Abstract

BackgroundCurrent information about the expansion of Bantu-speaking peoples is hampered by the scarcity of genetic data from well identified populations from southern Africa. Here, we fill an important gap in the analysis of the western edge of the Bantu migrations by studying for the first time the patterns of Y-chromosome, mtDNA and lactase persistence genetic variation in four representative groups living around the Namib Desert in southwestern Angola (Ovimbundu, Ganguela, Nyaneka-Nkumbi and Kuvale). We assessed the differentiation between these populations and their levels of admixture with Khoe-San groups, and examined their relationship with other sub-Saharan populations. We further combined our dataset with previously published data on Y-chromosome and mtDNA variation to explore a general isolation with migration model and infer the demographic parameters underlying current genetic diversity in Bantu populations.ResultsCorrespondence analysis, lineage sharing patterns and admixture estimates indicate that the gene pool from southwestern Angola is predominantly derived from West-Central Africa. The pastoralist Herero-speaking Kuvale people were additionally characterized by relatively high frequencies of Y-chromosome (12%) and mtDNA (22%) Khoe-San lineages, as well as by the presence of the -14010C lactase persistence mutation (6%), which likely originated in non-Bantu pastoralists from East Africa. Inferred demographic parameters show that both male and female populations underwent significant size growth after the split between the western and eastern branches of Bantu expansions occurring 4000 years ago. However, males had lower population sizes and migration rates than females throughout the Bantu dispersals.ConclusionGenetic variation in southwestern Angola essentially results from the encounter of an offshoot of West-Central Africa with autochthonous Khoisan-speaking peoples from the south. Interactions between the Bantus and the Khoe-San likely involved cattle herders from the two groups sharing common aspects of their social organization. The presence of the -14010C mutation in southwestern Angola provides a link between the East and Southwest African pastoral scenes that might have been established indirectly, through migrations of Khoe herders across southern Africa. Differences in patterns of mtDNA and Y-chromosome intrapopulation diversity and interpopulation differentiation may be explained by contrasting demographic histories underlying the current female and male genetic variation.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAmong the complex series of demographic events that shaped the patterns of human genetic variation in Africa, the massive dispersal of Bantu-speakers stands as one of the most impressive examples of human migration

  • Current information about the expansion of Bantu-speaking peoples is hampered by the scarcity of genetic data from well identified populations from southern Africa

  • Both the patterns of lineage sharing and admixture estimates from different potential source populations strongly suggest that the bulk (~75%) of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variation in southwestern Angola can be traced back just to West-Central Africa, in areas that are adjacent to the original heartland of Bantu expansions [2]

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Summary

Introduction

Among the complex series of demographic events that shaped the patterns of human genetic variation in Africa, the massive dispersal of Bantu-speakers stands as one of the most impressive examples of human migration Both linguistic and archeological evidences suggest that the spread of Bantu languages started about 4000 years ago in the adjacent grasslands of Cameroon-Nigeria and involved large movements of farmers carrying an agricultural tradition especially well-suited to the climate conditions prevailing in subequatorial Africa [1,2]. According to a widely accepted dispersion model, one major population movement involved the expansion of ancestors of East Bantu speakers along the northern fringe of the African rain forest into the interlacustrine areas surrounding Uganda [1,2,3] Another important movement is thought to be linked to the early penetration of ancestors of West Bantu speakers into the wet coastal areas of the central African forest, beyond the Cameroon plateau [2]. This basic representation of the major trends of Bantu dispersals has not remained unchallenged [3,4,5], and many specific details of the migration dynamics leading to the emergence of widespread Bantu-speaking communities are still poorly understood [3]

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