Abstract
Background: The Venezuelan population is the product of Native American, African and European admixture. Few admixture studies have been made in Venezuela using short tandem repeats (STRs).
Aim: The study estimated the contribution of each parental group in two Venezuelan regions: the Northern-Central and the Central-Western Regions.
Subjects and methods: Frequencies for ABO and Rh were estimated by maximum likelihood, and by direct count for nine STRs, for 211 individuals. Admixture was estimated using Chakraborty's gene identity method. Neighbour-joining dendrograms were obtained with Nei's DS distance calculated between the two regions, the parental populations and other Venezuelan and Latin American populations. A principal component analysis (PCA) was also performed.
Results: For the Northern-Central Region, the estimate of admixture was 37.7% for the European component, 37.7% for the African and 24.6% for the Native American. For the Central-Western region, the estimate of admixture was 58.5% for the European, 16.5% for the African and 25.0% for the Native American component.
Conclusions: (i) All systems were in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium, except the Rh blood group of the Central-Western Region; (ii) the European contribution is high in both groups; (iii) in the dendrogram and PCA, the studied populations appear close to other admixed populations, and their relative position with regard to the three parental populations coincides with the admixture analysis.