Dental size variation in admixed Latin Americans: Effects of age, sex and genomic ancestry

Author:

Yang Guangrui,Chen Yingjie,Li Qing,Benítez Daniel,Ramírez Luis MiguelORCID,Fuentes-Guajardo Macarena,Hanihara Tsunehiko,Scott G. Richard,Acuña Alonzo Victor,Gonzalez Jose Rolando,Bortolini Maria Catira,Poletti Giovanni,Gallo Carla,Rothhammer Francisco,Rojas Winston,Zanolli ClémentORCID,Adhikari Kaustubh,Ruiz-Linares Andres,Delgado MiguelORCID

Abstract

Dental size variation in modern humans has been assessed from regional to worldwide scales, especially under microevolutionary and forensic contexts. Despite this, populations of mixed continental ancestry such as contemporary Latin Americans remain unexplored. In the present study we investigated a large Latin American sample from Colombia (N = 804) and obtained buccolingual and mesiodistal diameters and three indices for maxillary and mandibular teeth (except third molars). We evaluated the correlation between 28 dental measurements (and three indices) with age, sex and genomic ancestry (estimated using genome-wide SNP data). In addition, we explored correlation patterns between dental measurements and the biological affinities, based on these measurements, between two Latin American samples (Colombians and Mexicans) and three putative parental populations: Central and South Native Americans, western Europeans and western Africans through PCA and DFA. Our results indicate that Latin Americans have high dental size diversity, overlapping the variation exhibited by the parental populations. Several dental dimensions and indices have significant correlations with sex and age. Western Europeans presented closer biological affinities with Colombians, and the European genomic ancestry exhibited the highest correlations with tooth size. Correlations between tooth measurements reveal distinct dental modules, as well as a higher integration of postcanine dentition. The effects on dental size of age, sex and genomic ancestry is of relevance for forensic, biohistorical and microevolutionary studies in Latin Americans.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Scientific and Technology Committee of Shanghai Municipality

Ministry of Science and Technology of China

Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project

111 Project

Leverhulme Trust

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Excellence Initiative of Aix-Marseille University–A*MIDEX

Wenner-Gren Foundation

Universidad de Antioquia CODI

UCL Global Engagement Fund

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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