Title: The Human Genome and Human Evolution
1The Human Genome and Human Evolution
- Chris Tyler-Smith
- The Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
2Outline
- Information from fossils and archaeology
- Neutral (or assumed-to-be-neutral) genetic
markers - Classical markers
- Y chromosome
- Demographic changes
- Genes under selection
- Balancing selection
- Positive selection
3Who are our closest living relatives?
Chen FC Li WH (2001) Am. J. Hum. Genet. 68
444-456
4Phenotypic differences between humans and other
apes
Carroll (2003) Nature 422, 849-857
5Chimpanzee-human divergence
6-8 million years
Hominids or hominins
Chimpanzees
Humans
6Origins of hominids
- Sahelanthropus tchadensis
- Chad (Central Africa)
- Dated to 6 7 million years ago
- Posture uncertain, but slightly later hominids
were bipedal
Toumai, Chad, 6-7 MYA
Brunet et al. (2002) Nature 418, 145-151
7Hominid fossil summary
Found only in Africa
Found both in Africa and outside, or only outside
Africa
8Origins of the genus Homo
- Homo erectus/ergaster 1.9 million years ago in
Africa - Use of stone tools
- H. erectus in Java 1.8 million years ago
Nariokatome boy, Kenya, 1.6 MYA
9Additional migrations out of Africa
- First known Europeans date to 800 KYA
- Ascribed to H. heidelbergensis
Atapueca 5, Spain, 300 KYA
10Origins of modern humans (1)
- Anatomically modern humans in Africa 130 KYA
- In Israel by 90 KYA
- Not enormously successful
Omo I, Ethiopia, 130 KYA
11Origins of modern humans (2)
- Modern human behaviour starts to develop in
Africa after 80 KYA - By 50 KYA, features such as complex tools and
long-distance trading are established in Africa
The first art? Inscribed ochre, South Africa, 77
KYA
12Expansions of fully modern humans
- Two expansions
- Middle Stone Age technology in Australia 50 KYA
- Upper Palaeolithic technology in Israel 47 KYA
Lake Mungo 3, Australia, 40 KYA
13Routes of migration?archaeological evidence
Upper Paleolithic
130 KYA
Middle Stone Age
14Strengths and weaknesses of the
fossil/archaeological records
- Major source of information for most of the time
period - Only source for extinct species
- Dates can be reliable and precise
- need suitable material, C calibration required
- Did they leave descendants?
14
15Mixing or replacement?
16Human genetic diversity is low
17Human genetic diversity is evenly distributed
Most variation between populations
Most variation within populations
Templeton (1999) Am. J. Anthropol. 100, 632-650
18Phylogenetic trees commonly indicate a recent
origin in Africa
Y chromosome
19Modern human mtDNA is distinct from Neanderthal
mtDNA
Krings et al. (1997) Cell 90, 19-30
20Classical marker studies
Based on 120 protein-coding genes in 1,915
populations Cavalli-Sforza Feldman (2003)
Nature Genet. 33, 266-275
21Phylogeographic studies
- Analysis of the geographical distributions of
lineages within a phylogeny - Nodes or mutations within the phylogeny may be
dated - Extensive studies of mtDNA and the Y chromosome
22Y haplogroup distribution
Jobling Tyler-Smith (2003) Nature Rev. Genet.
4, 598-612
23An African origin
24SE Y haplogroups
25NW Y haplogroups
26Did both migrations leave descendants?
- General SE/NW genetic distinction fits
two-migration model - Basic genetic pattern established by initial
colonisation - All humans outside Africa share same subset of
African diversity (e.g. Y M168, mtDNA L3) - Large-scale replacement, or migrations were not
independent - How much subsequent change?
