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Genetic history of Africa

The genetic history of Africa is composed of the overall genetic history of African populations in Africa, including the regional genetic histories of North Africa, West Africa, East Africa, Central Africa, and Southern Africa, as well as the recent origin of modern humans in Africa. The Sahara served as a trans-regional passageway and place of dwelling for people in Africa during various humid phases[1][2][3] and periods throughout the history of Africa.[4][5]

Population structure of African populations in a broad context. ADMIXTURE analysis of 2,194 individuals from 81 populations for 16,420 SNPs reveals both well-established and novel ancestry components in African populations.

Overview edit

 
(A) the origin of the 46 African ethnic groups used in the analysis; ethnic groups from similar regions are given the same colour, but different shapes. (B) PCA shows that the first major axis of variation in Africa (PC1, y-axis) splits southern groups from the rest of Africa, each symbol represents an individual; PC2 (x-axis) reflects ethno-linguistic differences, with Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan speakers split from Afroasiatic speakers. (C) The third principal component (PC3, x-axis) represents geographical separation of Niger-Congo speakers, forming a cline from west to east Africans.

The peoples of Africa are characterized by regional genetic substructure and heterogeneity, depending on the respective ethno-linguistic identity, and, in part, explainable by the "multiregional evolution" of modern human lineages in various multiple regions of the African continent, as well as later admixture events, including back-migrations from Eurasia, of both highly differentiated West- and East-Eurasian components.[6]

Africans' genetic ancestry is largely partitioned by geography and language family, with populations belonging to the same ethno-linguistic groupings showing high genetic homogeneity and coherence. Gene flow, consistent with both short- and long-range migration events followed by extensive admixture and bottleneck events, have influenced the regional genetic makeup and demographic structure of Africans. The historical Bantu expansion had lasting impacts on the modern demographic make up of Africa, resulting in a greater genetic and linguistic homogenization.[7] Genetic, archeologic, and linguistic studies added extra insight into this movement: "Our results reveal a genetic continuum of Niger–Congo speaker populations across the continent and extend our current understanding of the routes, timing and extent of the Bantu migration."[8]

Overall, different African populations display genetic diversity and substructure, but can be clustered in distinct but partially overlapping groupings:[9]

  • Khoisan hunter-gatherer lineages from Southern Africa represent the deepest lineages, forming a divergent and distinct cluster, shifted away from contemporary "Sub-Saharan Africans", and are further diverged from them than the various Eurasian lineages are. The diverging date of these "Southern hunter-gatherers" from all other human populations is estimated to over 100,000 years ago respectively, with the Khoisan later diverging into two subgroups, northern and southern Khoisan,~30,000 years ago.[a]
  • Rain forest foragers such as the Baka and the Mbuti diverged from other Sub-Saharan African groups over 60,000 years ago. Eastern groups such as the Mbuti split from Western groups such as the Baka ~20,000 years ago.
  • The various Afroasiatic speakers are suggested to have diverged from other African groups ~50,000 years ago.[10]
  • Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan speakers split around 28,000 years ago.[9]
  • Austronesian-speaking Malagasy people in Madagascar have received significant East/Southeast Asian admixture, less among some groups of coastal Southern, Eastern and the Horn of Africa. The estimated date of geneflow is 2,200 years ago.[11][12][13][7][14][15]
 
Geographic location of the samples analyzed in this study (A). PCA of the Khoe-San individuals, Eurasians, West and East Africans before (unmasked, B) and after (masked, C) applying the local ancestry pipeline (146,696 independent SNPs).

Indigenous Africans edit

The indigenous populations of Africa consists of Niger–Congo speakers, Nilo-Saharan speakers, the divergent and diverse Khoisan grouping, as well as of several unclassified or isolated ethnolinguistic groupings (see unclassified languages of Africa). The origin of the Afroasiatic languages remains disputed, with some proposing a Middle Eastern origin, while others support an African origin[16] with varying degrees of Eurasian and African components.[10] The Austronesian languages originated in southern East Asia, and later expanded outgoing from the Philippines.

 
PCA plot of genetic variation of worldwide populations. (A) Geographic coordinates of 53 populations. (B) Procrustes-transformed PCA plot of genetic variation.[17]

The Niger–Congo languages probably originated in or near the area where these languages were spoken prior to Bantu expansion (i.e. West Africa or Central Africa). Its expansion may have been associated with the expansion of agriculture, in the African Neolithic period, following the desiccation of the Sahara in c. 3500 BCE. Proto-Niger-Congo may have originated about 10,000 years before present in the "Green Sahara" of Africa (roughly the Sahel and southern Sahara), and that its dispersal can be correlated with the spread of the bow and arrow by migrating hunter-gatherers, which later developed agriculture.[18][19][20]

Although the validity of the Nilo-Saharan family remains controversial, the region between Chad, Sudan, and the Central African Republic is seen as a likely candidate for its homeland prior to its dispersal around 10,000–8,000 BCE.[21]

The Southern African hunter-gatherers (Khoisan) are suggested to represent the autochthonous hunter-gatherer population of southern Africa, prior to the expansion of Bantu-speakers from Western/Central Africa and East African pastoralists. Khoisan show evidence for Bantu-related admixture, ranging from nearly ~0% to up to ~87.1%.[22]

Out-of-Africa event edit

 
Human migration routes following Out-of-Africa.
 
Most modern Africans display a high level of genetic homogeneity, but contributions from Eurasian populations are substantial, mostly concentrated in the Northeastern part of Africa and Madagascar.

The "recent African origin of modern humans" model proposes a "single origin" of Homo sapiens in Africa the taxonomic sense. Recent genetic and archeologic data suggests that Homo sapiens-subgroups originated in multiple regions of Africa, not confined to a single region of origin. The H. sapiens ancestral to proper Eurasians most likely left Northeastern Africa between 50,000 and 100,000 years ago.[15] The "recent African origin" model proposes that all modern non-African populations descend from one or several waves of H. sapiens that left Africa 70,000-60,000 years ago.[23][24][25][26]

 
According to serial founder model, the earliest-branching non-African lineages are expected to have expanded in the Middle East, after the Out-of-Africa event (a), but have their deepest divergence in modern-day East or Southeast Asia (b), suggesting either rapid diversification and substructure within the early Eurasians, or replacement and loss of deep lineages in Western Eurasia. Simplified Y tree is shown as reference for colours.[27]

According to Durvasula et al. (2020), there are indications that 2% to 19% (≃6.6 to 7.0%) of the DNA of West African populations may have come from an unknown archaic hominin which split from the ancestor of humans and Neanderthals between 360 kya to 1.02 mya. However, Durvasula et al. (2020) also suggests that at least part of this archaic admixture is also present in Eurasians/non-Africans, and that the admixture event or events range from 0 to 124 ka B.P, which includes the period before the Out-of-Africa migration and prior to the African/Eurasian split (thus affecting in part the common ancestors of both Africans and Eurasians/non-Africans).[28][29][30] Chen et al. (2020) found that Africans have higher Neanderthal ancestry than previously thought. 2,504 African samples from all over Africa were analyzed and tested on Neanderthal ancestry. All African samples showed evidence for minor Neanderthal ancestry, but always at lower levels than observed in Eurasians.[31]

Geneflow between Eurasian and African populations edit

 
Pre-Neolithic and Neolithic migration events in Africa.[32]

Significant Eurasian admixture is found in Northern Africa, and among specific ethnic groups of the Horn of Africa, as well as among the Malagasy people of Madagascar. Various genome studies found evidence for multiple prehistoric back-migrations from various Eurasian populations and subsequent admixture with native groups.[33] West-Eurasian geneflow arrived to Northern Africa during the Paleolithic (30,000 to 15,000 years ago), followed by other pre-Neolithic and Neolithic migration events. Genetic data on the Taforalt samples "demonstrated that Northern Africa received significant amounts of gene-flow from Eurasia predating the Holocene and development of farming practices". Medieval geneflow events, such as the Arab expansion also left traces in various African populations.[15][32][34] Pickrell et al. (2014) indicated that Western Eurasian ancestry eventually arrived through Northeast Africa (particularly the Horn of Africa) to Southern Africa.[35]

Ramsay et al. (2018) also found evidence for significant Western Eurasian admixture in various parts of Africa, from both ancient and more recent migrations, being highest among populations from Northern Africa, and some groups of the Horn of Africa:[36]

In addition to the intrinsic diversity within the continent due to population structure and isolation, migration of Eurasian populations into Africa has emerged as a critical contributor to the genetic diversity. These migrations involved the influx of different Eurasian populations at different times and to different parts of Africa. Comprehensive characterization of the details of these migrations through genetic studies on existing populations could help to explain the strong genetic differences between some geographically neighbouring populations.

This distinctive Eurasian admixture appears to have occurred over at least three time periods with ancient admixture in central west Africa (e.g., Yoruba from Nigeria) occurring between ~7.5 and 10.5 kya, older admixture in east Africa (e.g., Ethiopia) occurring between ~2.4 and 3.2 kya and more recent admixture between ~0.15 and 1.5 kya in some east African (e.g., Kenyan) populations.

Subsequent studies based on LD decay and haplotype sharing in an extensive set of African and Eurasian populations confirmed the presence of Eurasian signatures in west, east and southern Africans. In the west, in addition to Niger-Congo speakers from The Gambia and Mali, the Mossi from Burkina Faso showed the oldest Eurasian admixture event ~7 kya. In the east, these analyses inferred Eurasian admixture within the last 4000 years in Kenya.[36]

There is no definitive agreement on when or where the original homeland of the Afroasiatic language family existed. Some have suggested that they were spread by people with largely West-Eurasian ancestry during the Neolithic Revolution, towards Northern Africa and the Horn of Africa, outgoing from the Middle East, specifically from the Levant. This hypothesis does not account for the domestication of plants endemic to the Horn of Africa such as teff, ensete, and Niger seed, nor does it account for the lack of evidence of intrusive agricultural populations or the cultivation of wheat, barley, or sorghum in that region prior to 3000 B.C.[37][38] Others argue that the first speakers of Proto-Afroasiatic were based in Northeast Africa because that region includes the majority of the diversity of the Afroasiatic language family and has very diverse groups in close geographic proximity, which is sometimes considered a telltale sign for a linguistic geographic origin.[39] A subset of the Proto-Afroasiatic population would have migrated to the Levant during the late Paleolithic, merging with local West-Eurasians and resulting in a population which would later give rise to Natufian culture, associated with the early development of agriculture and early Afroasiatic languages, or specifically pre-proto-Semitic.[40][41][page needed][42][43][44][45] In addition, Y-haplogroup sub-lineage E-M215 (also known as "E1b1b) and its derivative E-M35 are quite common among Afroasiatic speakers, and southwestern Ethiopia is a plausible source of these haplogroups.[46] The linguistic group and carriers of this lineage would have arisen and dispersed together from Northeast Africa in the Mesolithic, plausibly having already developed subsistence patterns of pastoralism and intensive plant usage and collection.[47][48][49][50] According to historian and linguist Christopher Ehret, the form of intensive plant collection practiced by the Proto-Afroasiatic population in Northeast Africa may have been a precursor to the agricultural practices that would later independently develop in the Fertile Crescent and the Horn of Africa.[44][51][52]

 
Proposed migration routes of paternal lineage E.

Horn of Africa edit

While many studies conducted on Horn of Africa populations estimate a West-Eurasian admixture event around 3,000 years ago,[53][36][35][54] Hodgson et al. (2014) found a distinct West-Eurasian ancestral component among studied Afroasiatic-speaking groups in the Horn of Africa (and to a lesser extent in North Africa and West Asia), most prevalent among the Somali. This ancestral component dubbed "Ethio-Somali" is most closely related to the "Maghrebi" (peaking in Tunisians) component and is believed to have diverged from other non-African ancestries around 23,000 years ago, and migrated back to Africa prior to developing agriculture (12–23 ka) from the Near East. This population would have crossed via the Sinai Peninsula and then split into two, with one branch continuing west across North Africa and the other heading south into the Horn of Africa. The authors propose that "Ethio-Somali" may have been a substantial ancestral component of the Proto-Afroasiatic-speaking population. Later migration from Arabia into the HOA beginning around 3 ka would explain the origin of the Ethiosemitic languages at this time.[42] An mtDNA analysis by Gandini et al. (2016) has produced additional evidence in support of a pre-agricultural back-migration from West-Eurasia into the Horn of Africa with an estimated date of arrival into the Horn of Africa in the early Holocene, possibly as a result of obsidian exchange networks across the Red Sea.[55] Hodgson et al. also confirmed the existence of an ancestral component indigenous to the Horn of Africa - "Ethiopic" or "Omotic" (Pagani et al.) - which is most prevalent among speakers of the Omotic branch of Afroasiatic in southwestern Ethiopia.[42][53] This lineage is associated with that of a 4,500 year-old fossil (Mota) found in a cave in southwestern Ethiopia, which has high genetic affinity to modern Ethiopian groups, especially the endogamous blacksmith caste of the Omotic Aari people. Like Mota, Aari blacksmiths do not show evidence for admixture with West-Eurasians, demonstrating a degree of population continuity in this region for at least 4,500 years. In a comparative analysis of Mota's genome referencing modern populations, Gallego et al. (2016) concluded that the divergence of Omotic from other Afroasiatic languages may have resulted from the relative isolation of its speakers from external groups.[56] In an analysis of 68 Ethiopian ethnic groups, Lopez et al. (2021) revealed that several groups belonging to the three AA classifications of Cushitic, Omotic and Semitic show high genetic similarity to each other on average. Furthermore, the Nilo-Saharan speakers in the southwest shared more recent ancestry with Bantu and Nilotics, in contrast Afro-Asiatic speakers in the northeast shared more recent ancestry with Egyptians and other West Eurasians. The data also supported widespread recent intermixing among various ethnic groups.[57]

Madagascar edit

 
Austronesian expansion, outgoing from Taiwan and the northern Philippines.

