Scientific Reports (Jul 2024)

Impact of patrilocality on contrasting patterns of paternal and maternal heritage in Central-West Africa

  • Masinda Nguidi,
  • Verónica Gomes,
  • Carlos Vullo,
  • Pedro Rodrigues,
  • Martina Rotondo,
  • Micaela Longaray,
  • Laura Catelli,
  • Beatriz Martínez,
  • Afonso Campos,
  • Elizeu Carvalho,
  • Victoria O. Orovboni,
  • Samuel O. Keshinro,
  • Filipa Simão,
  • Leonor Gusmão

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-65428-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Despite their ancient past and high diversity, African populations are the least represented in human population genetic studies. In this study, uniparental markers (mtDNA and Y chromosome) were used to investigate the impact of sociocultural factors on the genetic diversity and inter-ethnolinguistic gene flow in the three major Nigerian groups: Hausa (n = 89), Yoruba (n = 135) and Igbo (n = 134). The results show a distinct history from the maternal and paternal perspectives. The three Nigerian groups present a similar substrate for mtDNA, but not for the Y chromosome. The two Niger–Congo groups, Yoruba and Igbo, are paternally genetically correlated with populations from the same ethnolinguistic affiliation. Meanwhile, the Hausa is paternally closer to other Afro-Asiatic populations and presented a high diversity of lineages from across Africa. When expanding the analyses to other African populations, it is observed that language did not act as a major barrier to female-mediated gene flow and that the differentiation of paternal lineages is better correlated with linguistic than geographic distances. The results obtained demonstrate the impact of patrilocality, a common and well-established practice in populations from Central-West Africa, in the preservation of the patrilineage gene pool and in the affirmation of identity between groups.