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Research Publication

The multifaceted genomic history of Ashaninka from Amazonian Peru.

Capodiferro Marco Rosario, MR Chero Osorio, Ana María AM et al.

36931272 PubMed ID
25 Authors
2023-04-24 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

CM
Capodiferro Marco Rosario
MC
MR Chero Osorio
AM
Ana María AM
RM
Rambaldi Migliore Nicola
NT
N Tineo Tineo
DH
Dean Herman DH
RA
Raveane Alessandro
AX
A Xavier
CC
Catarina C
BM
Bodner Martin
MS
M Simão
FF
Filipa F
OL
Ongaro Linda
LM
L Montinaro
FF
Francesco F
LJ
Lindo John
JH
J Huerta-Sanchez
EE
Emilia E
PG
Politis Gustavo
GB
G Barbieri
CC
Chiara C
PW
Parson Walther
WG
W Gusmão
LL
Leonor L
AA
Achilli Alessandro
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Despite its crucial location, the western side of Amazonia between the Andes and the source(s) of the Amazon River is still understudied from a genomic and archaeogenomic point of view, albeit possibly harboring essential information to clarify the complex genetic history of local Indigenous groups and their interactions with nearby regions,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 including central America and the Caribbean.9,10,11,12 Focusing on this key region, we analyzed the genome-wide profiles of 51 Ashaninka individuals from Amazonian Peru, observing an unexpected extent of genomic variation. We identified at least two Ashaninka subgroups with distinctive genomic makeups, which were differentially shaped by the degree and timing of external admixtures, especially with the Indigenous groups from the Andes and the Pacific coast. On a continental scale, Ashaninka ancestors probably derived from a south-north migration of Indigenous groups moving into the Amazonian rainforest from a southeastern area with contributions from the Southern Cone and the Atlantic coast. These ancestral populations diversified in the variegated geographic regions of interior South America, on the eastern side of the Andes, differentially interacting with surrounding coastal groups. In this complex scenario, we also revealed strict connections between the ancestors of present-day Ashaninka, who belong to the Arawakan language family,13 and those Indigenous groups that moved further north into the Caribbean, contributing to the early Ceramic (Saladoid) tradition in the islands.14,15.

Chapter III

Analysis

Comprehensive review of ancestry and genetic findings

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