Just a quick observation: the "Native American" components at K=4 and K=5 are probably partially Caucasoid. For example, at K=3, Puerto Ricans are 62% Caucasian, and this becomes 18% at K=5. This is due to the fact that the three "Native American" components at K=5 are actually mixes of a Caucasoid with a local Amerindian component.
As I explain here, ADMIXTURE increases the proportion of the "native" component in the absence of pure-blooded representatives of the indigenous inhabitants. Since the Taino are extinct, the "Native American 3" component is actually a hybrid of the Taino aborigines and Europeans.
PLoS Genet 8(4): e1002640. doi:10.1371/journal.pgen.1002640
Population Structure of Hispanics in the United States: The Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis
Ani Manichaikul et al.
Using ~60,000 SNPs selected for minimal linkage disequilibrium, we perform population structure analysis of 1,374 unrelated Hispanic individuals from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA), with self-identification corresponding to Central America (n = 93), Cuba (n = 50), the Dominican Republic (n = 203), Mexico (n = 708), Puerto Rico (n = 192), and South America (n = 111). By projection of principal components (PCs) of ancestry to samples from the HapMap phase III and the Human Genome Diversity Panel (HGDP), we show the first two PCs quantify the Caucasian, African, and Native American origins, while the third and fourth PCs bring out an axis that aligns with known South-to-North geographic location of HGDP Native American samples and further separates MESA Mexican versus Central/South American samples along the same axis. Using k-means clustering computed from the first four PCs, we define four subgroups of the MESA Hispanic cohort that show close agreement with self-identification, labeling the clusters as primarily Dominican/Cuban, Mexican, Central/South American, and Puerto Rican. To demonstrate our recommendations for genetic analysis in the MESA Hispanic cohort, we present pooled and stratified association analysis of triglycerides for selected SNPs in the LPL and TRIB1 gene regions, previously reported in GWAS of triglycerides in Caucasians but as yet unconfirmed in Hispanic populations. We report statistically significant evidence for genetic association in both genes, and we further demonstrate the importance of considering population substructure and genetic heterogeneity in genetic association studies performed in the United States Hispanic population.
Link
Well, so far, no comments that Dienekes is wrong and that the taino indians of Puerto Rico are not extinct. This is a good thing, a few months there were a flush of negative comments on the Internet criticizing an article (in the journal Nature I believe?) that made the same statement, with some fringe groups insisting the Taino were not extinct. Some comments veered into the bizarre.
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