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1.
Article in French | AIM (Africa) | ID: biblio-1556506

ABSTRACT

Cet article porte sur les perceptions que les Enseignants-chercheurs de l'Université des Lettres et des Sciences Humaines Bamako ( (ULSHB) ont de l'Assurance Maladie Obligatoire. L'objectif du travail est d'analyser ces différentes perceptions. Au plan méthodologique, l'approche qualitative a été exclusivement utilisée. Les entretiens individuels de type semi-directif ont été réalisés auprès de 26 enseignants-chercheurs.Les résultats révèlent une divergence de position quant aux perceptions. En effet, la quasi-totalité des enquêtés n'ont pas été sensibilisés sur la mise en œuvre de l'AMO. De même, ils n'ont pas été associés et affirment n'avoir pas été consentant quant au mode de prélèvement des cotisations sur le salaire. Quant à la gouvernance, elle est jugée mitigée, dans la mesure où elle est caractérisée parla politisation du système, le népotisme et le favoritisme dans les recrutements au sein de l'AMO. Sa pérennité est compromise au regard des pratiques qui l'entourent. Les efforts doivent porter sur la sensibilisation des couches socioprofessionnelles pour une adhésion de masse surtout avec la nouvelle forme d'assurance qui est le Régime d'Assurance Maladie Universelle


This article examines the perceptions of teachers and researchers at the Université des Lettres et des Sciences Humaines de Bamako (ULSHB) regarding compulsory health insurance. The aim of this study is to analyze these different perceptions. Methodologically, the qualitative approach was used exclusively. Semi-directive individual interviews were also used. The results reveal a divergence in perceptions. In fact, almost all of those interviewed had not been made aware of the implementation of AMO. Similarly, they had not been involved, and said they had not consented to the payroll deduction method. As for governance, it is deemed chaotic, insofar as it is characterized by corruption, politicization of the system, nepotism and favoritism in AMO recruitment. Its sustainability is compromised by the practices that surround it. Efforts must be focused on raising awareness among the socio-professional strata to ensure mass take-up, especially with the new form, the Universal Health Insurance Scheme.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Universal Health Insurance
2.
Am J Biol Anthropol ; 177(3): 540-555, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34846066

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Mode of subsistence is an important factor influencing dietary habits and the genetic structure of various populations through differential intensity of gene flow and selection pressures. Previous studies suggest that in Africa Taste 2 Receptor Member 16 (TAS2R16), which encodes the 7-transmembrane receptor protein for bitterness, might also be under positive selection pressure. METHODS: However, since sampling coverage of populations was limited, we created a new TAS2R16 population dataset from across the African Sahel/Savannah belt representing various local populations of differing subsistence modes, linguistic affiliations, and geographic provenience. We sequenced the TAS2R16 exon gene and analyzed 2250 haplotypes among 19 populations. RESULTS: We found no evidence for selection as a driving force of genetic variation at this locus; instead, we discovered a highly significant correlation between TAS2R16 genetic and geographical distances based on provenience of the sampled populations, strongly suggesting that genetic drift most likely prevailed over positive selection at this specific locus. We also found significant correlations with other independent loci, mainly in sedentary farmers. DISCUSSION: Our results do not support the notion that the genetic diversity of TAS2R16 in Sahelian populations was shaped by selective pressures. This could result from several alternative and not mutually exclusive mechanisms, of which the possibility that, due to the pleiotropic nature of TAS2R16, selective pressures on other traits could counterbalance those acting on bitter taste perception, or that the change of diet in the Neolithic generally relaxed selective pressure on this gene.


