mtDNA variation in the Cayapa, an Ecuadorian Amerindian tribe belonging to the Chibcha-Paezan linguistic branch, was analyzed by use of hypervariable control regions I and II along with two linked regions undergoing insertion/deletion mutations. Three major maternal lineage clusters fit into the A, B, and C founding groups first described by Schurr and colleagues in 1990, whereas a fourth lineage, apparently unique to the Cayapa, has ambiguous affinity to known clusters. The time of divergence from a common maternal ancestor of the four lineage groups is of sufficient age that it indicates an origin in Asia and supports the hypothesis that the degree of variability carried by the Asian ancestral populations into the New World was rather high. Spatial autocorrelation analysis points out (a) statistically significant nonrandom distributions of the founding lineages in the Americas, because of north-south population movements that have occurred since the first Asian migrants spread through Beringia into the Americas, and (b) an unusual pattern associated with the D lineage cluster. The values of haplotype and nucleotide diversity that are displayed by the Cayapa appear to differ from those observed in other Chibchan populations but match those calculated for South American groups belonging to various linguistic stocks. These data, together with the results of phylogenetic analysis performed with the Amerinds of Central and South America, highlight the difficulty in the identification of clear coevolutionary patterns between linguistic and genetic relationships in particular human populations.

Rickards, O., MARTINEZ-LABARGA, M.c., Lum, J., De Stefano, G., Cann, R. (1999). mtDNA history of the Cayapa Amerinds of Ecuador: Detection of additional founding lineages for the native American populations. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 65(2), 519-530 [10.1086/302513].

mtDNA history of the Cayapa Amerinds of Ecuador: Detection of additional founding lineages for the native American populations

RICKARDS, OLGA;MARTINEZ-LABARGA, MARIA CRISTINA;
1999-01-01

Abstract

mtDNA variation in the Cayapa, an Ecuadorian Amerindian tribe belonging to the Chibcha-Paezan linguistic branch, was analyzed by use of hypervariable control regions I and II along with two linked regions undergoing insertion/deletion mutations. Three major maternal lineage clusters fit into the A, B, and C founding groups first described by Schurr and colleagues in 1990, whereas a fourth lineage, apparently unique to the Cayapa, has ambiguous affinity to known clusters. The time of divergence from a common maternal ancestor of the four lineage groups is of sufficient age that it indicates an origin in Asia and supports the hypothesis that the degree of variability carried by the Asian ancestral populations into the New World was rather high. Spatial autocorrelation analysis points out (a) statistically significant nonrandom distributions of the founding lineages in the Americas, because of north-south population movements that have occurred since the first Asian migrants spread through Beringia into the Americas, and (b) an unusual pattern associated with the D lineage cluster. The values of haplotype and nucleotide diversity that are displayed by the Cayapa appear to differ from those observed in other Chibchan populations but match those calculated for South American groups belonging to various linguistic stocks. These data, together with the results of phylogenetic analysis performed with the Amerinds of Central and South America, highlight the difficulty in the identification of clear coevolutionary patterns between linguistic and genetic relationships in particular human populations.
1999
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore BIO/08 - ANTROPOLOGIA
Settore BIO/18 - GENETICA
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
DNA polymorphisms, Native Americans, recent human evolution
Rickards, O., MARTINEZ-LABARGA, M.c., Lum, J., De Stefano, G., Cann, R. (1999). mtDNA history of the Cayapa Amerinds of Ecuador: Detection of additional founding lineages for the native American populations. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 65(2), 519-530 [10.1086/302513].
Rickards, O; MARTINEZ-LABARGA, Mc; Lum, J; De Stefano, G; Cann, R
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/64104
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