Tsosie Krystal S, Begay Rene L, Fox Keolu, Garrison Nanibaa' A
Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37325, USA; Native BioData Consortium, Eagle Butte, SD 57625, USA.
Centers for American Indian and Alaska Native Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO 80045, USA.
Curr Opin Genet Dev. 2020 Jun;62:91-96. doi: 10.1016/j.gde.2020.06.010. Epub 2020 Jul 25.
For decades, scientists have collected genomic information from Indigenous peoples and their ancestors with the goal of elucidating human migration events, understanding ancestral origins, and identifying ancestral variants contributing to disease. However, such studies may not have offered much benefit to the Indigenous groups who contributed DNA, and many have instead perpetuated stereotypes and other harms. With recent advances in genomic technology facilitating the study of both ancient and present-day DNA, researchers and Indigenous communities have new opportunities to begin collaboratively addressing important questions about human health and history. Yet, while there are increased efforts to ethically engage Indigenous communities, more work is still needed as the discipline struggles to absolve itself of the racialized science and extractive biocolonialism that defined its past.
几十年来,科学家们从原住民及其祖先那里收集基因组信息,目的是阐明人类迁徙事件、了解祖先起源以及识别导致疾病的祖先变异。然而,这类研究可能并未给提供DNA的原住民群体带来太多益处,相反,许多研究延续了刻板印象及其他危害。随着基因组技术的最新进展推动了对古代和现代DNA的研究,研究人员和原住民社区有了新的机会,可以开始合作解决有关人类健康和历史的重要问题。然而,尽管在以符合伦理的方式与原住民社区合作方面做出了更多努力,但由于该学科仍在努力摆脱曾定义其过去的种族化科学和掠夺性生物殖民主义,仍有更多工作要做。