Subject(s)
Taste Buds , Taste , Humans , Taste/genetics , Africa , Genetic Structures , Demography
3.
BMC Genomics ; 20(1): 915, 2019 Dec 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31791255

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Human population history in the Holocene was profoundly impacted by changes in lifestyle following the invention and adoption of food-production practices. These changes triggered significant increases in population sizes and expansions over large distances. Here we investigate the population history of the Fulani, a pastoral population extending throughout the African Sahel/Savannah belt. RESULTS: Based on genome-wide analyses we propose that ancestors of the Fulani population experienced admixture between a West African group and a group carrying both European and North African ancestries. This admixture was likely coupled with newly adopted herding practices, as it resulted in signatures of genetic adaptation in contemporary Fulani genomes, including the control element of the LCT gene enabling carriers to digest lactose throughout their lives. The lactase persistence (LP) trait in the Fulani is conferred by the presence of the allele T-13910, which is also present at high frequencies in Europe. We establish that the T-13910 LP allele in Fulani individuals analysed in this study lies on a European haplotype background thus excluding parallel convergent evolution. We furthermore directly link the T-13910 haplotype with the Lactase Persistence phenotype through a Genome Wide Association study (GWAS) and identify another genomic region in the vicinity of the SPRY2 gene associated with glycaemic measurements after lactose intake. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that Eurasian admixture and the European LP allele was introduced into the Fulani through contact with a North African population/s. We furthermore confirm the link between the lactose digestion phenotype in the Fulani to the MCM6/LCT locus by reporting the first GWAS of the lactase persistence trait. We also explored other signals of recent adaptation in the Fulani and identified additional candidates for selection to adapt to herding life-styles.


Subject(s)
Black People/genetics , Lactase/genetics , Europe , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Flow , Genome-Wide Association Study , Humans , Transients and Migrants
4.
Expert Rev Proteomics ; 16(2): 139-159, 2019 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30580641

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Acetylation is a widely occurring post-translational modification (PTM) of proteins that plays a crucial role in many cellular physiological and pathological processes. Over the last decade, acetylation analyses required the development of multiple methods to target individual acetylated proteins, as well as to cover a broader description of acetylated proteins that comprise the acetylome. Areas covered: This review discusses the different types of acetylation (N-ter/K-/O-acetylation) and then describes some major strategies that have been reported in the literature to detect, enrich, identify and quantify protein acetylation. The review highlights the advantages and limitations of these strategies, to guide researchers in designing their experimental investigations and analysis of protein acetylation. Finally, this review highlights the main applications of acetylomics (proteomics based on mass spectrometry) for understanding physiological and pathological conditions. Expert opinion: Recent advances in acetylomics have enhanced knowledge of the biological and pathological roles of protein acetylation and the acetylome. Besides, radiolabeling and western blotting remain also techniques-of-choice for targeted protein acetylation. Future challenges in acetylomics to analyze the N-ter and K-acetylome will most likely require enrichment/fractionation, MS instrumentation and bioinformatics. Challenges also remain to identify the potential biological roles of O-acetylation and cross-talk with other PTMs.


Subject(s)
Proteome/analysis , Proteomics/methods , Acetylation , Mass Spectrometry , Protein Processing, Post-Translational
5.
Ann Hum Biol ; 44(6): 537-545, 2017 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28502204

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The origin of Western African pastoralism, represented today by the Fulani nomads, has been a highly debated issue for the past decades, and has not yet been conclusively resolved. AIM: This study focused on Alu polymorphisms in sedentary and nomadic populations across the African Sahel to investigate patterns of diversity that can complement the existing results and contribute to resolving issues concerning the origin of West African pastoralism. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: A new dataset of 21 Alu biallelic markers covering a substantial part of the African Sahel has been analysed jointly with several published North African populations. RESULTS: Interestingly, with regard to Alu variation, the relationship of Fulani pastoralists to North Africans is not as evident as was earlier revealed by studies of uniparental loci such as mtDNA and NRY. Alu insertions point rather to an affinity of Fulani pastoralists to Eastern Africans also leading a pastoral lifestyle. CONCLUSIONS: It is suggested that contemporary Fulani pastoralists might be descendants of an ancestral Eastern African population that, while crossing the Sahara in the Holocene, admixed slightly with a population of Eurasian (as evidenced by uniparental polymorphisms) ancestry. It seems that, in the Fulani pastoralists, Alu elements reflect more ancient genetic relationships than do uniparental genetic systems.


