Genetic structure correlates with ethnolinguistic diversity in eastern and southern Africa
Author:
Atkinson Elizabeth G.ORCID, Dalvie Shareefa, Pichkar Yakov, Kalungi Allan, Majara Lerato, Stevenson Anne, Abebe Tamrat, Akena Dickens, Alemayehu Melkam, Ashaba Fred K., Atwoli Lukoye, Baker Mark, Chibnik Lori B.ORCID, Creanza Nicole, Daly Mark J.ORCID, Fekadu Abebaw, Gelaye Bizu, Gichuru Stella, Injera Wilfred E., James Roxanne, Kariuki Symon M., Kigen Gabriel, Koen Nastassja, Koenen Karestan C., Koenig Zan, Kwobah Edith, Kyebuzibwa Joseph, Musinguzi Henry, Mwema Rehema M., Neale Benjamin M.ORCID, Newman Carter P., Newton Charles R.J.C., Ongeri Linnet, Ramachandran Sohini, Ramesar Raj, Shiferaw Welelta, Stein Dan J., Stroud Rocky E., Teferra Solomon, Zingela Zukiswa, Martin Alicia R.ORCID,
Abstract
SummaryAfrican populations are the most diverse in the world yet are sorely underrepresented in medical genetics research. Here, we examine the structure of African populations using genetic and comprehensive multigenerational ethnolinguistic data from the Neuropsychiatric Genetics of African Populations-Psychosis study (NeuroGAP-Psychosis) consisting of 900 individuals from Ethiopia, Kenya, South Africa, and Uganda. We find that self-reported language classifications meaningfully tag underlying genetic variation that would be missed with consideration of geography alone, highlighting the importance of culture in shaping genetic diversity. Leveraging our uniquely rich multi-generational ethnolinguistic metadata, we track language transmission through the pedigree, observing the disappearance of several languages in our cohort as well as notable shifts in frequency over three generations. We further find significantly higher language transmission rates for matrilineal groups as compared to patrilineal. We highlight both the diversity of variation within the African continent, as well as how within-Africa variation can be informative for broader variant interpretation; many variants appearing rare elsewhere are common in parts of Africa. The work presented here improves the understanding of the spectrum of genetic variation in African populations and highlights the enormous and complex genetic and ethnolinguistic diversity within Africa.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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