Specific East Asian-related ancestry is found among the Malagasy speakers of Madagascar at a medium frequency. The presence of this East Asian-related ancestry is mostly linked to the Austronesian peoples expansion from Southeast Asia.[58][59][60][61] The peoples of Borneo were identified to resemble the East Asian voyagers, who arrived on Madagascar. East Asian ancestry among Malagasy people was estimated at a mean average of 33%, but as high as ~75% among some Highlander groups and upper caste groups.[62][63][61]

Northern Africa edit

Dobon et al. (2015) identified an autosomal ancestral component that is commonly found among modern Afroasiatic-speaking populations (as well as Nubians) in Northeast Africa. This Coptic component peaks among Copts in Sudan, which is differentiated by its lack of Arab influence, but shares common ancestry with the North African/Middle Eastern populations. It appears alongside a component that defines Nilo-Saharan speakers of southwestern Sudan and South Sudan.[64] Arauna et al. (2017), analyzing existing genetic data obtained from Northern African populations, such as Berbers, described them as a mosaic of North African (Taforalt), Middle Eastern, European (Early European Farmers), and Sub-Saharan African-related ancestries.[65]

Chen et al. (2020) analyzed 2,504 African samples from all over Africa, and found archaic Neanderthal ancestry, among all tested African samples at low frequency. They also identified a European-related (West-Eurasian) ancestry segment, which seems to largely correspond with the detected Neanderthal ancestry components. European-related admixture among Africans was estimated to be between ~0% to up to ~30%, with a peak among Northern Africans.[14] According to Chen et al. (2020), "These data are consistent with the hypothesis that back-migration contributed to the signal of Neanderthal ancestry in Africans. Furthermore, the data indicates that this back-migration came after the split of Europeans and East Asians, from a population related to the European lineage."[14]

There is a minor geneflow from North Africa in parts of Southern Europe, this is supported by the presence of an African-specific mitochondrial haplogroup among one of four 4,000 year old samples.[66] Multiple studies found also evidence for geneflow of African ancestry towards Eurasia, specifically Europe and the Middle East. The analysis of 40 different West-Eurasian populations found African admixture at a frequency of 0% to up to ~15%.[67][68][69][70]

Western Africa edit

Hollfelder et al. (2021) concluded that West African Yoruba people, which were previously used as "unadmixed reference population" for indigenous Africans, harbor minor levels of Neanderthal ancestry, which can be largely associated with back-migration of an "Ancestral European-like" source population.[6]

A genome-wide study of a Fulani community from Burkina Faso inferred two major admixture events in this group, dating to ~1800 ya, and 300 ya. The first admixture event took place between the West African ancestors of the Fula and ancestral North African nomadic groups. The second admixture event, relatively recent, inferred a source from Southwestern Europe, or suggests either an additional gene flow between the Fulani and Northern African groups, who carry admixture proportions from Europeans.[71] Sahelian populations like the Toubou also showed admixture coming from Eurasians.[72]

Southern Africa edit

Low levels of West Eurasian ancestry (European or Middle Eastern) are found in Khoe–Kwadi Khoesan-speakers. It could have been acquired indirectly by admixture with migrating pastoralists from East Africa. This hypothesis of gene flow from eastern to southern Africa is further supported by other genetic and archaeological data documenting the spread of pastoralism from East to South Africa.[73]

Regional genomic overview edit

North Africa edit

Archaic Human DNA edit

While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non-Africans outside of Africa are more certain, archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty.[74]

Ancient DNA edit

Daniel Shriner (2018), using modern populations as a reference, showed that the Natufians carried 61.2% Arabian, 21.2% Northern African, 10.9% Western Asian, and a small portion of Eastern African ancestry at 6.8%, which is associated with the modern Omotic-speaking groups found in southern Ethiopia.[46]

Egypt edit

Khnum-aa, Khnum-Nakht, Nakht-Ankh and JK2911 carried maternal haplogroup M1a1.[75][53]

Djehutynakht (10A) carried maternal haplogroup U5b2b5.[76] JK2888 carried maternal haplogroup U6a2.[53]

Thuya, Tiye, Tutankhamen's mother, and Tutankhamen carried the maternal haplogroup K.[75]

JK2134 carried maternal haplogroup J1d[53] and JK2887 carried maternal haplogroup J2a1a1.[53]

Amenhotep III, Akhenaten, and Tutankhamen carried the paternal haplogroup R1b.[75]

Ramesses III and "Unknown Man E", possibly Pentawere, carried paternal haplogroup E1b1a.[75][77][78]

JK2134 and JK2911 carried paternal haplogroup J.[53]

Takabuti carried maternal haplogroup H4a1[79] and YM:KMM A 63 carried maternal haplogroup HV.[80]

OM:KMM A 64 carried maternal haplogroup T2c1a.[80]

JK2888 carried paternal haplogroup E1b1b1a1b2.[53]

Libya edit

At Takarkori rockshelter, in Libya, two naturally mummified women, dated to the Middle Pastoral Period (7000 BP), carried basal maternal haplogroup N.[81]

Morocco edit

Van de Loorsdrecht et al. (2018) found that of seven samples of Taforalts of Morocco, radiocarbon dated to between 15,100 cal BP and 13,900 cal BP, six were found to carry maternal haplogroup U6a, and one was found to carry maternal haplogroup M1b. Six of six males were found to carry paternal haplogroup E1b1b. They were found to harbor 63.5% Natufian-related ancestry and 36.5% Sub-Saharan African-related ancestry. The Sub-Saharan component is most strongly drawn out by modern West African groups such as the Yoruba and the Mende. The samples also contain an additional affinity to South, Central, and East African outgroups that cannot be explained by any known ancient or modern populations.[82] When projected onto a principal component analysis graph of African and west Eurasian populations, the Taforalt individuals form a distinct cluster in an intermediate position between modern North Africans (e.g., Berbers, Mozabites, Saharawis) and East Africans (e.g., Afars, Oromos, Somalis).[82] Jeong (2020), comparing the Taforalt people of the Iberomaurusian culture to modern populations, found that the Taforalt's Sub-Saharan African genetic component may be best represented by modern West Africans (e.g., Yoruba).[83]

Y-Chromosomal DNA edit

Mitochondrial DNA edit

Amid the Holocene, including the Holocene Climate Optimum in 8000 BP, Africans bearing haplogroup L2 spread within West Africa and Africans bearing haplogroup L3 spread within East Africa.[84] As the largest migration since the Out of Africa migration, migration from Sub-Saharan Africa toward the North Africa occurred, by West Africans, Central Africans, and East Africans, resulting in migrations into Europe and Asia; consequently, Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into Europe and Asia.[84] During the early period of the Holocene, 50% of Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into North Africa by West Africans and the other 50% was introduced by East Africans.[84] During the modern period, a greater number of West Africans introduced Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA into North Africa than East Africans.[84]

Mitochondrial haplogroups L3, M, and N are found among Sudanese peoples (e.g., Beja, Nilotics, Nuba, Nubians), who have no known interaction (e.g., history of migration/admixture) with Europeans or Asians; rather than having developed in a post-Out-of-Africa migration context, mitochondrial macrohaplogroup L3/M/N and its subsequent development into distinct mitochondrial haplogroups (e.g., Haplogroup L3, Haplogroup M, Haplogroup N) may have occurred in East Africa at a time that considerably predates the Out-of-Africa migration event of 50,000 BP.[85]

Autosomal DNA edit

Medical DNA edit

The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA, and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet, physiology, and evolutionary pressures from pathogens.[86]

Lactase Persistence edit

Neolithic agriculturalists, who may have resided in Northeast Africa and the Near East, may have been the source population for lactase persistence variants, including –13910*T, and may have been subsequently supplanted by later migrations of peoples.[87] The Sub-Saharan West African Fulani, the North African Tuareg, and European agriculturalists, who are descendants of these Neolithic agriculturalists, share the lactase persistence variant –13910*T.[87] While shared by Fulani and Tuareg herders, compared to the Tuareg variant, the Fulani variant of –13910*T has undergone a longer period of haplotype differentiation.[87] The Fulani lactase persistence variant –13910*T may have spread, along with cattle pastoralism, between 9686 BP and 7534 BP, possibly around 8500 BP; corroborating this timeframe for the Fulani, by at least 7500 BP, there is evidence of herders engaging in the act of milking in the Central Sahara.[87]

West Africa edit

Archaic Human DNA edit

Archaic traits found in human fossils of West Africa (e.g., Iho Eleru fossils, which dates to 13,000 BP) and Central Africa (e.g., Ishango fossils, which dates between 25,000 BP and 20,000 BP) may have developed as a result of admixture between archaic humans and modern humans or may be evidence of late-persisting early modern humans.[74] While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non-Africans outside of Africa are more certain, archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty.[74]

Ancient DNA edit

As of 2017, human ancient DNA has not been found in the region of West Africa.[88] As of 2020, human ancient DNA has not been forthcoming in the region of West Africa.[83]

Y-Chromosomal DNA edit

Eight male individuals from Guinea Bissau, two male individuals from Niger, one male individual from Mali, and one male individual from Cabo Verde carried haplogroup A1a.[89]

As a result of haplogroup D0, a basal branch of haplogroup DE, being found in three Nigerian men, it may be the case that haplogroup DE, as well as its sublineages D0 and E, originated in Africa.[90]

As of 19,000 years ago, Africans, bearing haplogroup E1b1a-V38, likely traversed across the Sahara, from east to west.[91] E1b1a1-M2 likely originated in West Africa or Central Africa.[92]

Mitochondrial DNA edit

Around 18,000 BP, Mende people, along with Gambian peoples, grew in population size.[93]

In 15,000 BP, Niger-Congo speakers may have migrated from the Sahelian region of West Africa, along the Senegal River, and introduced L2a1 into North Africa, resulting in modern Mauritanian peoples and Berbers of Tunisia inheriting it.[94]

Between 11,000 BP and 10,000 BP, Yoruba people and Esan people grew in population size.[93]

As early as 11,000 years ago, Sub-Saharan West Africans, bearing macrohaplogroup L (e.g., L1b1a11, L1b1a6a, L1b1a8, L1b1a9a1, L2a1k, L3d1b1a), may have migrated through North Africa and into Europe, mostly into southern Europe (e.g., Iberia).[95]

Autosomal DNA edit

During the early period of the Holocene, in 9000 BP, Khoisan-related peoples admixed with the ancestors of the Igbo people, possibly in the western Sahara.[96][97]

Between 2000 BP and 1500 BP, Nilo-Saharan-speakers may have migrated across the Sahel, from East Africa into West Africa, and admixed with Niger-Congo-speaking Berom people.[98] In 710 CE, West African-related populations (e.g., Niger-Congo-speaking Berom people, Bantu-speakers) and East African-related populations (Nilo-Saharan-speaking Ethiopians, Nilo-Saharan-speaking Chadians) admixed with one another in northern Nigeria and northern Cameroon.[99]

Fan et al. (2019) found that the Fulani people show genetic affinity to isolated Afroasiatic-speaking groups in Eastern Africa, specifically Omotic-speakers such as the Aari people. While the Fulani have nearly exclusive indigenous African ancestry (defined by West and East African ancestry), they also show traces of West-Eurasian-like admixture, supporting an ancestral homeland somewhere in North or Eastern Africa, and westwards expansion during the Neolithic, possibly caused by the arrival and expansion of West-Eurasian-related groups.[100] Fan et al. (2023) found that the Fulani, who have 50% Amhara-related and 50% Tikari-related ancestry as well as occupy regions such as West Africa, Central Africa, and the Sudan as nomadic herders, may have initially been Afroasiatic speakers that subsequently underwent language replacement and became Niger-Congo speakers.[101]

Medical DNA edit

The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA, and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet, physiology, and evolutionary pressures from pathogens.[86] Throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, genetic adaptation (e.g., rs334 mutation, Duffy blood group, increased rates of G6PD deficiency, sickle cell disease) to malaria has been found among Sub-Saharan Africans, which may have initially developed in 7300 BP.[86] Sub-Saharan Africans have more than 90% of the Duffy-null genotype.[102]

Pediculus edit

During the Copper Age and early Islamic era of ancient Israel, West Africans may have migrated into ancient Israel and introduced head louse from West Africa.[103]

Sickle Cell edit

Amid the Green Sahara, the mutation for sickle cell originated in the Sahara[91] or in the northwest forest region of western Central Africa (e.g., Cameroon)[91][104] by at least 7,300 years ago,[91][104] though possibly as early as 22,000 years ago.[105][104] The ancestral sickle cell haplotype to modern haplotypes (e.g., Cameroon/Central African Republic and Benin/Senegal haplotypes) may have first arose in the ancestors of modern West Africans, bearing haplogroups E1b1a1-L485 and E1b1a1-U175 or their ancestral haplogroup E1b1a1-M4732.[91] West Africans (e.g., Yoruba and Esan of Nigeria), bearing the Benin sickle cell haplotype, may have migrated through the northeastern region of Africa into the western region of Arabia.[91] West Africans (e.g., Mende of Sierra Leone), bearing the Senegal sickle cell haplotype,[106][91] may have migrated into Mauritania (77% modern rate of occurrence) and Senegal (100%); they may also have migrated across the Sahara, into North Africa, and from North Africa, into Southern Europe, Turkey, and a region near northern Iraq and southern Turkey.[106] Some may have migrated into and introduced the Senegal and Benin sickle cell haplotypes into Basra, Iraq, where both occur equally.[106] West Africans, bearing the Benin sickle cell haplotype, may have migrated into the northern region of Iraq (69.5%), Jordan (80%), Lebanon (73%), Oman (52.1%), and Egypt (80.8%).[106]

