The paternal landscape along the bight of benin

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RESEARCH ARTICLE

The Paternal Landscape along the Bight of Benin – Testing Regional Representativeness of West-African Population Samples Using Y-Chromosomal Markers Maarten H. D. Larmuseau1,2,3*, Andrea Vessi1,4, Mark A. Jobling3, Anneleen Van Geystelen2, Giuseppina Primativo4, Gianfranco Biondi5, Cristina Martínez-Labarga4, Claudio Ottoni1,4,6, Ronny Decorte1,7, Olga Rickards4 1 KU Leuven, Forensic Biomedical Sciences, Department of Imaging & Pathology, Leuven, Belgium, 2 KU Leuven, Laboratory of Socioecology and Social Evolution, Department of Biology, Leuven, Belgium, 3 University of Leicester, Department of Genetics, Leicester, United Kingdom, 4 University of Rome Tor Vergata, Department of Biology, Rome, Italy, 5 University of L’Aquila, Department of Clinical Medicine, Public Health, Life and Environment, L’Aquila, Italy, 6 KU Leuven, Centre for Archaeological Sciences, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Leuven, Belgium, 7 UZ Leuven, Laboratory of Forensic Genetics and Molecular Archaeology, Leuven, Belgium OPEN ACCESS Citation: Larmuseau MHD, Vessi A, Jobling MA, Van Geystelen A, Primativo G, Biondi G, et al. (2015) The Paternal Landscape along the Bight of Benin – Testing Regional Representativeness of West-African Population Samples Using Y-Chromosomal Markers. PLoS ONE 10(11): e0141510. doi:10.1371/journal. pone.0141510 Editor: Manfred Kayser, Erasmus University Medical Center, NETHERLANDS Received: August 25, 2015 Accepted: October 8, 2015 Published: November 6, 2015 Copyright: © 2015 Larmuseau et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Data Availability Statement: All genotypic data of this study have been archived in the open access YSTR Haplotype Reference Database (YHRD, www. yhrd.org): accession number YA003889. It is also available in Figshare (www.figshare.com): doi: 10. 6084/m9.figshare.1573053. Funding: MHDL is a postdoctoral fellow of the FWO Vlaanderen (Research Foundation Flanders). MAJ was supported by a Wellcome Trust Senior Fellowship (grant no. 087576). This study was funded in the context of the KU Leuven BOF Centre of

* maarten.larmuseau@bio.kuleuven.be

Abstract Patterns of genetic variation in human populations across the African continent are still not well studied in comparison with Eurasia and America, despite the high genetic and cultural diversity among African populations. In population and forensic genetic studies a single sample is often used to represent a complete African region. In such a scenario, inappropriate sampling strategies and/or the use of local, isolated populations may bias interpretations and pose questions of representativeness at a macrogeographic-scale. The non-recombining region of the Y-chromosome (NRY) has great potential to reveal the regional representation of a sample due to its powerful phylogeographic information content. An area poorly characterized for Y-chromosomal data is the West-African region along the Bight of Benin, despite its important history in the trans-Atlantic slave trade and its large number of ethnic groups, languages and lifestyles. In this study, Y-chromosomal haplotypes from four Beninese populations were determined and a global meta-analysis with available Y-SNP and YSTR data from populations along the Bight of Benin and surrounding areas was performed. A thorough methodology was developed allowing comparison of population samples using Y-chromosomal lineage data based on different Y-SNP panels and phylogenies. Geographic proximity turned out to be the best predictor of genetic affinity between populations along the Bight of Benin. Nevertheless, based on Y-chromosomal data from the literature two population samples differed strongly from others from the same or neighbouring areas and are not regionally representative within large-scale studies. Furthermore, the analysis of the HapMap sample YRI of a Yoruban population from South-western Nigeria based on Y-SNPs and Y-STR data showed for the first time its regional representativeness, a result which is important for standard population and forensic genetic applications using the YRI

PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0141510 November 6, 2015

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The paternal landscape along the bight of benin by DNA Tested African Descendants - Issuu