Humans, Male, Melanesia, Molecular Sequence Data, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Mitochondria genetics, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Although genetic studies have contributed greatly to our understanding of the colonization of Near and Remote Oceania, important gaps still exist. One such gap is the Solomon Islands, which extend between Bougainville and Vanuatu, thereby bridging Near and Remote Oceania, and include both Austronesian-speaking and Papuan-speaking groups. Here, we describe patterns of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and nonrecombining Y chromosome (NRY) variation in over 700 individuals from 18 populations in the Solomons, including 11 Austronesian-speaking groups, 3 Papuan-speaking groups, and 4 Polynesian Outliers (descended via back migration from Polynesia). We find evidence for ancient (pre-Lapita) colonization of the Solomons in old NRY paragroups as well as from M2-M353, which probably arose in the Solomons ∼9,200 years ago and is the most frequent NRY haplogroup there. There are no consistent genetic differences between Austronesian-speaking and Papuan-speaking groups, suggesting extensive genetic contact between them. Santa Cruz, which is located in Remote Oceania, shows unusually low frequencies of mtDNA and NRY haplogroups of recent Asian ancestry. This is in apparent contradiction with expectations based on archaeological and linguistic evidence for an early (∼3,200 years ago), direct colonization of Santa Cruz by Lapita people from the Bismarck Archipelago, via a migration that "leapfrogged" over the rest of the Solomons. Polynesian Outliers show dramatic island-specific founder events involving various NRY haplogroups. We also find that NRY, but not mtDNA, genetic distance is correlated with the geographic distance between Solomons groups and that historically attested spheres of cultural interaction are associated with the recent genetic structure of Solomons groups, as revealed by mtDNA HV1 sequence and Y-STR haplotype diversity. Our results fill an important lacuna in human genetic studies of Oceania and aid in understanding the colonization and genetic history of this region.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The genetic prehistory of southern Africa.
- Author
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Pickrell JK, Patterson N, Barbieri C, Berthold F, Gerlach L, Güldemann T, Kure B, Mpoloka SW, Nakagawa H, Naumann C, Lipson M, Loh PR, Lachance J, Mountain J, Bustamante CD, Berger B, Tishkoff SA, Henn BM, Stoneking M, Reich D, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Africa, Southern, Cluster Analysis, Databases, Genetic, Ethnicity genetics, Gene Pool, History, Ancient, Humans, Linkage Disequilibrium genetics, Models, Genetic, Population Dynamics, Genetics, Population history
- Abstract
Southern and eastern African populations that speak non-Bantu languages with click consonants are known to harbour some of the most ancient genetic lineages in humans, but their relationships are poorly understood. Here, we report data from 23 populations analysed at over half a million single-nucleotide polymorphisms, using a genome-wide array designed for studying human history. The southern African Khoisan fall into two genetic groups, loosely corresponding to the northwestern and southeastern Kalahari, which we show separated within the last 30,000 years. We find that all individuals derive at least a few percent of their genomes from admixture with non-Khoisan populations that began ∼1,200 years ago. In addition, the East African Hadza and Sandawe derive a fraction of their ancestry from admixture with a population related to the Khoisan, supporting the hypothesis of an ancient link between southern and eastern Africa.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Y-chromosomal variation in sub-Saharan Africa: insights into the history of Niger-Congo groups.
- Author
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de Filippo C, Barbieri C, Whitten M, Mpoloka SW, Gunnarsdóttir ED, Bostoen K, Nyambe T, Beyer K, Schreiber H, de Knijff P, Luiselli D, Stoneking M, and Pakendorf B
- Subjects
- Black People ethnology, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Chromosomes, Human, Y classification, Congo, Emigration and Immigration history, Emigration and Immigration trends, Female, Genetic Markers, Genetic Variation, Genetics, Population statistics & numerical data, Genotype, Haplotypes, History, Ancient, Humans, Language history, Male, Microsatellite Repeats genetics, Niger, Phylogeography, Zambia, Black People genetics, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, Demography statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Technological and cultural innovations as well as climate changes are thought to have influenced the diffusion of major language phyla in sub-Saharan Africa. The most widespread and the richest in diversity is the Niger-Congo phylum, thought to have originated in West Africa ∼ 10,000 years ago (ya). The expansion of Bantu languages (a family within the Niger-Congo phylum) ∼ 5,000 ya represents a major event in the past demography of the continent. Many previous studies on Y chromosomal variation in Africa associated the Bantu expansion with haplogroup E1b1a (and sometimes its sublineage E1b1a7). However, the distribution of these two lineages extends far beyond the area occupied nowadays by Bantu-speaking people, raising questions on the actual genetic structure behind this expansion. To address these issues, we directly genotyped 31 biallelic markers and 12 microsatellites on the Y chromosome in 1,195 individuals of African ancestry focusing on areas that were previously poorly characterized (Botswana, Burkina Faso, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Zambia). With the inclusion of published data, we analyzed 2,736 individuals from 26 groups representing all linguistic phyla and covering a large portion of sub-Saharan Africa. Within the Niger-Congo phylum, we ascertain for the first time differences in haplogroup composition between Bantu and non-Bantu groups via two markers (U174 and U175) on the background of haplogroup E1b1a (and E1b1a7), which were directly genotyped in our samples and for which genotypes were inferred from published data using linear discriminant analysis on short tandem repeat (STR) haplotypes. No reduction in STR diversity levels was found across the Bantu groups, suggesting the absence of serial founder effects. In addition, the homogeneity of haplogroup composition and pattern of haplotype sharing between Western and Eastern Bantu groups suggests that their expansion throughout sub-Saharan Africa reflects a rapid spread followed by backward and forward migrations. Overall, we found that linguistic affiliations played a notable role in shaping sub-Saharan African Y chromosomal diversity, although the impact of geography is clearly discernible.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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50. Larger mitochondrial DNA than Y-chromosome differences between matrilocal and patrilocal groups from Sumatra.
- Author
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Gunnarsdóttir ED, Nandineni MR, Li M, Myles S, Gil D, Pakendorf B, and Stoneking M
- Subjects
- Artifacts, Chromosome Mapping, DNA Fingerprinting, Emigration and Immigration, Female, Haplotypes, Humans, Indonesia, Male, Microsatellite Repeats, Mitochondria genetics, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Sex Factors, Chromosomes, Human, Y genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, Genetic Variation, Genetics, Population
- Abstract
Genetic differences between human populations are typically larger for the Y-chromosome than for mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), which has been attributed to the ubiquity of patrilocality across human cultures. However, this claim has been disputed, and previous analyses of matrilocal groups give conflicting results. Here we analyse mtDNA variation (complete mtDNA genome sequences via next-generation sequencing) and non-recombining regions of the Y-chromosome variation (Y-single-nucleotide-polymorphisms and Y-short-tandem-repeats (STR)) in a matrilocal group (the Semende) and a patrilocal group (the Besemah) from Sumatra. We find in the Semende significantly lower mtDNA diversity than in the Besemah as expected for matrilocal groups, but unexpectedly we find no difference in Y-chromosome diversity between the groups. We highlight the importance of using complete mtDNA sequences for such analyses, as using only partial sequences (as done in previous studies) can give misleading results.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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