Schistosomes edit

According to Steverding (2020), while not definite: Near the African Great Lakes, schistosomes (e.g., S. mansoni, S. haematobium) underwent evolution.[107] Subsequently, there was an expansion alongside the Nile.[107] From Egypt, the presence of schistosomes may have expanded, via migratory Yoruba people, into Western Africa.[107] Thereafter, schistosomes may have expanded, via migratory Bantu peoples, into the rest of Sub-Saharan Africa (e.g., Southern Africa, Central Africa).[107]

Thalassemia edit

Through pathways taken by caravans, or via travel amid the Almovarid period, a population (e.g., Sub-Saharan West Africans) may have introduced the –29 (A → G) β-thalassemia mutation (found in notable amounts among African-Americans) into the North African region of Morocco.[108]

Domesticated Animal DNA edit

While the Niger-Congo migration may have been from West Africa into Kordofan, possibly from Kordofan, Sudan, Niger-Congo speakers accompanied by undomesticated helmeted guineafowls, may have traversed into West Africa, domesticated the helmeted guineafowls by 3000 BCE, and via the Bantu expansion, traversed into other parts of Sub-Saharan Africa (e.g., Central Africa, East Africa, Southern Africa).[109]

Central Africa edit

Archaic Human DNA edit

Archaic traits found in human fossils of West Africa (e.g., Iho Eleru fossils, which dates to 13,000 BP) and Central Africa (e.g., Ishango fossils, which dates between 25,000 BP and 20,000 BP) may have developed as a result of admixture between archaic humans and modern humans or may be evidence of late-persisting early modern humans.[74] While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non-Africans outside of Africa are more certain, archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty.[74]

Ancient DNA edit

In 4000 BP, there may have been a population that traversed from Africa (e.g., West Africa or West-Central Africa), through the Strait of Gibraltar, into the Iberian peninsula, where admixing between Africans and Iberians (e.g., of northern Portugal, of southern Spain) occurred.[110]

Cameroon edit

West African hunter-gatherers, in the region of western Central Africa (e.g., Shum Laka, Cameroon), particularly between 8000 BP and 3000 BP, were found to be related to modern Central African hunter-gatherers (e.g., Baka, Bakola, Biaka, Bedzan).[111]

Democratic Republic of Congo edit

At Kindoki, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, there were three individuals, dated to the protohistoric period (230 BP, 150 BP, 230 BP); one carried haplogroups E1b1a1a1d1a2 (E-CTS99, E-CTS99) and L1c3a1b, another carried haplogroup E (E-M96, E-PF1620), and the last carried haplogroups R1b1 (R-P25 1, R-M415) and L0a1b1a1.[112][113]

Y-Chromosomal DNA edit

Haplogroup R-V88 may have originated in western Central Africa (e.g., Equatorial Guinea), and, in the middle of the Holocene, arrived in North Africa through population migration.[114]

Mitochondrial DNA edit

In 150,000 BP, Africans (e.g., Central Africans, East Africans) bearing haplogroup L1 diverged.[84] Between 75,000 BP and 60,000 BP, Africans bearing haplogroup L3 emerged in East Africa and eventually migrated into and became present in modern West Africans, Central Africans, and non-Africans.[84] Amid the Holocene, including the Holocene Climate Optimum in 8000 BP, Africans bearing haplogroup L2 spread within West Africa and Africans bearing haplogroup L3 spread within East Africa.[84] As the largest migration since the Out of Africa migration, migration from Sub-Saharan Africa toward the North Africa occurred, by West Africans, Central Africans, and East Africans, resulting in migrations into Europe and Asia; consequently, Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into Europe and Asia.[84]

Mitochondrial haplogroup L1c is strongly associated with pygmies, especially with Bambenga groups.[115] L1c prevalence was variously reported as: 100% in Ba-Kola, 97% in Aka (Ba-Benzélé), and 77% in Biaka,[116] 100% of the Bedzan (Tikar), 97% and 100% in the Baka people of Gabon and Cameroon, respectively,[117] 97% in Bakoya (97%), and 82% in Ba-Bongo.[115] Mitochondrial haplogroups L2a and L0a are prevalent among the Bambuti.[115][118]

Autosomal DNA edit

Genetically, African pygmies have some key difference between them and Bantu peoples.[119][120]

Medical DNA edit

Evidence suggests that, when compared to other Sub-Saharan African populations, African pygmy populations display unusually low levels of expression of the genes encoding for human growth hormone and its receptor associated with low serum levels of insulin-like growth factor-1 and short stature.[121]

The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA, and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet, physiology, and evolutionary pressures from pathogens.[86] Throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, genetic adaptation (e.g., rs334 mutation, Duffy blood group, increased rates of G6PD deficiency, sickle cell disease) to malaria has been found among Sub-Saharan Africans, which may have initially developed in 7300 BP.[86] Sub-Saharan Africans have more than 90% of the Duffy-null genotype.[102] In the rainforests of Central Africa, genetic adaptation for non-height-related factors (e.g., immune traits, reproduction, thyroid function) and short stature (e.g., EHB1 and PRDM5 – bone synthesis; OBSCN and COX10 – muscular development; HESX1 and ASB14 – pituitary gland’s growth hormone production/secretion) has been found among rainforest hunter-gatherers.[86]

Eastern Africa edit

From the region of Kenya and Tanzania to South Africa, eastern Bantu-speaking Africans constitute a north to south genetic cline; additionally, from eastern Africa to toward southern Africa, evidence of genetic homogeneity is indicative of a serial founder effect and admixture events having occurred between Bantu-speaking Africans and other African populations by the time the Bantu migration had spanned into South Africa.[86]

Archaic Human DNA edit

While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non-Africans outside of Africa are more certain, archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty.[74]

Ancient DNA edit

Ethiopia edit

At Mota, in Ethiopia, an individual, estimated to date to the 5th millennium BP, carried haplogroups E1b1 and L3x2a.[122][123] The individual of Mota is genetically related to groups residing near the region of Mota, and in particular, are considerably genetically related to the Aari people, especially the blacksmith caste of that group.[124][125]

Kenya edit

At Jawuoyo Rockshelter, in Kisumu County, Kenya, a forager of the Later Stone Age carried haplogroups E1b1b1a1b2/E-V22 and L4b2a2c.[126][127]

At Ol Kalou, in Nyandarua County, Kenya, a pastoralist of the Pastoral Neolithic carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b2a1/E-M293 and L3d1d.[126][127]

At Kokurmatakore, in Marsabit County, Kenya, a pastoralist of the Pastoral Iron Age carried haplogroups E1b1b1/E-M35 and L3a2a.[126][127]

At White Rock Point, in Homa Bay County, Kenya, there were two foragers of the Later Stone Age; one carried haplogroups BT (xCT), likely B, and L2a4, and another probably carried haplogroup L0a2.[126][127]

At Nyarindi Rockshelter, in Kenya, there were two individuals, dated to the Later Stone Age (3500 BP); one carried haplogroup L4b2a and another carried haplogroup E (E-M96, E-P162).[112][113]

At Lukenya Hill, in Kenya, there were two individuals, dated to the Pastoral Neolithic (3500 BP); one carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b (E-M293, E-CTS10880) and L4b2a2b, and another carried haplogroup L0f1.[112][113]

At Hyrax Hill, in Kenya, an individual, dated to the Pastoral Neolithic (2300 BP), carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b (E-M293, E-M293) and L5a1b.[112][113]

At Molo Cave, in Kenya, there were two individuals, dated to the Pastoral Neolithic (1500 BP); while one had haplogroups that went undetermined, another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b (E-M293, E-M293) and L3h1a2a1.[112][113]

At Kakapel, in Kenya, there were three individuals, one dated to the Later Stone Age (3900 BP) and two dated to the Later Iron Age (300 BP, 900 BP); one carried haplogroups CT (CT-M168, CT-M5695) and L3i1, another carried haplogroup L2a1f, and the last carried haplogroup L2a5.[112][113]

At Panga ya Saidi, in Kenya, an individual, estimated to date between 496 BP and 322 BP, carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2 and L4b2a2.[128]

At Kilifi, Mtwapa, in Kenya, an individual, dated between 1250 CE and 1650 CE, carried haplogroup L3b1a1a.[129]

Tanzania edit

At Mlambalasi rockshelter, in Tanzania, an individual, dated between 20,345 BP and 17,025 BP, carried undetermined haplogroups.[130]

At Gishimangeda Cave, in Karatu District, Tanzania, there were eleven pastoralists of the Pastoral Neolithic; one carried haplogroups E1b1b1a1b2/E-V22 and HV1b1, another carried haplogroup L0a, another carried haplogroup L3x1, another carried haplogroup L4b2a2b, another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b2a1/E-M293 and L3i2, another carried haplogroup L3h1a2a1, another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b2/E-V1486, likely E-M293 and L0f2a1, and another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b2/E-V1486, likely E-M293, and T2+150; while most of the haplogroups among three pastoralists went undetermined, one was determined to carry haplogroup BT, likely B.[126][127]

At Kilwa, Coast, in Tanzania, an individual, dated between 1300 CE and 1600 CE, carried haplogroups J2a2a1a1a2a~ and L2a1h.[129]

At Lindi, in Tanzania, an individual, dated between 1511 cal CE and 1664 cal CE, carried haplogroups E1b1a1a1a2a1a3a1d~ and L0a1a2.[129]

At Makangale Cave, on Pemba Island, Tanzania, an individual, estimated to date between 1421 BP and 1307 BP, carried haplogroup L0a.[128]

At Songo Mnara, in Tanzania, an individual, dated between 1294 cal CE and 1392 cal CE, carried haplogroups R1a and L3e3a.[129]

Uganda edit

At Munsa, in Uganda, an individual, dated to the Later Iron Age (500 BP), carried haplogroup L3b1a1.[112][113]

Y-Chromosomal DNA edit

As of 19,000 years ago, Africans, bearing haplogroup E1b1a-V38, likely traversed across the Sahara, from east to west.[91]

Before the slave trade period, East Africans, who carried haplogroup E1b1a-M2, expanded into Arabia, resulting in various rates of inheritance throughout Arabia (e.g., 2.8% Qatar, 3.2% Yemen, 5.5% United Arab Emirates, 7.4% Oman).[131]

Mitochondrial DNA edit

In 150,000 BP, Africans (e.g., Central Africans, East Africans) bearing haplogroup L1 diverged.[84] In 130,000 BP, Africans bearing haplogroup L5 diverged in East Africa.[84] Between 130,000 BP and 75,000 BP, behavioral modernity emerged among Southern Africans and long-term interactions between the regions of Southern Africa and Eastern Africa became established.[84] Between 75,000 BP and 60,000 BP, Africans bearing haplogroup L3 emerged in East Africa and eventually migrated into and became present in modern West Africans, Central Africans, and non-Africans.[84] Amid the Holocene, including the Holocene Climate Optimum in 8000 BP, Africans bearing haplogroup L2 spread within West Africa and Africans bearing haplogroup L3 spread within East Africa.[84] As the largest migration since the Out of Africa migration, migration from Sub-Saharan Africa toward the North Africa occurred, by West Africans, Central Africans, and East Africans, resulting in migrations into Europe and Asia; consequently, Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into Europe and Asia.[84] During the early period of the Holocene, 50% of Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into North Africa by West Africans and the other 50% was introduced by East Africans.[84] During the modern period, a greater number of West Africans introduced Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA into North Africa than East Africans.[84] Between 15,000 BP and 7000 BP, 86% of Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into Southwest Asia by East Africans, largely in the region of Arabia, which constitute 50% of Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA in modern Southwest Asia.[84] In the modern period, 68% of Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced by East Africans and 22% was introduced by West Africans, which constitutes 50% of Sub-Saharan African mitochondrial DNA in modern Southwest Asia.[84]

Autosomal DNA edit

Across all areas of Madagascar, the average ancestry for the Malagasy people was found to be 4% West Eurasian, 37% Austronesian, and 59% Bantu.[62]

Medical DNA edit

The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA, and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet, physiology, and evolutionary pressures from pathogens.[86] Throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, genetic adaptation (e.g., rs334 mutation, Duffy blood group, increased rates of G6PD deficiency, sickle cell disease) to malaria has been found among Sub-Saharan Africans, which may have initially developed in 7300 BP.[86] Sub-Saharan Africans have more than 90% of the Duffy-null genotype.[102] In the highlands of Ethiopia, genetic adaptation (e.g., rs10803083, an SNP associated with the rate and function of hemoglobin; BHLHE41, a gene associated with circadian rhythm and hypoxia response; EGNL1, a gene strongly associated with oxygen homeostasis in mammals) to hypoxia and low atmospheric pressure has been found among the Amhara people, which may have developed within the past 5000 years.[86] In Tanzania, genetic adaptation (e.g., greater amount of amylase genes than in African populations that consume low-starch foods) has been found in the Hadza people due to a food diet that especially includes consumption of tubers.[86]

