September 18, 2014

23andMe mega-study on different American groups

It's great to see that the massive dataset of 23andMe was used for a study like this that seeks to capture the landscape of ancestry of different American groups.

First, distribution of ancestry in African Americans:


The higher fraction of African ancestry in the south and of European ancestry in the north, shouldn't be very surprising. There are some interesting loci of higher "Native American" ancestry; most African Americans don't seem to have a lot of this ancestry, but some apparently do.

Second, distribution of ancestry in "Latinos":


To my eye, this seems like more African ancestry in the eastern parts (presumbly from Caribbean-type Latinos?) and more Native American ancestry in the west.

Third, distribution of ancestry in European Americans:


Overall, it seems that relatively few (less than 5%) of European Americans have more than 2% either African or Native American ancestry in any of the states, so the breakdown of European ancestry into various subgroups  is perhaps more interesting.

The distribution of African ancestry in European and African Americans is also interesting:


The existence of "African Americans" with virtually no African ancestry and of "European Americans" with as much as half African ancestry is probably due to either misreporting or some quite strange self-perception issues. The bulk of the African ancestry in European Americans seems to be in the sub-10% range (equivalent to less than 1 great grandparent). It is possible that many of these individuals might not even be aware of the existence of such ancestors.

bioRxiv doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/009340

The genetic ancestry of African, Latino, and European Americans across the United States.

Katarzyna Bryc, Eric Durand, J Michael Macpherson, David Reich, Joanna Mountain

Over the past 500 years, North America has been the site of ongoing mixing of Native Americans, European settlers, and Africans brought largely by the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, shaping the early history of what became the United States. We studied the genetic ancestry of 5,269 self-described African Americans, 8,663 Latinos, and 148,789 European Americans who are 23andMe customers and show that the legacy of these historical interactions is visible in the genetic ancestry of present-day Americans. We document pervasive mixed ancestry and asymmetrical male and female ancestry contributions in all groups studied. We show that regional ancestry differences reflect historical events, such as early Spanish colonization, waves of immigration from many regions of Europe, and forced relocation of Native Americans within the US. This study sheds light on the fine-scale differences in ancestry within and across the United States, and informs our understanding of the relationship between racial and ethnic identities and genetic ancestry.

Link

8 comments:

Unknown said...

Would have liked to have seen the self-reported Native Americans. But I guess the reality of that situation is too much of a political hot potato. Personally I would rather know the truth than close my eyes on my true ancestors.

On the whole the levels of NA in the dominant European population look pretty high to me. Quite a lot of folk clearly bred in and live on in their descendants.

Interesting that South Dakota, a state named after a north American tribe is the only state with NO NAs in the dominant European population. Does that mean everyone in South Dakota with a trace of NA ancestry claims it? Were they obliterated? Or is sexual apartheid alive and well in South Dakota?

Unknown said...

In the US, the one drop rule held sway for several centuries. Both my parents are about 50% African and 50% European in ancestry (my mother is about 8% Native American). I have maternal ancestors who are ethnically black but appear phenotypically white. Race in America is a cultural construct with fuzzy boundaries. So I am not surprised by the vague overlap in identity. It is not an error in self-report, but part and parcel a consequence of the squirrelly definition of race on America.

andrew said...

Approximately 1% of self-identified whites have more than 1/16th African ancestry. The Lion's share of African Americans have more than 50% African ancestry.

Many people in the U.S. who have one black parent and one white parent no longer adhere to the "one drop rule" and identify instead as having more than one race on census forms. But, that was not a choice apparently, in this context.

Many people with one black grandparent and three white grandparents who normally identify as mixed race, will say that they are white rather than black when forced to choose. And, some who have one black parent and one white parent (a group that often identifies as mixed race on census forms) will choose white because they are aware (if they are ordering genetic tests for themselves) that most African-Americans are part-European, so that they are more European than African American, percentage-wise.

Certainly, no one in either situation would be unaware of their African ancestry, although at less than one great-grandparent (with that great-grandparent having typical proportions of European admixture) someone might not know, or at least might "pass".

I suspect that this threshold of "passing" also helps to explain the peak level of Neanderthal and Denisovan admixture in the populations that originally admixed which those archaic hominins, and that later dilution by unadmixed populations where archaic hominins were already gone explains currently lower levels of these kinds of admixture.

Ryan said...

"The existence of "African Americans" with virtually no African ancestry and of "European Americans" with as much as half African ancestry is probably due to either misreporting or some quite strange self-perception issues."

It goes back to American attitudes on race. The belief was that "one drop" of non-European ancestry made you non-European. Also, skin colour is carried by a relatively small number of genes, so there you go.

It's silly and ridiculous if you ask me.

Re: Latino ancestry, keep in mind in the US Latino is a term used in addition to "race." So on the US census, one could self report as "Latino white" or "Latino black" or whatever.

There's also a naming convention thing that might be skewing the results. In the Western US, "Hispanic" is more of a preferred term, though Hispanic also excludes people from Brazil and includes Iberians, whereas Latino includes Brazil and excludes Iberia.

The numbers for Latinos in Lousiana are interesting. Must have something to do with the period between French rule and American rule when it was a Spanish colony I guess?

DocG said...

African Americans with no African ancestry can be explained as an artefact of the methodology, which can be misleading. For example, the mtDNA of someone whose father's mother was African won't show any sign of African ancestry. Same with the Y DNA of someone whose mother's father was African. And nuclear DNA is of largely statistical significance, so not all that useful in precisely assessing the ancestry of an individual.

As far as "Europeans" vs "African Americans" is concerned, there are a great many people with largely European ancestry who self-identify as African American simply because they carry certain "negroid" features, such as dark skin or frizzy hair, or simply due to the usual stereotyping. I have "African American" cousins whose father was Jewish and whose mother is almost certainly at least partly of European extraction. Yet they all self identify as African American.

Unknown said...

Indeed, This is what the data should be used for!
Unfortunately, I am not so sure about 23andMe's European subgroups.
I have traced all my ancestors back to at least the 18th century and some much further back and the very large majority of them are Dutch, with some minor German import. Still, 23andMe states that my ancestors are 31% British/Irish, 19% Scandinavian, 12,6% German/French and 37% "broadly Northern European". I suspect that the Dutch, not being recognised as a different group, are thrown in with the British and the Scandinavians (ao). This leads some even to conclude that the Dutch are actually from Britain (etc), while, historically, it is more likely that Dutch people moved to Britain than vice versa.

Anonymous said...

The strongest gene for African genome would be the "short nappy hair" type.

U.S. Black American women for example shop for all sorts of weaves, wigs and get chemical treatments such as perms to hide away their hair.

Biracials for example tend to have curly hair (sometimes wavy). The straighter the hair, the less black one is.

Assistant Village Idiot said...

The "one drop" rule was never universal in America. It's a real part of history and not a myth, but is usually overstated in its application.