4.6 Article

Indigenous Ancestry and Admixture in the Uruguayan Population

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FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
卷 12, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2021.733195

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population genomics; human genomics; indigenous ancestry; admixed population; bioinformatics; South America

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The Charruas, an Amerindian group in Uruguay, were extinguished as an ethnic group due to genocide, but their heritage still plays a significant role in the identity of Uruguayans. Genetic studies of Uruguayan individuals with Charruan heritage show evidence of indigenous ancestry, with specific genetic markers indicating interactions with other Amerindian groups. The genomic similarity between Charruas and other Amerindians, as well as their European admixture history, reveal a complex genetic and historical background of Uruguay.
The Amerindian group known as the Charruas inhabited Uruguay at the timing of European colonial contact. Even though they were extinguished as an ethnic group as a result of a genocide, Charruan heritage is part of the Uruguayan identity both culturally and genetically. While mitochondrial DNA studies have shown evidence of Amerindian ancestry in living Uruguayans, here we undertake whole-genome sequencing of 10 Uruguayan individuals with self-declared Charruan heritage. We detect chromosomal segments of Amerindian ancestry supporting the presence of indigenous genetic ancestry in living descendants. Specific haplotypes were found to be enriched in Charruas and rare in the rest of the Amerindian groups studied. Some of these we interpret as the result of positive selection, as we identified selection signatures and they were located mostly within genes related to the infectivity of specific viruses. Historical records describe contacts of the Charruas with other Amerindians, such as Guarani, and patterns of genomic similarity observed here concur with genomic similarity between these groups. Less expected, we found a high genomic similarity of the Charruas to Diaguita from Argentinian and Chile, which could be explained by geographically proximity. Finally, by fitting admixture models of Amerindian and European ancestry for the Uruguayan population, we were able to estimate the timing of the first pulse of admixture between European and Uruguayan indigenous peoples in approximately 1658 and the second migration pulse in 1683. Both dates roughly concurring with the Franciscan missions in 1662 and the foundation of the city of Colonia in 1680 by the Spanish.

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