Southern Africa edit

From the region of Kenya and Tanzania to South Africa, eastern Bantu-speaking Africans constitute a north to south genetic cline; additionally, from eastern Africa to toward southern Africa, evidence of genetic homogeneity is indicative of a serial founder effect and admixture events having occurred between Bantu-speaking Africans and other African populations by the time the Bantu migration had spanned into South Africa.[86]

Archaic Human DNA edit

While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non-Africans outside of Africa are more certain, archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty.[74]

Ancient DNA edit

Three Later Stone Age hunter-gatherers carried ancient DNA similar to Khoisan-speaking hunter-gatherers.[132] Prior to the Bantu migration into the region, as evidenced by ancient DNA from Botswana, East African herders migrated into Southern Africa.[132] Out of four Iron Age Bantu agriculturalists of West African origin, two earlier agriculturalists carried ancient DNA similar to Tsonga and Venda peoples and the two later agriculturalists carried ancient DNA similar to Nguni people; this indicates that there were various movements of peoples in the overall Bantu migration, which resulted in increased interaction and admixing between Bantu-speaking peoples and Khoisan-speaking peoples.[132]

Botswana edit

At Nqoma, in Botswana, an individual, dated to the Early Iron Age (900 BP), carried haplogroup L2a1f.[112][113]

At Taukome, in Botswana, an individual, dated to the Early Iron Age (1100 BP), carried haplogroups E1b1a1 (E-M2, E-Z1123) and L0d3b1.[112][113]

At Xaro, in Botswana, there were two individuals, dated to the Early Iron Age (1400 BP); one carried haplogroups E1b1a1a1c1a and L3e1a2, and another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b (E-M293, E-CTS10880) and L0k1a2.[112][113]

Malawi edit

At Fingira rockshelter, in Malawi, an individual, dated between 6179 BP and 2341 BP, carried haplogroups B2 and L0d1.[130]

At Chencherere, in Malawi, an individual, estimated to date between 5400 BP and 4800 BP, carried haplogroup L0k2.[128]

At Hora 1 rockshelter, in Malawi, an individual, dated between 16,897 BP and 15,827 BP, carried haplogroups B2b and L5b.[130]

South Africa edit

At Doonside, in South Africa, an individual, estimated to date between 2296 BP and 1910 BP, carried haplogroup L0d2.[133][134]

At Ballito Bay, South Africa, an individual, estimated to date between 1986 BP and 1831 BP, carried haplogroups A1b1b2 and L0d2c1.[133][134]

At Kalemba rockshelter, in Zambia, an individual, dated between 5285 BP and 4975 BP, carried haplogroup L0d1b2b.[130]

Y-Chromosomal DNA edit

 
Distribution of Y-Chromosome Haplogroup A in Africa.
 
Distribution of haplogroup B (M60) of the human Y chromosome in native populations.

Various Y chromosome studies show that the San carry some of the most divergent (oldest) human Y-chromosome haplogroups. These haplogroups are specific sub-groups of haplogroups A and B, the two earliest branches on the human Y-chromosome tree.[135][136][137]

Mitochondrial DNA edit

In 200,000 BP, Africans (e.g., Khoisan of Southern Africa) bearing haplogroup L0 diverged from other Africans bearing haplogroup L1′6, which tend to be northward of Southern Africa.[84] Between 130,000 BP and 75,000 BP, behavioral modernity emerged among Southern Africans and long-term interactions between the regions of Southern Africa and Eastern Africa became established.[84]

Mitochondrial DNA studies also provide evidence that the San carry high frequencies of the earliest haplogroup branches in the human mitochondrial DNA tree. This DNA is inherited only from one's mother. The most divergent (oldest) mitochondrial haplogroup, L0d, has been identified at its highest frequencies in the southern African San groups.[135][138][139][140]

Autosomal DNA edit

Henn et al. (2011) found that the ǂKhomani San, as well as the Sandawe and Hadza peoples of Tanzania, were the most genetically diverse of any living humans studied. This high degree of genetic diversity hints at the origin of anatomically modern humans.[141][142]

Medical DNA edit

Among the ancient DNA from three hunter-gatherers sharing genetic similarity with San people and four Iron Age agriculturalists, their SNPs indicated that they bore variants for resistance against sleeping sickness and Plasmodium vivax.[143] In particular, two out of the four Iron Age agriculturalists bore variants for resistance against sleeping sickness and three out of the four Iron Age agriculturalists bore Duffy negative variants for resistance against malaria.[143] In contrast to the Iron Age agriculturalists, from among the San-related hunter-gatherers, a six-year-old boy may have died from schistosomiasis.[143] In Botswana, a man, who dates to 1400 BP, may have also carried the Duffy negative variant for resistance against malaria.[143]

The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA, and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet, physiology, and evolutionary pressures from pathogens.[86] Throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, genetic adaptation (e.g., rs334 mutation, Duffy blood group, increased rates of G6PD deficiency, sickle cell disease) to malaria has been found among Sub-Saharan Africans, which may have initially developed in 7300 BP.[86] Sub-Saharan Africans have more than 90% of the Duffy-null genotype.[102] In the Kalahari Desert region of Africa, various possible genetic adaptations (e.g., adiponectin, body mass index, metabolism) have been found among the ǂKhomani people.[86] Sub-Saharan Africans have more than 90% of the Duffy-null genotype.[102] In South Africa, genetic adaptation (e.g., rs28647531 on chromosome 4q22) and strong susceptibility to tuberculosis has been found among Coloureds.[86]

Recent African origin of modern humans edit

Between 500,000 BP and 300,000 BP, anatomically modern humans may have emerged in Africa.[144] As Africans (e.g., Y-Chromosomal Adam, Mitochondrial Eve) have migrated from their places of origin in Africa to other locations in Africa, and as the time of divergence for East African, Central African, and West African lineages are similar to the time of divergence for the Southern African lineage, there is insufficient evidence to identify a specific region for the origin of humans in Africa.[74] In 100,000 BP, anatomically modern humans migrated from Africa into Eurasia.[145] Subsequently, tens of thousands of years after, the ancestors of all present-day Eurasians migrated from Africa into Eurasia and eventually became admixed with Denisovans and Neanderthals.[145]

Archaeological and fossil evidence provide support for the African origin of homo sapiens and behavioral modernity.[146] Models reflecting a pan-African origin (multiple locations of origin within Africa) and evolution of modern humans have been developed.[146] As the idea of "modern" has become increasingly problematized, research has "begun to disentangle what is meant by "modern" genetic ancestry, skeletal morphology, and behavior, recognizing these are unlikely to form a single package."[146]

In comparison to the non-African genome, the African genome features a ~25% greater number of polymorphisms,[86] or 3 to 5 times as many,[102] and genetic variants that are rare outside of Africa are found to occur at an abundant rate within Africa.[86] Most of the genetic diversity found among non-Africans is found to be, at large, a subset of genetic diversity found among Africans.[86] The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA, and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet, physiology, and evolutionary pressures from pathogens.[86] Throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, genetic adaptation (e.g., rs334 mutation, Duffy blood group, increased rates of G6PD deficiency, sickle cell disease) to malaria has been found among Sub-Saharan Africans, which may have initially developed in 7300 BP.[86] Throughout Africa, various genetic adaptations (e.g., apolipoprotein L1 (APOL1): G1 and G2 haplotype resistance to trypanosomiasis and increased risk of kidney disease; human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes; major histocompatibility complex (MHC)) to HIV-1, smallpox, trypanosomiasis (African sleeping sickness), and tuberculosis has been found among Africans.[86] Biomedical tests for specific genetic variants (e.g., rs1799853 in the CYP2C9 gene), which have been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and are intended to indicate correct prescription of warfarin, has been found to be increasingly irrelevant to Africans as the variants are rare in Africa.[86] As frequency rate factors into considering and deciding variant pathogenicity and generalizable polygenic scores, modern clinical classifications of genetic variant pathogenicity are found to be inadequate due to a lack of genetic diversity in biomedical studies.[86] Fan et al (2023) recently found ~5.3 million unique genetic variants in 180 African hunter-gatherer populations, and among existing classifications for variants determined to likely be “pathogenic”, ~29% (44/154) of these “pathogenic” classified variants were found to occur frequently among the African hunter-gatherers.[86]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Although the estimated date of this event varies across studies, there is general consensus that the split occurred over 100 thousand years ago (kya) (8,23).

