Genetic ancestry, admixture, and population structure in rural Dominica

Autor: Harly J. Durbin, Jared E. Decker, Jeremy F. Taylor, Troy N. Rowan, Kristen H. Taylor, Mark V. Flinn, Gregory E. Blomquist, Monica H. Keith
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
Male
Rural Population
Linkage disequilibrium
Topography
Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms
Population genetics
Geographical locations
Linkage Disequilibrium
Ethnicity
Islands
education.field_of_study
Caribbean island
Multidisciplinary
Ecology
Hispanic or Latino
Middle Aged
Europe
Geography
Community Ecology
Genetic structure
Medicine
Dominica
Female
Research Article
Adult
Adolescent
Genetic genealogy
West Indies
Science
Population
Black People
Polymorphism
Single Nucleotide

Indigenous
White People
Young Adult
Genetics
Humans
education
Caribbean
Evolutionary Biology
Landforms
Community
Population Biology
Genome
Human

Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Biology and Life Sciences
Genetic Variation
Geomorphology
Genetics
Population

North America
Earth Sciences
Genetic Polymorphism
People and places
Population Genetics
Zdroj: PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 11 (2021)
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 11, p e0258735 (2021)
ISSN: 1932-6203
Popis: The Caribbean is a genetically diverse region with heterogeneous admixture compositions influenced by local island ecologies, migrations, colonial conflicts, and demographic histories. The Commonwealth of Dominica is a mountainous island in the Lesser Antilles historically known to harbor communities with unique patterns of migration, mixture, and isolation. This community-based population genetic study adds biological evidence to inform post-colonial narrative histories in a Dominican horticultural village. High density single nucleotide polymorphism data paired with a previously compiled genealogy provide the first genome-wide insights on genetic ancestry and population structure in Dominica. We assessed family-based clustering, inferred global ancestry, and dated recent admixture by implementing the fastSTRUCTURE clustering algorithm, modeling graph-based migration with TreeMix, assessing patterns of linkage disequilibrium decay with ALDER, and visualizing data from Dominica with Human Genome Diversity Panel references. These analyses distinguish family-based genetic structure from variation in African, European, and indigenous Amerindian admixture proportions, and analyses of linkage disequilibrium decay estimate admixture dates 5–6 generations (~160 years) ago. African ancestry accounts for the largest mixture components, followed by European and then indigenous components; however, our global ancestry inferences are consistent with previous mitochondrial, Y chromosome, and ancestry marker data from Dominica that show uniquely higher proportions of indigenous ancestry and lower proportions of African ancestry relative to known admixture in other French- and English-speaking Caribbean islands. Our genetic results support local narratives about the community’s history and founding, which indicate that newly emancipated people settled in the steep, dense vegetation along Dominica’s eastern coast in the mid-19th century. Strong genetic signals of post-colonial admixture and family-based structure highlight the localized impacts of colonial forces and island ecologies in this region, and more data from other groups are needed to more broadly inform on Dominica’s complex history and present diversity.
Databáze: OpenAIRE
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