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Admixture dynamics in colonial Mexico and the genetic legacy of the Manila Galleon

Authors :
Rosenda I. Peñaloza-Espinosa
Erika Landa-Chavarría
Karla Sandoval
Juan Esteban Rodríguez-Rodríguez
Alexander G. Ioannidis
Andrés Moreno-Estrada
Consuelo D. Quinto-Cortés
Javier Blanco-Portillo
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

SummaryMexico has considerable population substructure due to pre-Columbian diversity and subsequent variation in admixture levels from trans-oceanic migrations, primarily from Europe and Africa, but also, to a lesser extent, from Asia. Detailed analyses exploring sub-continental structure remain limited and post-Columbian demographic dynamics within Mexico have not been inferred with genomic data. We analyze the distribution of ancestry tracts to infer the timing and number of pulses of admixture in ten regions across Mexico, observing older admixture timings in the first colonial cities and more recent timings moving outward into southern and southeastern Mexico. We characterize the specific origin of the heterogeneous Native American ancestry in Mexico: a widespread western-central Native Mesoamerican component in northern Aridoamerican states and a central-eastern Nahua contribution in Guerrero (southern Mexico) and Veracruz to its north. Yucatan shows lowland Mayan ancestry, while Sonora exhibits a unique northwestern native Mexican ancestry matching no sampled reference, each consistent with localized indigenous cultures. Finally, in Acapulco, Guerrero a notable proportion of East Asian ancestry was observed, an understudied heritage in Mexico. We identified the source of this ancestry within Southeast Asia—specifically western Indonesian and non-Negrito Filipino—and dated its arrival to approximately thirteen generations ago (1620 CE). This points to a genetic legacy from the 17thcentury Manila Galleon trade between the colonial Spanish Philippines and the Pacific port of Acapulco in Spanish Mexico. Although this piece of the colonial Spanish trade route from China to Europe appears in historical records, it has been largely ignored as a source of genetic ancestry in Mexico, neglected due to slavery, assimilation as “Indios” and incomplete historical records.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f0ce3270b7127f9fd5ac4999c99c1d93
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.10.09.463780