References edit

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genetic, history, africa, confused, with, genetic, history, african, diaspora, genetic, history, africa, composed, overall, genetic, history, african, populations, africa, including, regional, genetic, histories, north, africa, west, africa, east, africa, cent. Not to be confused with Genetic history of the African diaspora The genetic history of Africa is composed of the overall genetic history of African populations in Africa including the regional genetic histories of North Africa West Africa East Africa Central Africa and Southern Africa as well as the recent origin of modern humans in Africa The Sahara served as a trans regional passageway and place of dwelling for people in Africa during various humid phases 1 2 3 and periods throughout the history of Africa 4 5 Population structure of African populations in a broad context ADMIXTURE analysis of 2 194 individuals from 81 populations for 16 420 SNPs reveals both well established and novel ancestry components in African populations Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Indigenous Africans 1 2 Out of Africa event 1 3 Geneflow between Eurasian and African populations 1 3 1 Horn of Africa 1 3 2 Madagascar 1 3 3 Northern Africa 1 3 4 Western Africa 1 3 5 Southern Africa 2 Regional genomic overview 2 1 North Africa 2 1 1 Archaic Human DNA 2 1 2 Ancient DNA 2 1 2 1 Egypt 2 1 2 2 Libya 2 1 2 3 Morocco 2 1 3 Y Chromosomal DNA 2 1 4 Mitochondrial DNA 2 1 5 Autosomal DNA 2 1 6 Medical DNA 2 1 6 1 Lactase Persistence 2 2 West Africa 2 2 1 Archaic Human DNA 2 2 2 Ancient DNA 2 2 3 Y Chromosomal DNA 2 2 4 Mitochondrial DNA 2 2 5 Autosomal DNA 2 2 6 Medical DNA 2 2 6 1 Pediculus 2 2 6 2 Sickle Cell 2 2 6 3 Schistosomes 2 2 6 4 Thalassemia 2 2 7 Domesticated Animal DNA 2 3 Central Africa 2 3 1 Archaic Human DNA 2 3 2 Ancient DNA 2 3 2 1 Cameroon 2 3 2 2 Democratic Republic of Congo 2 3 3 Y Chromosomal DNA 2 3 4 Mitochondrial DNA 2 3 5 Autosomal DNA 2 3 6 Medical DNA 2 4 Eastern Africa 2 4 1 Archaic Human DNA 2 4 2 Ancient DNA 2 4 2 1 Ethiopia 2 4 2 2 Kenya 2 4 2 3 Tanzania 2 4 2 4 Uganda 2 4 3 Y Chromosomal DNA 2 4 4 Mitochondrial DNA 2 4 5 Autosomal DNA 2 4 6 Medical DNA 2 5 Southern Africa 2 5 1 Archaic Human DNA 2 5 2 Ancient DNA 2 5 2 1 Botswana 2 5 2 2 Malawi 2 5 2 3 South Africa 2 5 3 Y Chromosomal DNA 2 5 4 Mitochondrial DNA 2 5 5 Autosomal DNA 2 5 6 Medical DNA 3 Recent African origin of modern humans 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesOverview edit nbsp A the origin of the 46 African ethnic groups used in the analysis ethnic groups from similar regions are given the same colour but different shapes B PCA shows that the first major axis of variation in Africa PC1 y axis splits southern groups from the rest of Africa each symbol represents an individual PC2 x axis reflects ethno linguistic differences with Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan speakers split from Afroasiatic speakers C The third principal component PC3 x axis represents geographical separation of Niger Congo speakers forming a cline from west to east Africans The peoples of Africa are characterized by regional genetic substructure and heterogeneity depending on the respective ethno linguistic identity and in part explainable by the multiregional evolution of modern human lineages in various multiple regions of the African continent as well as later admixture events including back migrations from Eurasia of both highly differentiated West and East Eurasian components 6 Africans genetic ancestry is largely partitioned by geography and language family with populations belonging to the same ethno linguistic groupings showing high genetic homogeneity and coherence Gene flow consistent with both short and long range migration events followed by extensive admixture and bottleneck events have influenced the regional genetic makeup and demographic structure of Africans The historical Bantu expansion had lasting impacts on the modern demographic make up of Africa resulting in a greater genetic and linguistic homogenization 7 Genetic archeologic and linguistic studies added extra insight into this movement Our results reveal a genetic continuum of Niger Congo speaker populations across the continent and extend our current understanding of the routes timing and extent of the Bantu migration 8 Overall different African populations display genetic diversity and substructure but can be clustered in distinct but partially overlapping groupings 9 Khoisan hunter gatherer lineages from Southern Africa represent the deepest lineages forming a divergent and distinct cluster shifted away from contemporary Sub Saharan Africans and are further diverged from them than the various Eurasian lineages are The diverging date of these Southern hunter gatherers from all other human populations is estimated to over 100 000 years ago respectively with the Khoisan later diverging into two subgroups northern and southern Khoisan 30 000 years ago a Rain forest foragers such as the Baka and the Mbuti diverged from other Sub Saharan African groups over 60 000 years ago Eastern groups such as the Mbuti split from Western groups such as the Baka 20 000 years ago The various Afroasiatic speakers are suggested to have diverged from other African groups 50 000 years ago 10 Niger Congo and Nilo Saharan speakers split around 28 000 years ago 9 Austronesian speaking Malagasy people in Madagascar have received significant East Southeast Asian admixture less among some groups of coastal Southern Eastern and the Horn of Africa The estimated date of geneflow is 2 200 years ago 11 12 13 7 14 15 nbsp Geographic location of the samples analyzed in this study A PCA of the Khoe San individuals Eurasians West and East Africans before unmasked B and after masked C applying the local ancestry pipeline 146 696 independent SNPs Indigenous Africans edit The indigenous populations of Africa consists of Niger Congo speakers Nilo Saharan speakers the divergent and diverse Khoisan grouping as well as of several unclassified or isolated ethnolinguistic groupings see unclassified languages of Africa The origin of the Afroasiatic languages remains disputed with some proposing a Middle Eastern origin while others support an African origin 16 with varying degrees of Eurasian and African components 10 The Austronesian languages originated in southern East Asia and later expanded outgoing from the Philippines nbsp PCA plot of genetic variation of worldwide populations A Geographic coordinates of 53 populations B Procrustes transformed PCA plot of genetic variation 17 The Niger Congo languages probably originated in or near the area where these languages were spoken prior to Bantu expansion i e West Africa or Central Africa Its expansion may have been associated with the expansion of agriculture in the African Neolithic period following the desiccation of the Sahara in c 3500 BCE Proto Niger Congo may have originated about 10 000 years before present in the Green Sahara of Africa roughly the Sahel and southern Sahara and that its dispersal can be correlated with the spread of the bow and arrow by migrating hunter gatherers which later developed agriculture 18 19 20 Although the validity of the Nilo Saharan family remains controversial the region between Chad Sudan and the Central African Republic is seen as a likely candidate for its homeland prior to its dispersal around 10 000 8 000 BCE 21 The Southern African hunter gatherers Khoisan are suggested to represent the autochthonous hunter gatherer population of southern Africa prior to the expansion of Bantu speakers from Western Central Africa and East African pastoralists Khoisan show evidence for Bantu related admixture ranging from nearly 0 to up to 87 1 22 Out of Africa event edit Main article Recent African origin of modern humans nbsp Human migration routes following Out of Africa nbsp Most modern Africans display a high level of genetic homogeneity but contributions from Eurasian populations are substantial mostly concentrated in the Northeastern part of Africa and Madagascar The recent African origin of modern humans model proposes a single origin of Homo sapiens in Africa the taxonomic sense Recent genetic and archeologic data suggests that Homo sapiens subgroups originated in multiple regions of Africa not confined to a single region of origin The H sapiens ancestral to proper Eurasians most likely left Northeastern Africa between 50 000 and 100 000 years ago 15 The recent African origin model proposes that all modern non African populations descend from one or several waves of H sapiens that left Africa 70 000 60 000 years ago 23 24 25 26 nbsp According to serial founder model the earliest branching non African lineages are expected to have expanded in the Middle East after the Out of Africa event a but have their deepest divergence in modern day East or Southeast Asia b suggesting either rapid diversification and substructure within the early Eurasians or replacement and loss of deep lineages in Western Eurasia Simplified Y tree is shown as reference for colours 27 According to Durvasula et al 2020 there are indications that 2 to 19 6 6 to 7 0 of the DNA of West African populations may have come from an unknown archaic hominin which split from the ancestor of humans and Neanderthals between 360 kya to 1 02 mya However Durvasula et al 2020 also suggests that at least part of this archaic admixture is also present in Eurasians non Africans and that the admixture event or events range from 0 to 124 ka B P which includes the period before the Out of Africa migration and prior to the African Eurasian split thus affecting in part the common ancestors of both Africans and Eurasians non Africans 28 29 30 Chen et al 2020 found that Africans have higher Neanderthal ancestry than previously thought 2 504 African samples from all over Africa were analyzed and tested on Neanderthal ancestry All African samples showed evidence for minor Neanderthal ancestry but always at lower levels than observed in Eurasians 31 Geneflow between Eurasian and African populations edit See also Eurasian backflow nbsp Pre Neolithic and Neolithic migration events in Africa 32 Significant Eurasian admixture is found in Northern Africa and among specific ethnic groups of the Horn of Africa as well as among the Malagasy people of Madagascar Various genome studies found evidence for multiple prehistoric back migrations from various Eurasian populations and subsequent admixture with native groups 33 West Eurasian geneflow arrived to Northern Africa during the Paleolithic 30 000 to 15 000 years ago followed by other pre Neolithic and Neolithic migration events Genetic data on the Taforalt samples demonstrated that Northern Africa received significant amounts of gene flow from Eurasia predating the Holocene and development of farming practices Medieval geneflow events such as the Arab expansion also left traces in various African populations 15 32 34 Pickrell et al 2014 indicated that Western Eurasian ancestry eventually arrived through Northeast Africa particularly the Horn of Africa to Southern Africa 35 Ramsay et al 2018 also found evidence for significant Western Eurasian admixture in various parts of Africa from both ancient and more recent migrations being highest among populations from Northern Africa and some groups of the Horn of Africa 36 In addition to the intrinsic diversity within the continent due to population structure and isolation migration of Eurasian populations into Africa has emerged as a critical contributor to the genetic diversity These migrations involved the influx of different Eurasian populations at different times and to different parts of Africa Comprehensive characterization of the details of these migrations through genetic studies on existing populations could help to explain the strong genetic differences between some geographically neighbouring populations This distinctive Eurasian admixture appears to have occurred over at least three time periods with ancient admixture in central west Africa e g Yoruba from Nigeria occurring between 7 5 and 10 5 kya older admixture in east Africa e g Ethiopia occurring between 2 4 and 3 2 kya and more recent admixture between 0 15 and 1 5 kya in some east African e g Kenyan populations Subsequent studies based on LD decay and haplotype sharing in an extensive set of African and Eurasian populations confirmed the presence of Eurasian signatures in west east and southern Africans In the west in addition to Niger Congo speakers from The Gambia and Mali the Mossi from Burkina Faso showed the oldest Eurasian admixture event 7 kya In the east these analyses inferred Eurasian admixture within the last 4000 years in Kenya 36 There is no definitive agreement on when or where the original homeland of the Afroasiatic language family existed Some have suggested that they were spread by people with largely West Eurasian ancestry during the Neolithic Revolution towards Northern Africa and the Horn of Africa outgoing from the Middle East specifically from the Levant This hypothesis does not account for the domestication of plants endemic to the Horn of Africa such as teff ensete and Niger seed nor does it account for the lack of evidence of intrusive agricultural populations or the cultivation of wheat barley or sorghum in that region prior to 3000 B C 37 38 Others argue that the first speakers of Proto Afroasiatic were based in Northeast Africa because that region includes the majority of the diversity of the Afroasiatic language family and has very diverse groups in close geographic proximity which is sometimes considered a telltale sign for a linguistic geographic origin 39 A subset of the Proto Afroasiatic population would have migrated to the Levant during the late Paleolithic merging with local West Eurasians and resulting in a population which would later give rise to Natufian culture associated with the early development of agriculture and early Afroasiatic languages or specifically pre proto Semitic 40 41 page needed 42 43 44 45 In addition Y haplogroup sub lineage E M215 also known as E1b1b and its derivative E M35 are quite common among Afroasiatic speakers and southwestern Ethiopia is a plausible source of these haplogroups 46 The linguistic group and carriers of this lineage would have arisen and dispersed together from Northeast Africa in the Mesolithic plausibly having already developed subsistence patterns of pastoralism and intensive plant usage and collection 47 48 49 50 According to historian and linguist Christopher Ehret the form of intensive plant collection practiced by the Proto Afroasiatic population in Northeast Africa may have been a precursor to the agricultural practices that would later independently develop in the Fertile Crescent and the Horn of Africa 44 51 52 nbsp Proposed migration routes of paternal lineage E Horn of Africa edit While many studies conducted on Horn of Africa populations estimate a West Eurasian admixture event around 3 000 years ago 53 36 35 54 Hodgson et al 2014 found a distinct West Eurasian ancestral component among studied Afroasiatic speaking groups in the Horn of Africa and to a lesser extent in North Africa and West Asia most prevalent among the Somali This ancestral component dubbed Ethio Somali is most closely related to the Maghrebi peaking in Tunisians component and is believed to have diverged from other non African ancestries around 23 000 years ago and migrated back to Africa prior to developing agriculture 12 23 ka from the Near East This population would have crossed via the Sinai Peninsula and then split into two with one branch continuing west across North Africa and the other heading south into the Horn of Africa The authors propose that Ethio Somali may have been a substantial ancestral component of the Proto Afroasiatic speaking population Later migration from Arabia into the HOA beginning around 3 ka would explain the origin of the Ethiosemitic languages at this time 42 An mtDNA analysis by Gandini et al 2016 has produced additional evidence in support of a pre agricultural back migration from West Eurasia into the Horn of Africa with an estimated date of arrival into the Horn of Africa in the early Holocene possibly as a result of obsidian exchange networks across the Red Sea 55 Hodgson et al also confirmed the existence of an ancestral component indigenous to the Horn of Africa Ethiopic or Omotic Pagani et al which is most