Recent admixture in an Indian population of African ancestry |
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Authors: | Narang Ankita,Jha Pankaj,Rawat Vimal,Mukhopadhyay Arijit,Mukhopadhayay Arijit,Dash Debasis Indian Genome Variation Consortium,Basu Analabha,Mukerji Mitali |
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Affiliation: | 1G.N. Ramachandran Knowledge Centre for Genome Informatics, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology, Mall Road, Delhi 110007, India;2Genomics and Molecular Medicine, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology, Mall Road, Delhi 110007, India;3National Institute of BioMedical Genomics, Kalyani 741251, India |
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Abstract: | ![]() Identification and study of genetic variation in recently admixed populations not only provides insight into historical population events but also is a powerful approach for mapping disease loci. We studied a population (OG-W-IP) that is of African-Indian origin and has resided in the western part of India for 500 years; members of this population are believed to be descendants of the Bantu-speaking population of Africa. We have carried out this study by using a set of 18,534 autosomal markers common between Indian, CEPH-HGDP, and HapMap populations. Principal-components analysis clearly revealed that the African-Indian population derives its ancestry from Bantu-speaking west-African as well as Indo-European-speaking north and northwest Indian population(s). STRUCTURE and ADMIXTURE analyses show that, overall, the OG-W-IPs derive 58.7% of their genomic ancestry from their African past and have very little inter-individual ancestry variation (8.4%). The extent of linkage disequilibrium also reveals that the admixture event has been recent. Functional annotation of genes encompassing the ancestry-informative markers that are closer in allele frequency to the Indian ancestral population revealed significant enrichment of biological processes, such as ion-channel activity, and cadherins. We briefly examine the implications of determining the genetic diversity of this population, which could provide opportunities for studies involving admixture mapping. |
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