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Sudan's complex genetic admixture history drives adaptation to malaria in Sudanese Copts.

Vilà-Valls Laura, L Garcia-Calleja, Jorge J et al.

41493817 PubMed ID
12 Authors
2026-01-20 Published
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

VL
Vilà-Valls Laura
LG
L Garcia-Calleja
JJ
Jorge J
PJ
Prado-Martinez Javier
JB
J Bosch
EE
Elena E
AA
Andrés Aida M
AN
AM Netea
MG
Mihai G MG
CD
Comas David
DH
D Hassan
HY
Hisham Y HY
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Sudan lies at the crossroads of Africa and the Middle East, with rich cultural, linguistic, and ecological diversity shaped by a complex demographic history. We present a whole-genome sequencing (WGS) study of Sudanese populations, analyzing high-coverage genomes (~30×) from 125 individuals representing five ethnolinguistic groups across three language families. Our results reveal deep population structure, involving Nilo-Saharan, West Eurasian, Northern African, and Western African ancestral components, as well as signatures of the Arab expansion. We report over one million novel variants, including population-specific deleterious alleles, highlighting the need for broader African genomic representation. Notably, local ancestry inference reveals a strong signal of adaptive admixture on chromosome 1 in Sudanese Copts, marked by a peak of Nilo-Saharan ancestry introduced via genetic admixture 1,000 to 1,500 y ago. At this locus, we estimate a remarkably strong selection coefficient (s = 0.0996) for SNP rs2814778 within the ACKR1 gene, which is responsible for the Duffy-null blood group that provides resistance to Plasmodium vivax malaria. These findings reveal Sudan as a genomic mosaic shaped by ancient and recent migrations and provide clear evidence of admixture-driven adaptation in an understudied region of Africa.

Chapter III

AI-Generated Summary

AI-generated by DNAGENICS

Independent AI summary of ancestry and genetic findings from the published study

Important: This summary is AI-generated by DNAGENICS for informational purposes only. It was not created by, affiliated with, or endorsed by the researchers behind the original publication, and is based solely on that published research. It may contain errors or omissions. DNAGENICS disclaims all liability for any inaccuracies or consequences arising from use of this information. Verify all information against the original publication. This is not professional scientific review or medical advice.

Summary

Key Findings

Ancestry Insights

Traits Analysis

Historical Context