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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Genes, peoples and languages in Central Africa

Berniell Lee, Gemma 19 July 2010 (has links)
La presente tesis, titulada “Genes, peoples and languages in Central Africa”, examina los patrones de diversidad genética en poblaciones del oeste de Africa central, más específicamente, poblaciones Bantús y Pigmeas de Gabon y Camerún, dos zonas vitales para la comprensión de la expansión Bantú. Se han analizado más de 800 muestras a nivel del cromosoma Y con el fin de caracterizar genéticamente a estas poblaciones, y establecer la relación genética entre ellas. Los resultados han demostrado que la expansión Bantú homogeneizó el acervo genético de las poblaciones Bantús, eliminando la diversidad pre-Bantú, mientras que diversificó aquel de las poblaciones Pigmeas, introduciendo linajes Bantus. Además, se ha visto que el flujo de linajes paternos parece haber tenido una única dirección: de Bantus a Pigmeos. Estos resultados contrastan con aquellos obtenidos para linajes maternos (DNA mitocondrial) en estas zonas, donde se ha observado un considerable flujo genético de Pigmeos a Bantus, sugiriendo un posible sesgo sexual en la tasa de mestizaje entre poblaciones Bantus y Pigmeas. Un hallazgo interesante es la presencia de un linaje no-africano en estas poblaciones de África subsahariana. / The present thesis titled “ Genes, peoples and languages in Central Africa” examines the genetic diversity patterns in populations from west central Africa, more specifically, in Bantu and Pygmy populations from Gabon and Cameroon, two key areas in the understanding of the Bantu expansion. More than 800 samples have been analysed at the Y chromosome level in order to genetically characterise these populations and establish the genetic relationship between them. The results have shown that the Bantu expansion largely homogenised the gene pool of Bantu populations, erasing the pre-Bantu diversity, while it diversified that of Pygmy groups, introducing Bantu lineages into their gene pool. Furthermore, gene flow of paternal lineages seems to have taken place mainly in one direction; from Bantus to Pygmies. These results contrast with those found in studies of maternal (mtDNA) lineages in these areas, where considerable gene flow from Pygmy to Bantu populations have been observed, suggesting possible sex-biased admixtures rates between Bantu and Pygmy populations. An interesting finding, is the significant presence of a non-African lineage in these sub-Saharan populations.

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