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Research Papers

Origin and genetic differentiation of three Native Mexican groups (Purépechas, Triquis and Mayas): Contribution of CODIS-STRs to the history of human populations of Mesoamerica

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Pages 801-819 | Received 28 Apr 2009, Accepted 11 Jan 2010, Published online: 22 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

Background: CODIS-STRs in Native Mexican groups have rarely been analysed for human identification and anthropological purposes.

Aim: To analyse the genetic relationships and population structure among three Native Mexican groups from Mesoamerica.

Subjects and methods: 531 unrelated Native individuals from Mexico were PCR-typed for 15 and 9 autosomal STRs (Identifiler™ and Profiler™ kits, respectively), including five population samples: Purépechas (Mountain, Valley and Lake), Triquis and Yucatec Mayas. Previously published STR data were included in the analyses.

Results: Allele frequencies and statistical parameters of forensic importance were estimated by population. The majority of Native groups were not differentiated pairwise, excepting Triquis and Purépechas, which was attributable to their relative geographic and cultural isolation. Although Mayas, Triquis and Purépechas-Mountain presented the highest number of private alleles, suggesting recurrent gene flow, the elevated differentiation of Triquis indicates a different origin of this gene flow. Interestingly, Huastecos and Mayas were not differentiated, which is in agreement with the archaeological hypothesis that Huastecos represent an ancestral Maya group. Interpopulation variability was greater in Natives than in Mestizos, both significant.

Conclusion: Although results suggest that European admixture has increased the similarity between Native Mexican groups, the differentiation and inconsistent clustering by language or geography stresses the importance of serial founder effect and/or genetic drift in showing their present genetic relationships.

Acknowledgements

We thank to all the volunteers who provided blood samples for this study, to the anonymous reviewers for valuable comments to the manuscript.

Declaration of interest: We thank the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACyT) for fellowship to G. M.-C., and for the research grant No. 48710 to H. R.-V. The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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