Mosaic maternal ancestry in the Great Lakes region of East Africa.

Maru Mormina, Veronica Gomes, Maria Pala, Antonio Salas, Vanesa Alvarez-Iglesias, Antonio Amorim, Alberto Gomez-Carballa, Angel Carracedo, Douglas Clarke, Catherine Hill, Marie-Anne Shaw, David Dunne, Rui Pereira, Vania Pereira, Maria Joao Prata, Paula Sanchez-Diz, Teresa Rito, Pedro Soares, Leonor Gusmao, Martin Richards

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The Great Lakes lie within a region of East Africa with very high human genetic diversity, home of many ethno-linguistic groups usually assumed to be the product of a small number of major dispersals. However, our knowledge of these dispersals relies primarily on the inferences of historical, linguistics and oral traditions, with attempts to match up the archaeological evidence where possible. This is an obvious area to which archaeogenetics can contribute, yet Uganda, at the heart of these developments, has not been studied for mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation. Here, we compare mtDNA lineages at this putative genetic crossroads across 409 representatives of the major language groups: Bantu speakers and Eastern and Western Nilotic speakers. We show that Uganda harbours one of the highest mtDNA diversities within and between linguistic groups, with the various groups significantly differentiated from each other. Despite an inferred linguistic origin in South Sudan, the data from the two Nilotic-speaking groups point to a much more complex history, involving not only possible dispersals from Sudan and the Horn but also large-scale assimilation of autochthonous lineages within East Africa and even Uganda itself. The Eastern Nilotic group also carries signals characteristic of West-Central Africa, primarily due to Bantu influence, whereas a much stronger signal in the Western Nilotic group suggests direct West-Central African ancestry. Bantu speakers share lineages with both Nilotic groups, and also harbour East African lineages not found in Western Nilotic speakers, likely due to assimilating indigenous populations since arriving in the region ~3000 years ago.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1013-1027
JournalHuman Genetics
Volume134
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19 Jul 2015

Keywords

  • Africa
  • Afro-Asiatic people
  • ancestry group
  • Article
  • Bantu people
  • Ethiopian
  • ethnic group
  • gene flow
  • gene pool
  • genetic variability
  • glacial period
  • haplogroup
  • haplotype
  • Holocene
  • human
  • Kenyan
  • language
  • lifestyle
  • maternal ancestry
  • mosaicism
  • Nilote
  • phylogenetic tree
  • phylogeography
  • priority journal
  • Sudan
  • Tanzanian
  • Uganda
  • Ugandan
  • Black person
  • genetics
  • phylogeny
  • principal component analysis

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