Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/110192
Title: Analysis of paternal lineages in Brazilian and African populations
Authors: Carvalho, Mónica 
Brito, Pedro 
Lopes, Virgínia 
Andrade, Lisa 
Anjos, Maria João 
Real, Francisco Corte 
Gusmão, Leonor 
Keywords: Africa; Brazil; STRs; chromosome Y; lineages
Issue Date: Jul-2010
Publisher: Brazilian Society of Genetics
Project: Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, POCI 2010 
Serial title, monograph or event: Genetics and Molecular Biology
Volume: 33
Issue: 3
Abstract: The present-day Brazilian population is a consequence of the admixture of various peoples of very different origins, namely, Amerindians, Europeans and Africans. The proportion of each genetic contribution is known to be very heterogeneous throughout the country. The aim of the present study was to compare the male lineages present in two distinct Brazilian populations, as well as to evaluate the African contribution to their male genetic substrate. Thus, two Brazilian population samples from Manaus (State of Amazon) and Ribeirão Preto (State of São Paulo) and three African samples from Guinea Bissau, Angola and Mozambique were typed for a set of nine Y chromosome specific STRs. The data were compared with those from African, Amerindian and European populations. By using Y-STR haplotype information, low genetic distances were found between the Manaus and Ribeirão Preto populations, as well as between these and others from Iberia. Likewise, no significant distances were observed between any of the African samples from Angola, Mozambique and Guinea Bissau. Highly significant Rst values were found between both Brazilian samples and all the African and Amerindian populations. The absence of a significant Sub-Saharan African male component resulting from the slave trade, and the low frequency in Amerindian ancestry Y-lineages in the Manaus and Ribeirão Preto population samples are in accordance with the accentuated gender asymmetry in admixture processes that has been systematically reported in colonial South American populations.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10316/110192
ISSN: 1678-4685
1415-4757
DOI: 10.1590/S1415-47572010005000067
Rights: openAccess
Appears in Collections:FMUC Medicina - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais

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