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Research Project
On the edge of the Bantu expansions: inferring recent African population history with independently evolving haplotypic systems
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Signatures of the preagricultural peopling processes in sub-Saharan Africa as revealed by the phylogeography of early Y chromosome lineages
Publication . Batini, C.; Ferri, G.; Destro-Bisol, G.; Brisighelli, F.; Luiselli, D.; Sanchez-Diz, P.; Rocha, J.; Simonson, T.; Brehm, António; Montano, V.; Elwali, N. E.; Spedini, G.; D'Amato, M. E.; Myres, N.; Ebbesen, P.; Comas, D.; Capelli, C.
The study of Y chromosome variation has helped reconstruct demographic events associated with the spread of languages,
agriculture, and pastoralism in sub-Saharan Africa, but little attention has been given to the early history of the continent. In
order to overcome this lack of knowledge, we carried out a phylogeographic analysis of haplogroups A and B in a broad data set
of sub-Saharan populations. These two lineages are particularly suitable for this objective because they are the two most deeply
rooted branches of the Y chromosome genealogy. Their distribution is almost exclusively restricted to sub-Saharan Africa where
their frequency peaks at 65% in groups of foragers. The combined high-resolution single nucleotide polymorphism analysis with
short tandem repeats variation of their subclades reveals strong geographic and population structure for both haplogroups. This
has allowed us to identify specific lineages related to regional preagricultural dynamics in different areas of sub-Saharan Africa. In
addition, we observed signatures of relatively recent contact, both among Pygmies and between them and Khoisan speaker
groups from southern Africa, thus contributing to the understanding of the complex evolutionary relationships among African
hunter-gatherers. Finally, by revising the phylogeography of the very early human Y chromosome lineages, we have obtained
support for the role of southern Africa as a sink, rather than a source, of the first migrations of modern humans from eastern
and central parts of the continent. These results open new perspectives on the early history of Homo sapiens in Africa, with
particular attention to areas of the continent where human fossil remains and archaeological data are scant.
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Funding agency
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
Funding programme
5876-PPCDTI
Funding Award Number
PTDC/BIA-BDE/68999/2006