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.2019 Sep 23;15(9):e1008225.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1008225. eCollection 2019 Sep.

Native American admixture recapitulates population-specific migration and settlement of the continental United States

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Native American admixture recapitulates population-specific migration and settlement of the continental United States

I King Jordan et al. PLoS Genet..

Abstract

European and African descendants settled the continental US during the 17th-19th centuries, coming into contact with established Native American populations. The resulting admixture among these groups yielded a significant reservoir of Native American ancestry in the modern US population. We analyzed the patterns of Native American admixture seen for the three largest genetic ancestry groups in the US population: African descendants, Western European descendants, and Spanish descendants. The three groups show distinct Native American ancestry profiles, which are indicative of their historical patterns of migration and settlement across the country. Native American ancestry in the modern African descendant population does not coincide with local geography, instead forming a single group with origins in the southeastern US, consistent with the Great Migration of the early 20th century. Western European descendants show Native American ancestry that tracks their geographic origins across the US, indicative of ongoing contact during westward expansion, and Native American ancestry can resolve Spanish descendant individuals into distinct local groups formed by more recent migration from Mexico and Puerto Rico. We found an anomalous pattern of Native American ancestry from the US southwest, which most likely corresponds to the Nuevomexicano descendants of early Spanish settlers to the region. We addressed a number of controversies surrounding this population, including the extent of Sephardic Jewish ancestry. Nuevomexicanos are less admixed than nearby Mexican-American individuals, with more European and less Native American and African ancestry, and while they do show demonstrable Sephardic Jewish ancestry, the fraction is no greater than seen for other New World Spanish descendant populations.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Genetic ancestry groups in the modern US population.
(A) ADMIXTURE plot (K = 3) showing the African (blue), European (gold), and Native American (red) ancestry components for individuals from different US population groups. Data are from the 1000 Genomes Project (1KGP) and the Health and Retirement Study (HRS). (B) Distributions of African, European, and Native American ancestry fractions for the three main US genetic ancestry groups defined here: African descendant, Wester European descendant, and Spanish descendant. (C) Principal components analysis (PCA) plot showing the relationships among individuals from reference populations and individuals from the HRS dataset corresponding to the three US genetic ancestry groups. (D) Percentages of individuals from each of the three US genetic ancestry groups are shown for the nine census regions in continental US.
Fig 2
Fig 2. Sex-biased admixture in US genetic ancestry groups.
Normalized differences between X chromosome ancestry fractions and autosomal ancestry fractions (ΔAdmix) are shown on the y-axis.ΔAdmix values are shown for each ancestry component–African (blue), European (gold), and Native American (red)–in each individual genome.ΔAdmix values above zero (pink) indicate female-biased admixture, and values below zero (blue) indicate male-biased admixture.
Fig 3
Fig 3. Native American ancestry percentages in the modern US population.
The average percentages of Native American ancestry are shown for the three US genetic ancestry groups across the nine geographic census regions (S1 Fig) for (A) African descendant, (B) Western European descendant, and (C) Spanish descendant populations. Data for census regions with less than five individuals for any ancestry group are considered unreliable and are not shown.
Fig 4
Fig 4. Native American and European ancestry profiles for US ancestry groups.
Native American (K = 9) and European (K = 5) ancestry-specific ADMXITURE plots are shown for the Western European descendant (WD) and African descendant (AD) groups combined (A) and for the Spanish descendant group (B). The individual panels shown correspond to Native American (NA) reference populations, 1000 Genomes Project reference populations and the HRS data from the different US census regions (S1 Fig).
Fig 5
Fig 5. Native American ancestry phylogeny.
Phylogenetic relationships are shown for the Native American ancestry-specific components of Native American (NA) reference populations, 1000 Genomes Project reference populations (Mexican and Puerto Rican) and HRS groups. The HRS groups are labeled according to their US census region origins and genetic ancestry group: African descendant (AD), Western European descendant (WD), and Spanish descendant (SD). Broad geographic and genetic groupings are indicated by the bars on the right side. The scale bar corresponds to the pairwise FST values used to generate the phylogeny.
Fig 6
Fig 6. Genetic ancestry of theNuevomexicanos.
(A) Native American (K = 9) and European (K = 5) ancestry-specific ADMXITURE plots comparing the Mountain census region (MNT) in the middle panel to Canadian Native American (NA) populations and admixed Mexican reference populations. Native American ancestry profiles for the Mountain region can be divided intoNuevomexicano (left) and Mexican-American (right) components. (B) Native American ancestry phylogeny (as shown in Fig 5) with the Mountain census region (MNT) broken down intoNuevomexicano and Mexican-American sub-populations. (C) Distributions of European, Native American, and African ancestry fractions are shown for the Spanish descendant Mountain (MNT)Nuevomexicano, Mountain (MNT) Mexican, West South Central (WSC), and Pacific (PAC) populations. The * indicates significant differences in median ancestry fractions between theNuevomexicano and other groups (P<0.01 Wilcoxon Rank-Sum test). (D) Distributions of the Sephardic Jewish haplotype copying fractions are shown for European reference populations from the 1000 Genomes Project (Central European and Spanish), Western European descendants from the Southeast census region (SE, WD), Mountain (MNT)Nuevomexicano, Mountain (MNT) Mexican, and West South Central Spanish descendant (WSC, SD) groups.
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