prevalent among speakers of the Omotic branch of Afroasiatic in southwestern Ethiopia 42 53 This lineage is associated with that of a 4 500 year old fossil Mota found in a cave in southwestern Ethiopia which has high genetic affinity to modern Ethiopian groups especially the endogamous blacksmith caste of the Omotic Aari people Like Mota Aari blacksmiths do not show evidence for admixture with West Eurasians demonstrating a degree of population continuity in this region for at least 4 500 years In a comparative analysis of Mota s genome referencing modern populations Gallego et al 2016 concluded that the divergence of Omotic from other Afroasiatic languages may have resulted from the relative isolation of its speakers from external groups 56 In an analysis of 68 Ethiopian ethnic groups Lopez et al 2021 revealed that several groups belonging to the three AA classifications of Cushitic Omotic and Semitic show high genetic similarity to each other on average Furthermore the Nilo Saharan speakers in the southwest shared more recent ancestry with Bantu and Nilotics in contrast Afro Asiatic speakers in the northeast shared more recent ancestry with Egyptians and other West Eurasians The data also supported widespread recent intermixing among various ethnic groups 57 Madagascar edit nbsp Austronesian expansion outgoing from Taiwan and the northern Philippines Specific East Asian related ancestry is found among the Malagasy speakers of Madagascar at a medium frequency The presence of this East Asian related ancestry is mostly linked to the Austronesian peoples expansion from Southeast Asia 58 59 60 61 The peoples of Borneo were identified to resemble the East Asian voyagers who arrived on Madagascar East Asian ancestry among Malagasy people was estimated at a mean average of 33 but as high as 75 among some Highlander groups and upper caste groups 62 63 61 Northern Africa edit Dobon et al 2015 identified an autosomal ancestral component that is commonly found among modern Afroasiatic speaking populations as well as Nubians in Northeast Africa This Coptic component peaks among Copts in Sudan which is differentiated by its lack of Arab influence but shares common ancestry with the North African Middle Eastern populations It appears alongside a component that defines Nilo Saharan speakers of southwestern Sudan and South Sudan 64 Arauna et al 2017 analyzing existing genetic data obtained from Northern African populations such as Berbers described them as a mosaic of North African Taforalt Middle Eastern European Early European Farmers and Sub Saharan African related ancestries 65 Chen et al 2020 analyzed 2 504 African samples from all over Africa and found archaic Neanderthal ancestry among all tested African samples at low frequency They also identified a European related West Eurasian ancestry segment which seems to largely correspond with the detected Neanderthal ancestry components European related admixture among Africans was estimated to be between 0 to up to 30 with a peak among Northern Africans 14 According to Chen et al 2020 These data are consistent with the hypothesis that back migration contributed to the signal of Neanderthal ancestry in Africans Furthermore the data indicates that this back migration came after the split of Europeans and East Asians from a population related to the European lineage 14 There is a minor geneflow from North Africa in parts of Southern Europe this is supported by the presence of an African specific mitochondrial haplogroup among one of four 4 000 year old samples 66 Multiple studies found also evidence for geneflow of African ancestry towards Eurasia specifically Europe and the Middle East The analysis of 40 different West Eurasian populations found African admixture at a frequency of 0 to up to 15 67 68 69 70 Western Africa edit Hollfelder et al 2021 concluded that West African Yoruba people which were previously used as unadmixed reference population for indigenous Africans harbor minor levels of Neanderthal ancestry which can be largely associated with back migration of an Ancestral European like source population 6 A genome wide study of a Fulani community from Burkina Faso inferred two major admixture events in this group dating to 1800 ya and 300 ya The first admixture event took place between the West African ancestors of the Fula and ancestral North African nomadic groups The second admixture event relatively recent inferred a source from Southwestern Europe or suggests either an additional gene flow between the Fulani and Northern African groups who carry admixture proportions from Europeans 71 Sahelian populations like the Toubou also showed admixture coming from Eurasians 72 Southern Africa edit Low levels of West Eurasian ancestry European or Middle Eastern are found in Khoe Kwadi Khoesan speakers It could have been acquired indirectly by admixture with migrating pastoralists from East Africa This hypothesis of gene flow from eastern to southern Africa is further supported by other genetic and archaeological data documenting the spread of pastoralism from East to South Africa 73 Regional genomic overview editNorth Africa edit Main article Genetic history of North Africa Further information DNA history of Egypt and Genetic studies on Moroccans Archaic Human DNA edit Further information Interbreeding between archaic and modern humans Archaic African hominins While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non Africans outside of Africa are more certain archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty 74 Ancient DNA edit Daniel Shriner 2018 using modern populations as a reference showed that the Natufians carried 61 2 Arabian 21 2 Northern African 10 9 Western Asian and a small portion of Eastern African ancestry at 6 8 which is associated with the modern Omotic speaking groups found in southern Ethiopia 46 Egypt edit Khnum aa Khnum Nakht Nakht Ankh and JK2911 carried maternal haplogroup M1a1 75 53 Djehutynakht 10A carried maternal haplogroup U5b2b5 76 JK2888 carried maternal haplogroup U6a2 53 Thuya Tiye Tutankhamen s mother and Tutankhamen carried the maternal haplogroup K 75 JK2134 carried maternal haplogroup J1d 53 and JK2887 carried maternal haplogroup J2a1a1 53 Amenhotep III Akhenaten and Tutankhamen carried the paternal haplogroup R1b 75 Ramesses III and Unknown Man E possibly Pentawere carried paternal haplogroup E1b1a 75 77 78 JK2134 and JK2911 carried paternal haplogroup J 53 Takabuti carried maternal haplogroup H4a1 79 and YM KMM A 63 carried maternal haplogroup HV 80 OM KMM A 64 carried maternal haplogroup T2c1a 80 JK2888 carried paternal haplogroup E1b1b1a1b2 53 Libya edit At Takarkori rockshelter in Libya two naturally mummified women dated to the Middle Pastoral Period 7000 BP carried basal maternal haplogroup N 81 Morocco edit Van de Loorsdrecht et al 2018 found that of seven samples of Taforalts of Morocco radiocarbon dated to between 15 100 cal BP and 13 900 cal BP six were found to carry maternal haplogroup U6a and one was found to carry maternal haplogroup M1b Six of six males were found to carry paternal haplogroup E1b1b They were found to harbor 63 5 Natufian related ancestry and 36 5 Sub Saharan African related ancestry The Sub Saharan component is most strongly drawn out by modern West African groups such as the Yoruba and the Mende The samples also contain an additional affinity to South Central and East African outgroups that cannot be explained by any known ancient or modern populations 82 When projected onto a principal component analysis graph of African and west Eurasian populations the Taforalt individuals form a distinct cluster in an intermediate position between modern North Africans e g Berbers Mozabites Saharawis and East Africans e g Afars Oromos Somalis 82 Jeong 2020 comparing the Taforalt people of the Iberomaurusian culture to modern populations found that the Taforalt s Sub Saharan African genetic component may be best represented by modern West Africans e g Yoruba 83 Y Chromosomal DNA edit Further information Y DNA haplogroups in populations of North Africa Mitochondrial DNA edit Amid the Holocene including the Holocene Climate Optimum in 8000 BP Africans bearing haplogroup L2 spread within West Africa and Africans bearing haplogroup L3 spread within East Africa 84 As the largest migration since the Out of Africa migration migration from Sub Saharan Africa toward the North Africa occurred by West Africans Central Africans and East Africans resulting in migrations into Europe and Asia consequently Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into Europe and Asia 84 During the early period of the Holocene 50 of Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into North Africa by West Africans and the other 50 was introduced by East Africans 84 During the modern period a greater number of West Africans introduced Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA into North Africa than East Africans 84 Mitochondrial haplogroups L3 M and N are found among Sudanese peoples e g Beja Nilotics Nuba Nubians who have no known interaction e g history of migration admixture with Europeans or Asians rather than having developed in a post Out of Africa migration context mitochondrial macrohaplogroup L3 M N and its subsequent development into distinct mitochondrial haplogroups e g Haplogroup L3 Haplogroup M Haplogroup N may have occurred in East Africa at a time that considerably predates the Out of Africa migration event of 50 000 BP 85 Autosomal DNA edit Medical DNA edit The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet physiology and evolutionary pressures from pathogens 86 Lactase Persistence edit Neolithic agriculturalists who may have resided in Northeast Africa and the Near East may have been the source population for lactase persistence variants including 13910 T and may have been subsequently supplanted by later migrations of peoples 87 The Sub Saharan West African Fulani the North African Tuareg and European agriculturalists who are descendants of these Neolithic agriculturalists share the lactase persistence variant 13910 T 87 While shared by Fulani and Tuareg herders compared to the Tuareg variant the Fulani variant of 13910 T has undergone a longer period of haplotype differentiation 87 The Fulani lactase persistence variant 13910 T may have spread along with cattle pastoralism between 9686 BP and 7534 BP possibly around 8500 BP corroborating this timeframe for the Fulani by at least 7500 BP there is evidence of herders engaging in the act of milking in the Central Sahara 87 West Africa edit Main article Genetic history of West Africa Further information Genetic history of the African diaspora Archaic Human DNA edit Further information Interbreeding between archaic and modern humans Archaic African hominins Archaic traits found in human fossils of West Africa e g Iho Eleru fossils which dates to 13 000 BP and Central Africa e g Ishango fossils which dates between 25 000 BP and 20 000 BP may have developed as a result of admixture between archaic humans and modern humans or may be evidence of late persisting early modern humans 74 While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non Africans outside of Africa are more certain archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty 74 Ancient DNA edit As of 2017 human ancient DNA has not been found in the region of West Africa 88 As of 2020 human ancient DNA has not been forthcoming in the region of West Africa 83 Y Chromosomal DNA edit Further information Y DNA haplogroups in populations of Sub Saharan Africa Eight male individuals from Guinea Bissau two male individuals from Niger one male individual from Mali and one male individual from Cabo Verde carried haplogroup A1a 89 As a result of haplogroup D0 a basal branch of haplogroup DE being found in three Nigerian men it may be the case that haplogroup DE as well as its sublineages D0 and E originated in Africa 90 As of 19 000 years ago Africans bearing haplogroup E1b1a V38 likely traversed across the Sahara from east to west 91 E1b1a1 M2 likely originated in West Africa or Central Africa 92 Mitochondrial DNA edit Further information Haplogroup L2 mtDNA Around 18 000 BP Mende people along with Gambian peoples grew in population size 93 In 15 000 BP Niger Congo speakers may have migrated from the Sahelian region of West Africa along the Senegal River and introduced L2a1 into North Africa resulting in modern Mauritanian peoples and Berbers of Tunisia inheriting it 94 Between 11 000 BP and 10 000 BP Yoruba people and Esan people grew in population size 93 As early as 11 000 years ago Sub Saharan West Africans bearing macrohaplogroup L e g L1b1a11 L1b1a6a L1b1a8 L1b1a9a1 L2a1k L3d1b1a may have migrated through North Africa and into Europe mostly into southern Europe e g Iberia 95 Autosomal DNA edit During the early period of the Holocene in 9000 BP Khoisan related peoples admixed with the ancestors of the Igbo people possibly in the western Sahara 96 97 Between 2000 BP and 1500 BP Nilo Saharan speakers may have migrated across the Sahel from East Africa into West Africa and admixed with Niger Congo speaking Berom people 98 In 710 CE West African related populations e g Niger Congo speaking Berom people Bantu speakers and East African related populations Nilo Saharan speaking Ethiopians Nilo Saharan speaking Chadians admixed with one another in northern Nigeria and northern Cameroon 99 Fan et al 2019 found that the Fulani people show genetic affinity to isolated Afroasiatic speaking groups in Eastern Africa specifically Omotic speakers such as the Aari people While the Fulani have nearly exclusive indigenous African ancestry defined by West and East African ancestry they also show traces of West Eurasian like admixture supporting an ancestral homeland somewhere in North or Eastern Africa and westwards expansion during the Neolithic possibly caused by the arrival and expansion of West Eurasian related groups 100 Fan et al 2023 found that the Fulani who have 50 Amhara related and 50 Tikari related ancestry as well as occupy regions such as West Africa Central Africa and the Sudan as nomadic herders may have initially been Afroasiatic speakers that subsequently underwent language replacement and became Niger Congo speakers 101 Medical DNA edit The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet physiology and evolutionary pressures from pathogens 86 Throughout Sub Saharan Africa genetic adaptation e g rs334 mutation Duffy blood group increased rates of G6PD deficiency sickle cell disease to malaria has been found among Sub Saharan Africans which may have initially developed in 7300 BP 86 Sub Saharan Africans have more than 90 of the Duffy null genotype 102 Pediculus edit During the Copper Age and early Islamic era of ancient Israel West Africans may have migrated into ancient Israel and introduced head louse from West Africa 103 Sickle Cell edit Amid the Green Sahara the mutation for sickle cell originated in the Sahara 91 or in the northwest forest region of western Central Africa e g Cameroon 91 104 by at least 7 300 years ago 91 104 though possibly as early as 22 000 years ago 105 104 The ancestral sickle cell haplotype to modern haplotypes e g Cameroon Central African Republic and Benin Senegal haplotypes may have first arose in the ancestors of modern West Africans bearing haplogroups E1b1a1 L485 and E1b1a1 U175 or their ancestral haplogroup E1b1a1 M4732 91 West Africans e g Yoruba and Esan of Nigeria bearing the Benin sickle cell haplotype may have migrated through the northeastern region of Africa into the western region of Arabia 91 West Africans e g Mende of Sierra Leone bearing the Senegal sickle cell haplotype 106 91 may have migrated into Mauritania 77 modern rate of occurrence and Senegal 100 they may also have migrated across the Sahara into North Africa and from North Africa into Southern Europe Turkey and a region near northern Iraq and southern Turkey 106 Some may have migrated into and introduced the Senegal and Benin sickle cell haplotypes into Basra Iraq where both occur equally 106 West Africans bearing the Benin sickle cell haplotype may have migrated into the northern region of Iraq 69 5 Jordan 80 Lebanon 73 Oman 52 1 and Egypt 80 8 106 Schistosomes edit According to Steverding 2020 while not definite Near the African Great Lakes schistosomes e g S mansoni S haematobium underwent evolution 107 Subsequently there was an expansion alongside the Nile 107 From Egypt the presence