Subject(s)
Alu Elements/genetics , Polymorphism, Genetic/genetics , Transients and Migrants , Africa South of the Sahara , Humans
6.
BMC Evol Biol ; 15: 263, 2015 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26620671

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Dietary changes associated to shifts in subsistence strategies during human evolution may have induced new selective pressures on phenotypes, as currently held for lactase persistence. Similar hypotheses exist for arylamine N-acetyltransferase 2 (NAT2) mediated acetylation capacity, a well-known pharmacogenetic trait with wide inter-individual variation explained by polymorphisms in the NAT2 gene. The environmental causative factor (if any) driving its evolution is as yet unknown, but significant differences in prevalence of acetylation phenotypes are found between hunter-gatherer and food-producing populations, both in sub-Saharan Africa and worldwide, and between agriculturalists and pastoralists in Central Asia. These two subsistence strategies also prevail among sympatric populations of the African Sahel, but knowledge on NAT2 variation among African pastoral nomads was up to now very scarce. Here we addressed the hypothesis of different selective pressures associated to the agriculturalist or pastoralist lifestyles having acted on the evolution of NAT2 by sequencing the gene in 287 individuals from five pastoralist and one agriculturalist Sahelian populations. RESULTS: We show that the significant NAT2 genetic structure of African populations is mainly due to frequency differences of three major haplotypes, two of which are categorized as decreased function alleles (NAT2*5B and NAT2*6A), particularly common in populations living in arid environments, and one fast allele (NAT2*12A), more frequently detected in populations living in tropical humid environments. This genetic structure does associate more strongly with a classification of populations according to ecoregions than to subsistence strategies, mainly because most Sahelian and East African populations display little to no genetic differentiation between them, although both regions hold nomadic or semi-nomadic pastoralist and sedentary agriculturalist communities. Furthermore, we found significantly higher predicted proportions of slow acetylators in pastoralists than in agriculturalists, but also among food-producing populations living in the Sahelian and dry savanna zones than in those living in humid environments, irrespective of their mode of subsistence. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest a possible independent influence of both the dietary habits associated with subsistence modes and the chemical environment associated with climatic zones and biomes on the evolution of NAT2 diversity in sub-Saharan African populations.


Subject(s)
Arylamine N-Acetyltransferase/genetics , Genetics, Population , Molecular Biology , Acetylation , Africa South of the Sahara , Black People , Food , Genetics, Medical , Haplotypes , Humans , Polymorphism, Genetic
7.
Mol Biol Evol ; 28(9): 2491-500, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21436121

ABSTRACT

Traditional pastoralists survive in few places in the world. They can still be encountered in the African Sahel, where annual alternations of dry and wet seasons force them to continual mobility. Little is known about the genetic structure of these populations. We present here the population distribution of 312 hypervariable segment I mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and 364 Y-short tandem repeat haplotypes in both farmer and pastoralist groups from the Lake Chad Basin and the West African Sahel. We show that the majority of pastoral populations (represented in the African Sahel by the Fulani nomads) fail to show significant departure from neutrality for mtDNA as evidenced by Fu's Fs statistics and exhibit lower levels of intrapopulation diversity measures for mtDNA when contrasted with farmers. These differences were not observed for the Y chromosome. Furthermore, analyses of molecular variance and population distributions of the mtDNA haplotypes show more heterogeneity in the sedentary groups than in the pastoralists. On the other hand, pastoralists retain a signature of a wide phylogenetic distance contributing to their male gene pool, whereas in at least some of the farmer populations, a founder effect and/or drift might have led to the presence of a single major lineage. Interestingly, these observations are in contrast with those recorded in Central Asia, where similar comparisons of farmer and pastoral groups have recently been carried out. We can conclude that in Africa, there have been no substantial mating exchanges between the Fulani pastoralists coming to the Lake Chad Basin from the West African Sahel and their farmer neighbors. At the same time, we suggest that the emergence of pastoralism might be an earlier and/or a demographically more important event than the introduction of sedentary agriculture, at least in this part of Africa.


Subject(s)
Chromosomes, Human, Y/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Haplotypes , Phylogeny , Selection, Genetic , Africa , Asia, Central , Black People/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Female , Genetic Structures , Humans , Male , Population , Transients and Migrants
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