Artigo de Periódico
Admixture and Relationships of the Population of Jacobina, Bahia, Brasil
Fecha
1996Autor
Lima, Angela M. M. D.
Axevedo, Eliane
Krieger, Henrique
Cabello, P. H.
Pollitzer, William S.
Lima, Angela M. M. D.
Axevedo, Eliane
Krieger, Henrique
Cabello, P. H.
Pollitzer, William S.
Institución
Resumen
As part of the Cornell-Bahia project on leishmaniasis, the people of Jacobina
in the state of Bahia in northeastern Brazil were studied for five genetic
polymorphisms: ABO blood groups, hemoglobin variants, PGM1, GPGD,
and adenylate kinase. A maximum likelihood method of calculation of frequency of genes for these traits indicates that the ancestry of the
people is 45% African, 43070 Portuguese, and 12% Brazilian Indian. This
estimate is similar to previous estimates of admixture in the people of northeastern Brazil, except for more African and less Caucasian ancestry. Previous distance relationships, based upon physical traits only, showed
the population of Jacobina to be similar to Seminole Indians of Florida
and equally distant from Whites and Blacks. While not strictly comparable, the genetic and morphologic pictures of relationships are compatible and show
concordance with surnames. The presence of Hemoglobin C and the frequencies of alleles of PGMl and 6PGD in the Jacobina population are
consistent with the greater importation of Africans into Brazil from
Costa de Mina on the Guinea Coast than from hgOkl.