of schistosomes may have expanded via migratory Yoruba people into Western Africa 107 Thereafter schistosomes may have expanded via migratory Bantu peoples into the rest of Sub Saharan Africa e g Southern Africa Central Africa 107 Thalassemia edit Through pathways taken by caravans or via travel amid the Almovarid period a population e g Sub Saharan West Africans may have introduced the 29 A G b thalassemia mutation found in notable amounts among African Americans into the North African region of Morocco 108 Domesticated Animal DNA edit While the Niger Congo migration may have been from West Africa into Kordofan possibly from Kordofan Sudan Niger Congo speakers accompanied by undomesticated helmeted guineafowls may have traversed into West Africa domesticated the helmeted guineafowls by 3000 BCE and via the Bantu expansion traversed into other parts of Sub Saharan Africa e g Central Africa East Africa Southern Africa 109 Central Africa edit Main article Genetic history of Central Africa Further information Genetic history of the African diaspora See also African Pygmies Genetics Archaic Human DNA edit Further information Interbreeding between archaic and modern humans Archaic African hominins Archaic traits found in human fossils of West Africa e g Iho Eleru fossils which dates to 13 000 BP and Central Africa e g Ishango fossils which dates between 25 000 BP and 20 000 BP may have developed as a result of admixture between archaic humans and modern humans or may be evidence of late persisting early modern humans 74 While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non Africans outside of Africa are more certain archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty 74 Ancient DNA edit In 4000 BP there may have been a population that traversed from Africa e g West Africa or West Central Africa through the Strait of Gibraltar into the Iberian peninsula where admixing between Africans and Iberians e g of northern Portugal of southern Spain occurred 110 Cameroon edit West African hunter gatherers in the region of western Central Africa e g Shum Laka Cameroon particularly between 8000 BP and 3000 BP were found to be related to modern Central African hunter gatherers e g Baka Bakola Biaka Bedzan 111 Democratic Republic of Congo edit At Kindoki in the Democratic Republic of Congo there were three individuals dated to the protohistoric period 230 BP 150 BP 230 BP one carried haplogroups E1b1a1a1d1a2 E CTS99 E CTS99 and L1c3a1b another carried haplogroup E E M96 E PF1620 and the last carried haplogroups R1b1 R P25 1 R M415 and L0a1b1a1 112 113 Y Chromosomal DNA edit Further information Y DNA haplogroups in populations of Sub Saharan Africa Haplogroup R V88 may have originated in western Central Africa e g Equatorial Guinea and in the middle of the Holocene arrived in North Africa through population migration 114 Mitochondrial DNA edit Further information Haplogroup L1 mtDNA and Haplogroup L2 mtDNA In 150 000 BP Africans e g Central Africans East Africans bearing haplogroup L1 diverged 84 Between 75 000 BP and 60 000 BP Africans bearing haplogroup L3 emerged in East Africa and eventually migrated into and became present in modern West Africans Central Africans and non Africans 84 Amid the Holocene including the Holocene Climate Optimum in 8000 BP Africans bearing haplogroup L2 spread within West Africa and Africans bearing haplogroup L3 spread within East Africa 84 As the largest migration since the Out of Africa migration migration from Sub Saharan Africa toward the North Africa occurred by West Africans Central Africans and East Africans resulting in migrations into Europe and Asia consequently Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into Europe and Asia 84 Mitochondrial haplogroup L1c is strongly associated with pygmies especially with Bambenga groups 115 L1c prevalence was variously reported as 100 in Ba Kola 97 in Aka Ba Benzele and 77 in Biaka 116 100 of the Bedzan Tikar 97 and 100 in the Baka people of Gabon and Cameroon respectively 117 97 in Bakoya 97 and 82 in Ba Bongo 115 Mitochondrial haplogroups L2a and L0a are prevalent among the Bambuti 115 118 Autosomal DNA edit Genetically African pygmies have some key difference between them and Bantu peoples 119 120 Medical DNA edit Evidence suggests that when compared to other Sub Saharan African populations African pygmy populations display unusually low levels of expression of the genes encoding for human growth hormone and its receptor associated with low serum levels of insulin like growth factor 1 and short stature 121 The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet physiology and evolutionary pressures from pathogens 86 Throughout Sub Saharan Africa genetic adaptation e g rs334 mutation Duffy blood group increased rates of G6PD deficiency sickle cell disease to malaria has been found among Sub Saharan Africans which may have initially developed in 7300 BP 86 Sub Saharan Africans have more than 90 of the Duffy null genotype 102 In the rainforests of Central Africa genetic adaptation for non height related factors e g immune traits reproduction thyroid function and short stature e g EHB1 and PRDM5 bone synthesis OBSCN and COX10 muscular development HESX1 and ASB14 pituitary gland s growth hormone production secretion has been found among rainforest hunter gatherers 86 Eastern Africa edit Main article Genetic history of Eastern Africa Further information Genetic history of the African diaspora From the region of Kenya and Tanzania to South Africa eastern Bantu speaking Africans constitute a north to south genetic cline additionally from eastern Africa to toward southern Africa evidence of genetic homogeneity is indicative of a serial founder effect and admixture events having occurred between Bantu speaking Africans and other African populations by the time the Bantu migration had spanned into South Africa 86 Archaic Human DNA edit Further information Interbreeding between archaic and modern humans Archaic African hominins While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non Africans outside of Africa are more certain archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty 74 Ancient DNA edit Ethiopia edit At Mota in Ethiopia an individual estimated to date to the 5th millennium BP carried haplogroups E1b1 and L3x2a 122 123 The individual of Mota is genetically related to groups residing near the region of Mota and in particular are considerably genetically related to the Aari people especially the blacksmith caste of that group 124 125 Kenya edit At Jawuoyo Rockshelter in Kisumu County Kenya a forager of the Later Stone Age carried haplogroups E1b1b1a1b2 E V22 and L4b2a2c 126 127 At Ol Kalou in Nyandarua County Kenya a pastoralist of the Pastoral Neolithic carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b2a1 E M293 and L3d1d 126 127 At Kokurmatakore in Marsabit County Kenya a pastoralist of the Pastoral Iron Age carried haplogroups E1b1b1 E M35 and L3a2a 126 127 At White Rock Point in Homa Bay County Kenya there were two foragers of the Later Stone Age one carried haplogroups BT xCT likely B and L2a4 and another probably carried haplogroup L0a2 126 127 At Nyarindi Rockshelter in Kenya there were two individuals dated to the Later Stone Age 3500 BP one carried haplogroup L4b2a and another carried haplogroup E E M96 E P162 112 113 At Lukenya Hill in Kenya there were two individuals dated to the Pastoral Neolithic 3500 BP one carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b E M293 E CTS10880 and L4b2a2b and another carried haplogroup L0f1 112 113 At Hyrax Hill in Kenya an individual dated to the Pastoral Neolithic 2300 BP carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b E M293 E M293 and L5a1b 112 113 At Molo Cave in Kenya there were two individuals dated to the Pastoral Neolithic 1500 BP while one had haplogroups that went undetermined another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b E M293 E M293 and L3h1a2a1 112 113 At Kakapel in Kenya there were three individuals one dated to the Later Stone Age 3900 BP and two dated to the Later Iron Age 300 BP 900 BP one carried haplogroups CT CT M168 CT M5695 and L3i1 another carried haplogroup L2a1f and the last carried haplogroup L2a5 112 113 At Panga ya Saidi in Kenya an individual estimated to date between 496 BP and 322 BP carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2 and L4b2a2 128 At Kilifi Mtwapa in Kenya an individual dated between 1250 CE and 1650 CE carried haplogroup L3b1a1a 129 Tanzania edit At Mlambalasi rockshelter in Tanzania an individual dated between 20 345 BP and 17 025 BP carried undetermined haplogroups 130 At Gishimangeda Cave in Karatu District Tanzania there were eleven pastoralists of the Pastoral Neolithic one carried haplogroups E1b1b1a1b2 E V22 and HV1b1 another carried haplogroup L0a another carried haplogroup L3x1 another carried haplogroup L4b2a2b another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b2a1 E M293 and L3i2 another carried haplogroup L3h1a2a1 another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b2 E V1486 likely E M293 and L0f2a1 and another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b2 E V1486 likely E M293 and T2 150 while most of the haplogroups among three pastoralists went undetermined one was determined to carry haplogroup BT likely B 126 127 At Kilwa Coast in Tanzania an individual dated between 1300 CE and 1600 CE carried haplogroups J2a2a1a1a2a and L2a1h 129 At Lindi in Tanzania an individual dated between 1511 cal CE and 1664 cal CE carried haplogroups E1b1a1a1a2a1a3a1d and L0a1a2 129 At Makangale Cave on Pemba Island Tanzania an individual estimated to date between 1421 BP and 1307 BP carried haplogroup L0a 128 At Songo Mnara in Tanzania an individual dated between 1294 cal CE and 1392 cal CE carried haplogroups R1a and L3e3a 129 Uganda edit At Munsa in Uganda an individual dated to the Later Iron Age 500 BP carried haplogroup L3b1a1 112 113 Y Chromosomal DNA edit Further information Y DNA haplogroups in populations of Sub Saharan Africa As of 19 000 years ago Africans bearing haplogroup E1b1a V38 likely traversed across the Sahara from east to west 91 Before the slave trade period East Africans who carried haplogroup E1b1a M2 expanded into Arabia resulting in various rates of inheritance throughout Arabia e g 2 8 Qatar 3 2 Yemen 5 5 United Arab Emirates 7 4 Oman 131 Mitochondrial DNA edit Further information Macro haplogroup L mtDNA Haplogroup M mtDNA and Haplogroup N mtDNA In 150 000 BP Africans e g Central Africans East Africans bearing haplogroup L1 diverged 84 In 130 000 BP Africans bearing haplogroup L5 diverged in East Africa 84 Between 130 000 BP and 75 000 BP behavioral modernity emerged among Southern Africans and long term interactions between the regions of Southern Africa and Eastern Africa became established 84 Between 75 000 BP and 60 000 BP Africans bearing haplogroup L3 emerged in East Africa and eventually migrated into and became present in modern West Africans Central Africans and non Africans 84 Amid the Holocene including the Holocene Climate Optimum in 8000 BP Africans bearing haplogroup L2 spread within West Africa and Africans bearing haplogroup L3 spread within East Africa 84 As the largest migration since the Out of Africa migration migration from Sub Saharan Africa toward the North Africa occurred by West Africans Central Africans and East Africans resulting in migrations into Europe and Asia consequently Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into Europe and Asia 84 During the early period of the Holocene 50 of Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into North Africa by West Africans and the other 50 was introduced by East Africans 84 During the modern period a greater number of West Africans introduced Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA into North Africa than East Africans 84 Between 15 000 BP and 7000 BP 86 of Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced into Southwest Asia by East Africans largely in the region of Arabia which constitute 50 of Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA in modern Southwest Asia 84 In the modern period 68 of Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA was introduced by East Africans and 22 was introduced by West Africans which constitutes 50 of Sub Saharan African mitochondrial DNA in modern Southwest Asia 84 Autosomal DNA edit Across all areas of Madagascar the average ancestry for the Malagasy people was found to be 4 West Eurasian 37 Austronesian and 59 Bantu 62 Medical DNA edit The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet physiology and evolutionary pressures from pathogens 86 Throughout Sub Saharan Africa genetic adaptation e g rs334 mutation Duffy blood group increased rates of G6PD deficiency sickle cell disease to malaria has been found among Sub Saharan Africans which may have initially developed in 7300 BP 86 Sub Saharan Africans have more than 90 of the Duffy null genotype 102 In the highlands of Ethiopia genetic adaptation e g rs10803083 an SNP associated with the rate and function of hemoglobin BHLHE41 a gene associated with circadian rhythm and hypoxia response EGNL1 a gene strongly associated with oxygen homeostasis in mammals to hypoxia and low atmospheric pressure has been found among the Amhara people which may have developed within the past 5000 years 86 In Tanzania genetic adaptation e g greater amount of amylase genes than in African populations that consume low starch foods has been found in the Hadza people due to a food diet that especially includes consumption of tubers 86 Southern Africa edit Main article Genetic history of Southern Africa Further information Genetic history of the African diaspora See also San people Genetics and Khoekhoe From the region of Kenya and Tanzania to South Africa eastern Bantu speaking Africans constitute a north to south genetic cline additionally from eastern Africa to toward southern Africa evidence of genetic homogeneity is indicative of a serial founder effect and admixture events having occurred between Bantu speaking Africans and other African populations by the time the Bantu migration had spanned into South Africa 86 Archaic Human DNA edit Further information Interbreeding between archaic and modern humans Archaic African hominins While Denisovan and Neanderthal ancestry in non Africans outside of Africa are more certain archaic human ancestry in Africans is less certain and is too early to be established with certainty 74 Ancient DNA edit Three Later Stone Age hunter gatherers carried ancient DNA similar to Khoisan speaking hunter gatherers 132 Prior to the Bantu migration into the region as evidenced by ancient DNA from Botswana East African herders migrated into Southern Africa 132 Out of four Iron Age Bantu agriculturalists of West African origin two earlier agriculturalists carried ancient DNA similar to Tsonga and Venda peoples and the two later agriculturalists carried ancient DNA similar to Nguni people this indicates that there were various movements of peoples in the overall Bantu migration which resulted in increased interaction and admixing between Bantu speaking peoples and Khoisan speaking peoples 132 Botswana edit At Nqoma in Botswana an individual dated to the Early Iron Age 900 BP carried haplogroup L2a1f 112 113 At Taukome in Botswana an individual dated to the Early Iron Age 1100 BP carried haplogroups E1b1a1 E M2 E Z1123 and L0d3b1 112 113 At Xaro in Botswana there were two individuals dated to the Early Iron Age 1400 BP one carried haplogroups E1b1a1a1c1a and L3e1a2 and another carried haplogroups E1b1b1b2b E M293 E CTS10880 and L0k1a2 112 113 Malawi edit At Fingira rockshelter in Malawi an individual dated between 6179 BP and 2341 BP carried haplogroups B2 and L0d1 130 At Chencherere in Malawi an individual estimated to date between 5400 BP and 4800 BP carried haplogroup L0k2 128 At Hora 1 rockshelter in Malawi an individual dated between 16 897 BP and 15 827 BP carried haplogroups B2b and L5b 130 South Africa edit At Doonside in South Africa an individual estimated to date between 2296 BP and 1910 BP carried haplogroup L0d2 133 134 At Ballito Bay South Africa an individual estimated to date between 1986 BP and 1831 BP carried haplogroups A1b1b2 and L0d2c1 133 134 At Kalemba rockshelter in Zambia an individual dated between 5285 BP and 4975 BP carried haplogroup L0d1b2b 130 Y Chromosomal DNA edit Further information Y DNA haplogroups in