27Fluctuations in climate
Ice ages
Antarctic ice core data
Greenland ice core data
28Possible reasons for genetic change
- Adaptation to new environments
- Food production new diets
- Population increase new diseases
29Debate about the Paleolithic-Neolithic transition
- Major changes in food production, lifestyle,
technology, population density - Were these mainly due to movement of people or
movement of ideas? - Strong focus on Europe
30Estimates of the Neolithic Y contribution in
Europe
- 22 (Eu4, 9, 10, 11) Semino et al. (2000)
Science 290, 1155-1159 - gt70 (assuming Basques Paleolithic and
Turks/Lebanese/ Syrians Neolithic populations)
Chikhi et al. (2002) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
99, 11008-11013
31More recent reshaping of diversity
- Star cluster Y haplotype originated in/near
Mongolia 1,000 (700-1,300) years ago - Now carried by 8 of men in Central/East
Asia, 0.5 of men worldwide - Suggested association with Genghis Khan
Zerjal et al. (2003) Am. J. Hum. Genet. 72,
717-721
32Is the Y a neutral marker?
- Recurrent partial deletions of a region required
for spermatogenesis - Possible negative selection on multiple (14/43)
lineages
Repping et al. (2003) Nature Genet. 35, 247-251
33Demographic changes
- Population has expanded in range and numbers
- Genetic impact, e.g. predominantly negative
values of Tajimas D - Most data not consistent with simple models e.g.
constant size followed by exponential growth
34Selection in the human genome
time
Negative (Purifying, Background)
Positive (Directional)
Neutral
Balancing
Bamshad Wooding (2003) Nature Rev. Genet. 4,
99-111
35The Prion protein gene and human disease
- Prion protein gene PRNP linked to protein-only
diseases e.g. CJD, kuru - A common polymorphism, M129V, influences the
course of these diseases the MV heterozygous
genotype is protective - Kuru acquired from ritual cannibalism was
reported (1950s) in the Fore people of Papua New
Guinea, where it caused up to 1 annual mortality - Departure from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium for the
M129V polymorphism is seen in Fore women over 50
(23/30 heterozygotes, P 0.01)
36Non-neutral evolution at PRNP
McDonald-Kreitman test
Resequence coding region in ? humans and apes
N S Diversity 5
1 Divergence (Gibbon) 2 13
P-value 0.0055
Mead et al. (2003) Science 300, 640-643
coding
non-coding
37Balancing selection at PRNP
- Excess of intermediate-frequency SNPs e.g.
Tajimas D 2.98 (Fore), 3.80 (CEPH families) - Deep division between the M and V lineages,
estimated at 500,000 years (using 5 MY
chimp-human split)
24 SNPs in 4.7 kb region, 95 haplotypes
38Effect of positive selection
Neutral
Selection
Derived allele of SNP
39What changes do we expect?
- New genes
- Changes in amino-acid sequence
- Changes in gene expression (e.g. level, timing or
location) - Changes in copy number
40How do we find such changes?
- Chance
- fhHaA type I hair keratin gene inactivation in
humans - Identify phenotypic changes, investigate genetic
basis - Identify genetic changes, investigate functional
consequences
41Inheritance of a language/speech defect in the KE
family
Autosomal dominant inheritance pattern
Lai et al. (2000) Am. J. Hum. Genet. 67, 357-367
42Mutation and evolution of the FOXP2 gene
Chr 7
7q31
Nucleotide substitutions
FOXP2 gene
silent
replacement
Enard et al. (2002) Nature 418, 869-872
43Positive selection at the FOXP2 gene
Constant rate of amino-acid replacements?
Positive selection in humans?
- Resequence 14 kb of DNA adjacent to the
amino-acid changes in 20 diverse humans, two
chimpanzees and one orang-utan - No reduction in diversity
- Excess of low-frequency alleles (Tajimas D
-2.20) - Excess of high-frequency derived alleles (Fay
Wus H -12.24) - Simulations suggest a selective sweep at 0 (0
200,000) years
replacement (non-synonymous) dN
silent (synonymous) dS
Orang
Gorilla
Chimp
Human
Human-specific increase in dN/dS ratio (Plt0.001)
Enard et al. (2002) Nature 418, 869-872
44A gene affecting brain size
- Microcephaly (MCPH)
- Small (430 cc v 1,400 cc) but otherwise normal
brain, only mild mental retardation - MCPH5 shows Mendelian autosomal recessive
inheritance - Due to loss of activity of the ASMP gene
ASPM-/ASPM-
control
Bond et al. (2002) Nature Genet. 32, 316-320
45Evolution of the ASPM gene (1)
Summary dN/dS values
Sliding-window dN/dS analysis
0.62
0.52
0.53
1.44
0.56
0.56
Orang
Gorilla
Chimp
Human
Human-specific increase in dN/dS ratio (Plt0.03)
Evans et al. (2004) Hum. Mol. Genet. 13, 489-494
46Evolution of the ASPM gene (2)
McDonald-Kreitman test
Sequence ASPM coding region from 40 diverse
individuals and one chimpanzee
N S Diversity
6 10 Divergence 19 7
P-value 0.025
Evans et al. (2004) Hum. Mol. Genet. 13, 489-494
47What changes?
