Abstract

Patterns of genetic variation in human populations have been described for decades. However, North Africa has received little attention and Algeria, in particular, is poorly studied, Here we genotyped a Berber-speaking population from Algeria using 15 short tandem repeat (STR) loci D8S1179, D21S11, D7S820, CSF1PO, D3S1358, TH01, D13S317, D16S539, D2S1338, D19S433, vWA, TPOX, D18S51, D5S818 and FGA from the commercially available AmpF/STR Identifiler kit. Altogether 150 unrelated North Algerian individuals were sampled across 10 administrative regions or towns from the Bejaia Wilaya (administrative district). We found that all of the STR loci met Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium expectations, after Bonferroni correction and that the Berber-speaking population of Bejaia presented a high level of observed heterozygosity for the 15 STR system (>0.7). Genetic parameters of forensic interest such as combined power of discrimination (PD) and combined probability of exclusion (PE) showed values higher than 0.999, suggesting that this set of STRs can be used for forensic studies. Our results were also compared to those published for 42 other human populations analyzed with the same set. We found that the Bejaia sample clustered with several North African populations but that some geographically close populations, including the Berber-speaking Mozabite from Algeria were closer to Near-Eastern populations. While we were able to detect some genetic structure among samples, we found that it was not correlated to language (Berber-speaking versus Arab-speaking) or to geography (east versus west). In other words, no significant genetic differences were found between the Berber-speaking and the Arab-speaking populations of North Africa. The genetic closeness of European, North African and Near-Eastern populations suggest that North Africa should be integrated in models aiming at reconstructing the demographic history of Europe. Similarly, the genetic proximity with sub-Saharan Africa is a reminder of the links that connect all African regions.

Highlights

  • 64Global patterns of genetic diversity are becoming increasingly important to reconstruct the 65demographic history of human populations

  • Today the Algerian population is composed of two main linguistic groups, the 69Berber- and the Arab-speaking populations, and it is usually considered that the majority of 70the Algerians descend from Berbers and Arabs (Taïeb, 2004)

  • Henn et al (2012), using genomic data, estimated that 85the North African populations are likely of Berber origin with substantial shared ancestry with 86the Near East and, to a lesser extent, eastern and western sub-Saharan Africa and Europe

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Summary

Introduction

STR-based genetic structure of the Berber population of Bejaia (Northern Algeria) and its relationships to various ethnic groups Genetic data could be useful to identify 83connections between populations speaking different languages today within Algeria or at a 84wider geographical scale.

Results
Conclusion

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