populations of Sub Saharan Africa nbsp Distribution of Y Chromosome Haplogroup A in Africa nbsp Distribution of haplogroup B M60 of the human Y chromosome in native populations Various Y chromosome studies show that the San carry some of the most divergent oldest human Y chromosome haplogroups These haplogroups are specific sub groups of haplogroups A and B the two earliest branches on the human Y chromosome tree 135 136 137 Mitochondrial DNA edit In 200 000 BP Africans e g Khoisan of Southern Africa bearing haplogroup L0 diverged from other Africans bearing haplogroup L1 6 which tend to be northward of Southern Africa 84 Between 130 000 BP and 75 000 BP behavioral modernity emerged among Southern Africans and long term interactions between the regions of Southern Africa and Eastern Africa became established 84 Mitochondrial DNA studies also provide evidence that the San carry high frequencies of the earliest haplogroup branches in the human mitochondrial DNA tree This DNA is inherited only from one s mother The most divergent oldest mitochondrial haplogroup L0d has been identified at its highest frequencies in the southern African San groups 135 138 139 140 Autosomal DNA edit Henn et al 2011 found that the ǂKhomani San as well as the Sandawe and Hadza peoples of Tanzania were the most genetically diverse of any living humans studied This high degree of genetic diversity hints at the origin of anatomically modern humans 141 142 Medical DNA edit Among the ancient DNA from three hunter gatherers sharing genetic similarity with San people and four Iron Age agriculturalists their SNPs indicated that they bore variants for resistance against sleeping sickness and Plasmodium vivax 143 In particular two out of the four Iron Age agriculturalists bore variants for resistance against sleeping sickness and three out of the four Iron Age agriculturalists bore Duffy negative variants for resistance against malaria 143 In contrast to the Iron Age agriculturalists from among the San related hunter gatherers a six year old boy may have died from schistosomiasis 143 In Botswana a man who dates to 1400 BP may have also carried the Duffy negative variant for resistance against malaria 143 The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet physiology and evolutionary pressures from pathogens 86 Throughout Sub Saharan Africa genetic adaptation e g rs334 mutation Duffy blood group increased rates of G6PD deficiency sickle cell disease to malaria has been found among Sub Saharan Africans which may have initially developed in 7300 BP 86 Sub Saharan Africans have more than 90 of the Duffy null genotype 102 In the Kalahari Desert region of Africa various possible genetic adaptations e g adiponectin body mass index metabolism have been found among the ǂKhomani people 86 Sub Saharan Africans have more than 90 of the Duffy null genotype 102 In South Africa genetic adaptation e g rs28647531 on chromosome 4q22 and strong susceptibility to tuberculosis has been found among Coloureds 86 Recent African origin of modern humans editMain article Recent African origin of modern humans Further information Early human migrations Basal Eurasian and Human genetic variation Between 500 000 BP and 300 000 BP anatomically modern humans may have emerged in Africa 144 As Africans e g Y Chromosomal Adam Mitochondrial Eve have migrated from their places of origin in Africa to other locations in Africa and as the time of divergence for East African Central African and West African lineages are similar to the time of divergence for the Southern African lineage there is insufficient evidence to identify a specific region for the origin of humans in Africa 74 In 100 000 BP anatomically modern humans migrated from Africa into Eurasia 145 Subsequently tens of thousands of years after the ancestors of all present day Eurasians migrated from Africa into Eurasia and eventually became admixed with Denisovans and Neanderthals 145 Archaeological and fossil evidence provide support for the African origin of homo sapiens and behavioral modernity 146 Models reflecting a pan African origin multiple locations of origin within Africa and evolution of modern humans have been developed 146 As the idea of modern has become increasingly problematized research has begun to disentangle what is meant by modern genetic ancestry skeletal morphology and behavior recognizing these are unlikely to form a single package 146 In comparison to the non African genome the African genome features a 25 greater number of polymorphisms 86 or 3 to 5 times as many 102 and genetic variants that are rare outside of Africa are found to occur at an abundant rate within Africa 86 Most of the genetic diversity found among non Africans is found to be at large a subset of genetic diversity found among Africans 86 The genomes of Africans commonly found to undergo adaptation are regulatory DNA and many cases of adaptation found among Africans relate to diet physiology and evolutionary pressures from pathogens 86 Throughout Sub Saharan Africa genetic adaptation e g rs334 mutation Duffy blood group increased rates of G6PD deficiency sickle cell disease to malaria has been found among Sub Saharan Africans which may have initially developed in 7300 BP 86 Throughout Africa various genetic adaptations e g apolipoprotein L1 APOL1 G1 and G2 haplotype resistance to trypanosomiasis and increased risk of kidney disease human leukocyte antigen HLA genes major histocompatibility complex MHC to HIV 1 smallpox trypanosomiasis African sleeping sickness and tuberculosis has been found among Africans 86 Biomedical tests for specific genetic variants e g rs1799853 in the CYP2C9 gene which have been approved by the U S Food and Drug Administration and are intended to indicate correct prescription of warfarin has been found to be increasingly irrelevant to Africans as the variants are rare in Africa 86 As frequency rate factors into considering and deciding variant pathogenicity and generalizable polygenic scores modern clinical classifications of genetic variant pathogenicity are found to be inadequate due to a lack of genetic diversity in biomedical studies 86 Fan et al 2023 recently found 5 3 million unique genetic variants in 180 African hunter gatherer populations and among existing classifications for variants determined to likely be pathogenic 29 44 154 of these pathogenic classified variants were found to occur frequently among the African hunter gatherers 86 See also editGenetic history of the African diasporaNotes edit Although the estimated date of this event varies across studies there is general consensus that the split occurred over 100 thousand years ago kya 8 23 References edit Osborne Anne H et al October 2008 A humid corridor across the Sahara for the migration of early modern humans out of Africa 120 000 years ago Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 105 43 16444 16447 Bibcode 2008PNAS 10516444O doi 10 1073 pnas 0804472105 PMC 2575439 PMID 18936490 S2CID 10418009 Drake Nick Breeze Paul 2016 Climate Change and Modern Human Occupation of the Sahara from MIS 6 2 Africa from MIS 6 2 Vertebrate Paleobiology and Paleoanthropology Africa from MIS 6 2 pp 103 122 doi 10 1007 978 94 017 7520 5 6 ISBN 978 94 017 7519 9 S2CID 131383927 El Shenawy Mohammed I et al 2018 Speleothem evidence for the greening of the Sahara and its implications for the early human dispersal out of sub Saharan Africa Quaternary Science Reviews 188 67 76 Bibcode 2018QSRv 188 67E doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2018 03 016 S2CID 134694090 Scheele Judith Aug 2016 Crossroads Regions The Sahara Oxford Handbooks Online doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199935369 013 18 ISBN 978 0 19 993536 9 Wippel Steffen 2020 The Sahara as a Bridge Not a Barrier An Essay and Book Review on Recent Transregional Perspectives Neue Politische Literatur 65 3 449 472 doi 10 1007 s42520 020 00318 y S2CID 224855920 a b Hollfelder N Breton G Sjodin P Jakobsson M April 2021 The deep population history in Africa Human Molecular Genetics 30 R1 R2 R10 doi 10 1093 hmg ddab005 PMC 8117439 PMID 33438014 a b Fan S Kelly DE Beltrame MH Hansen ME Mallick S Ranciaro A et al April 2019 African evolutionary history inferred from whole genome sequence data of 44 indigenous African populations Genome Biology 20 1 82 doi 10 1186 s13059 019 1679 2 PMC 6485071 PMID 31023338 A great African gene migration cosmosmagazine com 29 October 2020 Retrieved 2022 01 11 a b Ananyo Choudhury Shaun Aron Dhriti Sengupta Scott Hazelhurst Michele Ramsay 1 August 2018 African genetic diversity provides novel insights into evolutionary history and local adaptations academic oup com Retrieved 2022 10 21 a b Baker Jennifer L Rotimi Charles N Shriner Daniel 2017 05 08 Human ancestry correlates with language and reveals that race is not an objective genomic classifier Scientific Reports 7 1 1572 Bibcode 2017NatSR 7 1572B doi 10 1038 s41598 017 01837 7 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5431528 PMID 28484253 Kusuma Pradiptajati Brucato Nicolas Cox Murray P Pierron Denis Razafindrazaka Harilanto Adelaar Alexander Sudoyo Herawati Letellier Thierry Ricaut Francois Xavier 2016 05 18 Contrasting Linguistic and Genetic Origins of the Asian Source Populations of Malagasy Scientific Reports 6 26066 Bibcode 2016NatSR 626066K doi 10 1038 srep26066 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 4870696 PMID 27188237 Cruciani F Santolamazza P Shen P Macaulay V Moral P Olckers A et al May 2002 A back migration from Asia to sub Saharan Africa is supported by high resolution analysis of human Y chromosome haplotypes American Journal of Human Genetics 70 5 1197 1214 doi 10 1086 340257 PMC 447595 PMID 11910562 Pakstis AJ Speed WC Soundararajan U Rajeevan H Kidd JR Li H Kidd KK December 2019 Population relationships based on 170 ancestry SNPs from the combined Kidd and Seldin panels Scientific Reports 9 1 18874 Bibcode 2019NatSR 918874P doi 10 1038 s41598 019 55175 x PMC 6906462 PMID 31827153 a b c Chen L Wolf AB Fu W Li L Akey JM February 2020 Identifying and Interpreting Apparent Neanderthal Ancestry in African Individuals Cell 180 4 677 687 e16 doi 10 1016 j cell 2020 01 012 PMID 32004458 S2CID 210955842 a b c van de Loosdrecht Marieke Bouzouggar Abdeljalil Humphrey Louise Posth Cosimo Barton Nick Aximu Petri Ayinuer Nickel Birgit Nagel Sarah Talbi El Hassan El Hajraoui Mohammed Abdeljalil Amzazi Saaid Hublin Jean Jacques Paabo Svante Schiffels Stephan Meyer Matthias 2018 05 04 Pleistocene North African genomes link Near Eastern and sub Saharan African human populations Science 360 6388 548 552 Bibcode 2018Sci 360 548V doi 10 1126 science aar8380 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 29545507 S2CID 206666517 Blench R 2006 Archaeology language and the African past AltaMira Press ISBN 9780759104655 Wang C Zollner S Rosenberg NA August 2012 A quantitative comparison of the similarity between genes and geography in worldwide human populations PLOS Genetics 8 8 e1002886 doi 10 1371 journal pgen 1002886 PMC 3426559 PMID 22927824 Manning K Timpson A 2014 10 01 The demographic response to Holocene climate change in the Sahara Quaternary Science Reviews 101 28 35 Bibcode 2014QSRv 101 28M doi 10 1016 j quascirev 2014 07 003 ISSN 0277 3791 S2CID 54923700 Blench R 2006 Archaeology language and the African past AltaMira Press ISBN 9780759104655 Blench R September 2016 Can we visit the graves of the first Niger Congo speakers PDF 2nd International Congress Towards Proto Niger Congo Comparison and Reconstruction Paris Vossen R Dimmendaal GJ 2020 03 13 The Oxford Handbook of African Languages Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 960989 5 Vicente M Jakobsson M Ebbesen P Schlebusch CM September 2019 Genetic Affinities among Southern Africa Hunter Gatherers and the Impact of Admixing Farmer and Herder Populations Molecular Biology and Evolution 36 9 1849 1861 doi 10 1093 molbev msz089 PMC 6735883 PMID 31288264 Lopez S van Dorp L Hellenthal G 2016 04 21 Human Dispersal Out of Africa A Lasting Debate Evolutionary Bioinformatics Online 11 Suppl 2 57 68 doi 10 4137 EBO S33489 PMC 4844272 PMID 27127403 Scerri EM Thomas MG Manica A Gunz P Stock JT Stringer C et al August 2018 Did Our Species Evolve in Subdivided Populations across Africa and Why Does It Matter Trends in Ecology amp Evolution 33 8 582 594 doi 10 1016 j tree 2018 05 005 PMC 6092560 PMID 30007846 One Species Many Origins www shh mpg de Retrieved 2022 01 11 Vallini Leonardo et al 7 April 2022 Genetics and Material Culture Support Repeated Expansions into Paleolithic Eurasia from a Population Hub Out of Africa academic oup com Retrieved 2023 02 21 Hallast P Agdzhoyan A Balanovsky O Xue Y Tyler Smith C February 2021 A Southeast Asian origin for present day non African human Y chromosomes Human Genetics 140 2 299 307 doi 10 1007 s00439 020 02204 9 PMC 7864842 PMID 32666166 Durvasula A Sankararaman S February 2020 Recovering signals of ghost archaic introgression in African populations Science Advances 6 7 eaax5097 Bibcode 2020SciA 6 5097D doi 10 1126 sciadv aax5097 PMC 7015685 PMID 32095519 Non African populations Han Chinese in Beijing and Utah residents with northern and western European ancestry also show analogous patterns in the CSFS suggesting that a component of archaic ancestry was shared before the split of African and non African populations One interpretation of the recent time of introgression that we document is that archaic forms persisted in Africa until fairly recently Alternately the archaic population could have introgressed earlier into a modern human population which then subsequently interbred with the ancestors of the populations that we have analyzed here The models that we have explored here are not mutually exclusive and it is plausible that the history of African populations includes genetic contributions from multiple divergent populations as evidenced by the large effective population size associated with the introgressing archaic population Given the uncertainty in our estimates of the time of introgression we wondered whether jointly analyzing the CSFS from both the CEU Utah residents with Northern and Western European ancestry and YRI genomes could provide additional resolution Under model C we simulated introgression before and after the split between African and non African populations and observed qualitative differences between the two models in the high frequency derived allele bins of the CSFS in African and non African populations fig S40 Using ABC to jointly fit the high frequency derived allele bins of the CSFS in CEU and YRI defined as greater than 50 frequency we find that the lower limit on the 95 credible interval of the introgression time is older than the simulated split between CEU and YRI 2800 versus 2155 generations B P indicating that at least part of the archaic lineages seen in the YRI are also shared with the CEU 1 Archived 7 December 2020 at the Wayback Machine Supplementary Materials forRecovering signals of ghost archaic introgression in African populations section S8 2 We simulated data using the same priors in Section S5 2 but computed the spectrum for both YRI West African Yoruba and CEU a population of European origin We found that the best fitting parameters were an archaic split time of 27 000 generations ago 95 HPD 26 000 28 000 admixture fraction of 0 09 95 HPD 0 04 0 17 admixture time of 3 000 generations ago 95 HPD 2 800 3 400 and an effective population size of 19 700 individuals 95 HPD 19 300 20 200 We find that the lower bound of the admixture time is further back than the simulated split between CEU and YRI 2155 generations ago providing some evidence in favor of a pre Out of Africa event This model suggests that many populations outside of Africa should also contain haplotypes from this introgression event though detection is difficult because many methods use unadmixed outgroups to detect introgressed haplotypes Browning et al 2018 Skov et al 2018 Durvasula and Sankararaman 2019 5 53 22 It is also possible that some of these haplotypes were lost during the Out of Africa bottleneck Durvasula A Sankararaman S February 2020 Recovering signals of ghost archaic introgression in African populations Science Advances 6 7 eaax5097 Bibcode 2020SciA 6 5097D doi 10 1126 sciadv aax5097 PMC 7015685 PMID 32095519 Chen L Wolf AB Fu W Li L Akey JM February 2020 Identifying and Interpreting 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