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Patrilineal populations show more male transmission of reproductive success than cognatic populations in Central Asia, which reduces their genetic diversity

Évelyne HeyerMuseum National D'histoire Naturelle, CNRS, Université Paris 7 Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Sorbonne Universités, Unité Eco‐Anthropologie Et Ethnobiologie (UMR7206) Paris FranceJean‐Tristan BrandenburgINRA, UMR 0320/UMR 8120 Génétique Végétale, Ferme Du Moulon Gif‐sur‐Yvette 91190 FranceMichela LeonardiHuman Evolutionary Anthropology Group Department of Anthropology University College London UKBruno ToupanceSorbonne UniversitéPatricia BalaresqueLaboratoire Anthropologie Moléculaire Et Imagerie De Synthèse, Unité Mixte De Recherche 5288 Centre National De La Recherche Scientifique‐Université Paul Sabatier Toulouse 31073 FranceTanya HegayAcademy of Sciences, Institute of Immunology Tashkent UzbekistanAlmaz AldashevNational Academy of Sciences of Kyrgyzstan Bishkek Kyrgyz RepublicFrédéric AusterlitzEAE - Eco-Anthropologie et Ethnobiologie (Dpt Hommes Natures Sociétés, 57 rue Cuvier 75231 Paris Cedex 05 - Musée de l'Homme, place du Trocadéro 75016 Paris - France)
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Аннотация

OBJECTIVE: The extent to which social organization of human societies impacts the patterns of genetic diversity remains an open question. Here, we investigate the transmission of reproductive success in patrilineal and cognatic populations from Central Asia using a coalescent approach. METHODS: We performed a study on the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and Y chromosome polymorphism of patrilineal and cognatic populations from Central Asia. We reconstructed the gene genealogies in each population for both kind of markers and inferred the imbalance level of these genealogies, a parameter directly related to the level of transmission of reproductive success. RESULTS: This imbalance level appeared much stronger for the Y chromosome in patrilineal populations than in cognatic populations, while no difference was found for mtDNA. Furthermore, we showed that this imbalance level correlates negatively with Y-chromosomal, mtDNA, and autosomal genetic diversity. CONCLUSIONS: This shows that patrilineality might be one of the factors explaining the male transmission of reproductive success, which, in turn, lead to a reduction of genetic diversity. Thus, notwithstanding the fact that our population genetic approach clearly shows that there is a strong male-biased transmission of reproductive success in patrilineal societies, it also highlights the fact that a social process such as cultural transmission of reproductive success could play an important role in shaping human genetic diversity, although we cannot formally exclude that this transmission has also a genetic component.

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