Clustering of 770,000 genomes reveals post-colonial population structure of North America
Abstrak
Despite strides in characterizing human history from genetic polymorphism data, progress in identifying genetic signatures of recent demography has been limited. Here we identify very recent fine-scale population structure in North America from a network of over 500 million genetic (identity-by-descent, IBD) connections among 770,000 genotyped individuals of US origin. We detect densely connected clusters within the network and annotate these clusters using a database of over 20 million genealogical records. Recent population patterns captured by IBD clustering include immigrants such as Scandinavians and French Canadians; groups with continental admixture such as Puerto Ricans; settlers such as the Amish and Appalachians who experienced geographic or cultural isolation; and broad historical trends, including reduced north-south gene flow. Our results yield a detailed historical portrait of North America after European settlement and support substantial genetic heterogeneity in the United States beyond that uncovered by previous studies. Genetic data has led to great advances in our understanding of human evolution and dispersal, but information on more recent events is limited. Here, the authors analyse genotypes from 770,000 US individuals to map the fine-scale population structure of North America after European settlement.
Penulis (19)
Eunjung Han
P. Carbonetto
Ross E. Curtis
Yong Wang
J. Granka
Jake K. Byrnes
Keith Noto
Amir R. Kermany
Natalie M. Myres
Mathew Barber
K. Rand
Shiya Song
Theodore Roman
E. Battat
Eyal Elyashiv
H. Guturu
Eurie L. Hong
K. Chahine
C. Ball
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2017
- Bahasa
- en
- Total Sitasi
- 112×
- Sumber Database
- Semantic Scholar
- DOI
- 10.1038/ncomms14238
- Akses
- Open Access ✓