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Browsing by Autor "Cinthia Cuellar"

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    Genetic ancestry of families of putative Inka descent
    (Springer Science+Business Media, 2018) José R. Sandoval; Daniela R. Lacerda; Marilza S. Jota; Ronald Elward; Óscar Acosta; Donaldo Pinedo; Pierina Danós; Cinthia Cuellar; Susana Revollo; Fabrício R. Santos
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    Genetic ancestry of families of putative Inka descent.
    (LA Referencia, 2018) José R. Sandoval; Lacerda, Daniela R; Marilza S. Jota; Ronald Elward; Óscar Acosta; Donaldo Pinedo; Pierina Danós; Cinthia Cuellar; Susana Revollo; Fabrício R. Santos
    This study focuses on the descendants of the royal Inka family. The Inkas ruled Tawantinsuyu, the largest pre-Columbian empire in South America, which extended from southern Colombia to central Chile. The origin of the royal Inkas is currently unknown. While the mummies of the Inka rulers could have been informative, most were destroyed by Spaniards and the few remaining disappeared without a trace. Moreover, no genetic studies have been conducted on present-day descendants of the Inka rulers. In the present study, we analysed uniparental DNA markers in 18 individuals predominantly from the districts of San Sebastian and San Jerónimo in Cusco (Peru), who belong to 12 families of putative patrilineal descent of Inka rulers, according to documented registries. We used single-nucleotide polymorphisms and short tandem repeat (STR) markers of the Y chromosome (Y-STRs), as well as mitochondrial DNA D-loop sequences, to investigate the paternal and maternal descent of the 18 alleged Inka descendants. Two Q-M3* Y-STR clusters descending from different male founders were identified. The first cluster, named AWKI-1, was associated with five families (eight individuals). By contrast, the second cluster, named AWKI-2, was represented by a single individual; AWKI-2 was part of the Q-Z19483 sub-lineage that was likely associated with a recent male expansion in the Andes, which probably occurred during the Late Intermediate Period (1000-1450 AD), overlapping the Inka period. Concerning the maternal descent, different mtDNA lineages associated with each family were identified, suggesting a high maternal gene flow among Andean populations, probably due to changes in the last 1000 years.
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    Genetic portrait of the Amazonian communities of Peru and Bolivia: The legacy of the Takanan‐speaking people
    (Wiley, 2023) José R. Sandoval; Susana Revollo; Cinthia Cuellar; Daniela R. Lacerda; Marilza S. Jota; Ricardo Fujita; Fabrício R. Santos
    During the colonial period in South America, many autochthonous populations were affected by relocation by European missionary reductions and other factors that impacted and reconfigured their genetic makeup. Presently, the descendants of some "reduced" and other isolated groups are distributed in the Amazonian areas of Peru, Bolivia, and Brazil, and among them, speakers of Takanan and Panoan languages. Based on linguistics, these peoples should be closely related, but so far no DNA comparison studies have been conducted to corroborate a genetic relationship. To clarify these questions, we used a set of 15 short tandem repeats of the non-recombining part of the Y-chromosome (Y-STRs) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) control region sequence data. Paternal line comparisons showed the Takanan-speaking peoples from Peru and Bolivia descended from recent common ancestors; one group was related to Arawakan, Jivaroan, and Cocama and the other to Panoan speakers, consistent with linguistics. Also, a genetic affinity for maternal lines was observed between some Takanan speakers and individuals who spoke different Amazonian languages. Our results supported a shared ancestry of Takanan, Panoan, Cocama, and Jivaroan-speaking communities who appeared to be related to each other and came likely from an early Arawak expansion in the western Amazonia of South America.
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    New native South American Y chromosome lineages
    (Springer Nature, 2016) Marilza S. Jota; Daniela R. Lacerda; José R. Sandoval; Pedro Paulo Vieira; Dominique Ohasi; José E Santos-Júnior; Óscar Acosta; Cinthia Cuellar; Susana Revollo; César Paz‐y‐Miño
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    The Genetic History of Indigenous Populations of the Peruvian and Bolivian Altiplano: The Legacy of the Uros
    (Public Library of Science, 2013) José R. Sandoval; Daniela R. Lacerda; Marilza S. Jota; Alberto Salazar‐Granara; Pedro Paulo Vieira; Óscar Acosta; Cinthia Cuellar; Susana Revollo; Ricardo Fujita; Fabrício R. Santos
    The Altiplano region of the South American Andes is marked by an inhospitable climate to which the autochthonous human populations adapted and then developed great ancient civilizations, such as the Tiwanaku culture and the Inca Empire. Since pre-Columbian times, different rulers established themselves around the Titicaca and Poopo Lakes. By the time of the arrival of Spaniards, Aymara and Quechua languages were predominant on the Altiplano under the rule of the Incas, although the occurrence of other spoken languages, such as Puquina and Uruquilla, suggests the existence of different ethnic groups in this region. In this study, we focused on the pre-Columbian history of the autochthonous Altiplano populations, particularly the Uros ethnic group, which claims to directly descend from the first settlers of the Andes, and some linguists suggest they might otherwise be related to Arawak speaking groups from the Amazon. Using phylogeographic, population structure and spatial genetic analyses of Y-chromosome and mtDNA data, we inferred the genetic relationships among Uros populations (Los Uros from Peru, Uru-Chipaya and Uru-Poopo from Bolivia), and compared their haplotype profiles with eight Aymara, nine Quechua and two Arawak (Machiguenga and Yanesha) speaking populations from Peru and Bolivia. Our results indicated that Uros populations stand out among the Altiplano populations, while appearing more closely related to the Aymara and Quechua from Lake Titicaca and surrounding regions than to the Amazon Arawaks. Moreover, the Uros populations from Peru and Bolivia are genetically differentiated from each other, indicating a high heterogeneity in this ethnic group. Finally, our results support the distinctive ancestry for the Uros populations of Peru and Bolivia, which are likely derived from ancient Andean lineages that were partially replaced during more recent farming expansion events and the establishment of complex civilizations in the Andes.

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