Abstract

Argentina hosts more than 30 Native American groups, who are widely distributed throughout the country. Mataco-Guaycurú speakers settled in the ecoregion of Gran Chaco and represent 26.7% of the extant aboriginal population of the country. To further investigate the genetic attributes of these speakers, we focused our attention on four aboriginal groups, namely, Wichí, Toba, Pilagá and Mocoví, belonging to the Mataco-Guaycurú linguistic group. Our main goal was to evaluate the interrelationships among the groups and the relationships of these groups with admixed urban populations and to assess correspondences between molecular analysis and historical information. A total of 890 samples (282 Native Americans and 608 inhabitants of admixed urban areas) were analysed. Genetic information was gathered from 15 autosomal STRs, 17 Y-STRs, entire mtDNA control region sequences, 24 AIM-SNPs and 46 AIM-DIPs. Native American signatures were detected in 97.9% of mtDNA lineages, 89.1% of Y-haplotypes and 90.3% to 96.9% of autosomal markers. Wichí exhibited the genetic composition with the largest Native American contribution among the groups and a weak signal of gene flow. This work provides extended genetic information of potential interest in the fields of molecular anthropology and forensic genetics.

Highlights

  • Www.nature.com/scientificreports covering an area of approximately 1,391,000 km[2]

  • Aiming to investigate the genetic composition of Mataco-Guaycurú speakers as a consequence of internal migrations and after contact with European descendants, we compared genetic information across 15 autosomal short tandem repeats (STRs), 46 ancestry-informative markers (AIMs)-DIPs and 24 AIM-SNPs to estimate the degree of genetic admixture

  • Supplementary Material 1-a shows the frequency distributions across loci, molecular indices and Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (HWE) results as well as a summary of the autosomal STR analysis results

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Www.nature.com/scientificreports covering an area of approximately 1,391,000 km[2]. Aboriginal populations inhabiting the Argentinean part of the Chaco region were the last to submit to the power of the Spaniards and to the national government. According to the last Argentinean Supplementary Survey of Indigenous Peoples[6], there are 40,036 Wichí (90.3% of the Wichí who inhabit the country) inhabiting Chaco, Formosa and Salta Provinces; 69,452 individuals of Toba ethnicity (68.5%) inhabiting Chaco, Formosa and Santa Fe Provinces; 4,465 Pilagá (88.4%) living in Formosa Province and 15,837 Mocoví (76.7%) living in Chaco and Santa Fe Provinces. These ethnicities constitute approximately 26% of the extant Native American populations inhabiting Argentina

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call