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Minute Genetic Ancestry Differences Revealed in the US

by Vani Pradeep on December 20, 2014 at 12:44 PM

Recent study reveals minute differences in genetic ancestry of people across the United States. 23andMe, Inc., the leading personal genetics company, announced the publication of this study.


Since immigrants first arrived more than four hundred years ago, the United States has served as a meeting place for peoples from different continents. This study illuminates how American history and the ongoing mixing of peoples with African, European, and American origins can be seen in our DNA.

"The relationship between genomics and historical events can shed light on our collective understanding of the history of the population of the United States, and the history of our country itself," said Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Director of the Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard. "This study helps us build a bridge between data and the people and events that shaped our nation's history, revising long-held notions of who we are as individuals and as a country. In a unique way, genomics helps put a multicultural face on American history."

Led by 23andMe population geneticist Dr. Katarzyna Bryc, the study generated the first dense, state-by-state maps showing the gradients of ancestry within populations of self-identified African Americans, European Americans and Latinos across the United States.

The study leverages samples of unprecedented size and precise estimates of ancestry to reveal the rate of ancestry mixing among American populations, and where it has occurred geographically:

The ancestry proportions point to the different regional impacts of slavery, immigration, migration and colonization within the United States:

All three groups - African Americans, European Americans and Latinos - showed asymmetrical male and female ancestry contributions, with more European male and more Native American and African female ancestors. This asymmetry is likely a legacy of slavery, unbalanced sex ratios in frontier settings, as well as other social factors in early US history.

The study, entitled "The genetic ancestry of African, Latino, and European Americans across the United States," was published on December 18, 2014 in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

"We show that the signatures of recent historical migrations can be seen in the DNA of present-day Americans," said Dr. Bryc. "Furthermore, our results can inform the design of medical genetic studies. For example, the presence of Native American and African ancestry in European Americans may have implications for genetic studies of complex diseases."

The study also provides insight on the long-open question of how genetic ancestry aligns with self-reported identities. For example, the authors found those with as much as 28 percent African ancestry are more likely to describe themselves as European American than as African American, whereas individuals with more than 30 percent African ancestry are more likely to describe themselves as African-American.

This study, made possible by data contributed by more than 160,000 23andMe customers, makes it clear that the legacy of historical interactions between Native Americans, Europeans, and Africans is visible in the DNA of present-day Americans.



Source: Eurekalert

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