Institut de Biologia Evolutiva (CSIC-Universitat Pompeu Fabra), Departament de Medicina i Ciències de la Vida, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain.
Laboratory of Genetics, Immunology, and Human Pathologies, Faculty of Science of Tunis, University of Tunis El Manar, Tunis, Tunisia.
Hum Genet. 2023 Feb;142(2):305-320. doi: 10.1007/s00439-022-02503-3. Epub 2022 Nov 28.
The Sahara Desert has acted as a barrier to human gene-flow between the northern and central parts of Africa since its aridification. Nonetheless, some contacts between both sides of the desert have occurred throughout history, mainly driven by commercial activity. Part of this was the infamous trans-Saharan slave trade, which forcedly brought peoples from south of the Sahara to North Africa from Roman times until the nineteenth century. Although historical records exist, the genetic aspects of these trans-Saharan migrations have not been deeply studied. In the present study, we assess the genetic influence of trans-Saharan migrations in current-day North Africa and characterize its amount, geographical origin, and dates. We confirm the heterogeneous and generally low-frequency presence of genomic segments of sub-Saharan origin in present-day North Africans acquired in recent historical times, and we show evidence of at least two admixture events: one dated around the thirteenth-fourteenth centuries CE between North Africans and a Western-sub-Saharan-like source similar to current-day Senegambian populations, and another one dated around the seventeenth century CE involving Tunisians and an Eastern-sub-Saharan-like source related to current-day south-Sudan and Kenyan populations. Time and location coincide with the peak of trans-Saharan slave-trade activity between Western African empires and North African powers, and are also concordant with the possibility of continuous recent south-to-north gene-flow. These findings confirm the trans-Saharan human genetic contacts, providing new and precise evidence about its possible dates and geographical origins, which are pivotal to understanding the genomic composition of an underrepresented region such as North Africa.
撒哈拉沙漠自干旱化以来一直是非洲北部和中部之间人类基因流动的障碍。尽管如此,历史上沙漠两侧之间仍有一些接触,主要是由商业活动驱动的。其中一部分是臭名昭著的跨撒哈拉奴隶贸易,从罗马时代到 19 世纪,迫使撒哈拉以南的人们被带到北非。尽管有历史记录,但这些跨撒哈拉迁移的遗传方面尚未得到深入研究。在本研究中,我们评估了跨撒哈拉迁移对当今北非的遗传影响,并描述了其数量、地理起源和日期。我们证实了当今北非的近历史时期获得的源自撒哈拉以南地区的基因组片段的异质性和普遍低频率存在,并证明了至少有两次混合事件:一次发生在公元 13-14 世纪,涉及北非人和一个类似于当今塞内加尔人口的西部撒哈拉来源,另一次发生在公元 17 世纪,涉及突尼斯人和一个类似于当今南苏丹和肯尼亚人口的东部撒哈拉来源。时间和地点与西非帝国和北非大国之间跨撒哈拉奴隶贸易活动的高峰期相吻合,也与最近从南到北的持续基因流动的可能性相一致。这些发现证实了跨撒哈拉的人类遗传接触,为其可能的日期和地理起源提供了新的、精确的证据,这对于理解北非等代表性不足的地区的基因组组成至关重要。