Abstract

Fine scale population structure of Malays - the major population in Malaysia, has not been well studied. This may have important implications for both evolutionary and medical studies. Here, we investigated the population sub-structure of Malay involving 431 samples collected from all states from peninsular Malaysia and Singapore. We identified two major clusters of individuals corresponding to the north and south peninsular Malaysia. On an even finer scale, the genetic coordinates of the geographical Malay populations are in correlation with the latitudes (R2 = 0.3925; P = 0.029). This finding is further supported by the pairwise FST of Malay sub-populations, of which the north and south regions showed the highest differentiation (FST [North–south] = 0.0011). The collective findings therefore suggest that population sub-structure of Malays are more heterogenous than previously expected even within a small geographical region, possibly due to factors like different genetic origins, geographical isolation, could result in spurious association as demonstrated in our analysis. We suggest that cautions should be taken during the stage of study design or interpreting the association signals in disease mapping studies which are expected to be conducted in Malay population in the near future.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s40246-015-0039-x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Malaysia, a multi-ethnic, multi-lingual, multi-cultural and multi-religious country, is located at the crossroads of Southeast Asia

  • We showed that the genetic diversity and population sub-structure of the Malays from Peninsular Malaysia are correlated to the geographical latitude

  • Correlation of genetic and geographic coordinates Given the fact that the PC1 as well as the ADMIXTURE analysis showed significant differences between northern and southern Malay samples, we investigated if the genetic diversity between these sub-structure of Malays in Peninsular Malaysia were attributed to geographical coordinates

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Summary

Introduction

A multi-ethnic, multi-lingual, multi-cultural and multi-religious country, is located at the crossroads of Southeast Asia. It is separated by the South China Sea into two land masses namely, the Peninsular Malaysia and East Malaysia ( known as the Borneo island). Among the major populations in Peninsular Malaysia, the Malays are the largest ethnic group and make up to 63% of the total population follow by Chinese, Indians and other minority ethnic groups. It is very likely that the Malays of Singapore have a similar history of origin as those from the southern part of Peninsular Malaysia [3]

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