4.8 Article

Maternal traces of deep common ancestry and asymmetric gene flow between Pygmy hunter-gatherers and Bantu-speaking farmers

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0711467105

Keywords

Africa; evolution; human; mtDNA; populations

Funding

  1. Institut Pasteur
  2. Language, Languages, and Human Origins (OHLL) grant from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
  3. European Science Foundation EUROCORES Origins of Man, Language, and Languages (OMLL) program Language, culture and genes in Bantu: A multidisciplinary approach to the Bantu-speaking populations of Africa''
  4. Ministry of Research project Action Concertee Incitative-Prosodie Histoire et diversite genetique des Pygmees d'Afrique Centrale et de leurs voisins

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Two groups of populations with completely different life-styles-the Pygmy hunter-gatherers and the Bantu-speaking farmers-coexist in Central Africa. We investigated the origins of these two groups and the interactions between them, by analyzing mtDNA variation in 1,404 individuals from 20 farming populations and 9 Pygmy populations from Central Africa, with the aim of shedding light on one of the most fascinating cultural transitions in human evolution (the transition from hunting and gathering to agriculture). Our data indicate that this region was colonized gradually, with an initial L1c-rich ancestral population ultimately giving rise to current-day farmers, who display various L1c clades, and to Pygmies, in whom L1c1a is the only surviving clade. Detailed phylogenetic analysis of complete mtDNA sequences for L1c1a showed this clade to be autochthonous to Central Africa, with its most recent branches shared between farmers and Pygmies. Coalescence analyses revealed that these two groups arose through a complex evolutionary process characterized by (i) initial divergence of the ancestors of contemporary Pygmies from an ancestral Central African population no more than approximate to 70,000 years ago, (ii) a period of isolation between the two groups, accounting for their phenotypic differences, (iii) long-standing asymmetric maternal gene flow from Pygmies to the ancestors of the farming populations, beginning no more than approximate to 40,000 years ago and persisting until a few thousand years ago, and (iv) enrichment of the maternal gene pool of the ancestors of the farming populations by the arrival and/or subsequent demographic expansion of L0a, L2, and L3 carriers.

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