- FOXP2 is a member of a large family of
transcription factors and could therefore
influence the expression of a wide variety of
genes - The Drosophila homolog of ASPM codes for a
microtubule-binding protein that influences
spindle orientation and the number of neurons
- Subtle changes to the function of well-conserved
genes
48Genome-wide search for protein sequence evolution
- 7645 human-chimp-mouse gene trios compared
- Most significant categories showing positive
selection include - Olfaction sense of smell
- Amino-acid metabolism diet
- Development e.g. skeletal
- Hearing for speech perception
Clark et al. (2003) Science 302, 1960-1963
49Gene expression differences in human and
chimpanzee cerebral cortex
- Affymetrix oligonuclotide array (10,000) genes
- 91 show human-specific changes, 90 increases
Caceres et al. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
100, 13030-13035
50Copy number differences between human and
chimpanzee genomic DNA
Human male reference genomic DNA hybridised with
female chimpanzee genomic DNA
Locke et al. (2003) Genome Res. 13, 347-357
51Selection at the CCR5 locus
- CCR5?32/CCR5?32 homozygotes are resistant to HIV
and AIDS
- The high frequency and wide distribution of the
?32 allele suggest past selection by an unknown
agent
52Lactase persistence
- All infants have high lactase enzyme activity to
digest the sugar lactose in milk - In most humans, activity declines after weaning,
but in some it persists
LCTP
53Molecular basis of lactase persistence
- Lactase level is controlled by a cis-acting
element - Linkage and LD studies show association of
lactase persistence with the T allele of a T/C
polymorphism 14 kb upstream of the lactase gene
Enattah et al. (2002) Nature Genet. 30, 233-237
54The lactase-persistence haplotype
- The persistence-associated T allele occurs on a
haplotype (A) showing LD over gt 1 Mb
- Association of lactase persistence and the A
haplotype is less clear outside Europe
55Selection at the G6PD gene by malaria
- Reduced G6PD enzyme activity (e.g. A allele)
confers some resistance to falciparum malaria
Extended haplotype homozygosity at the A allele
Sabeti et al. (2002) Nature 419, 832-837
56Final words
Is there a genetic continuum between us and our
ancestors and the great apes? If there is, then
we can say that these i.e. microevolutionary
processes are genetically sufficient to fully
account for human uniqueness and that would be
my candidate for the top scientific problem
solved in the first decade of the new
millennium.
Nature 427, 208-209 (2004)
57Further reading
- Jobling MA, Hurles ME, Tyler-Smith C (2004) Human
Evolutionary Genetics. Garland Science (General
textbook) - Carroll SB (2003) Genetics and the making of Homo
sapiens. Nature, 422, 849-857 (Broad-ranging
review) - Paabo S (2003) The mosaic that is our genome.
Nature 421, 409-412 (Review) - Cavalli-Sforza LL, Feldman MW (2003) The
application of molecular genetic approaches to
the study of human evolution. Nature Genet. 33,
266-275 (Review) - Stringer C (2002) Modern human origins. Phil.
Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B 357, 563-579 (Fossils and
archaeology) - Forster P (2004) Ice Ages and the mitochondrial
DNA chronology of human dispersals a review.
Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B 359, 255-264 (mtDNA) - Jobling MA, Tyler-Smith C (2003) The human Y
chromosome an evolutionary marker comes of age.
Nature Rev. Genet. 4, 589-612 (Y chromosome) - Bamshad M, Wooding SP (2003) Signatures of
natural selection in the human genome. Nature
Rev. Genet. 4, 99-111