Title: Human origins and evolution
1Human origins and evolution
- Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford
2Questions about human origins
- What defines a human?
- What does the fossil record tell us?
- What are the genetic changes that make us human?
- What are the genetic changes that make people(s)
different?
3What makes us human?
- Upright posture, bipedalism
- Advanced tool-making capability
- Big brain, relative to body size, and small
canine teeth - Global dispersal
- Use of fire to modify environment
- Language and consciousness (self-awareness)
- Complex culture
4Human brain size
- Humans have an encephalisation quotient of about
6.5 8.0 - The biggest of any mammal!
Mammals Ebrain 0.12 x Mbody 2/3
5What is culture?
- Language
- Beliefs
- Rituals
- Law
- Morality
- Manners
- Visual arts
6Great ape phylogeny
- Human and chimp ancestors split about 6 MYA
Hacia JG (2001)
7A recent X?
- Suggestion of a more recent divergence time for X
chromosome - Patterson et al (2006)
8Some terminology
- Hominid is a term used to describe Humans and any
lineages that share a common ancestor with humans
more recently than the human-chimp split
9An overview of the fossils
Human chimp split
Origin of H. sapiens sapiens
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11Australopithecus
- 3.9 3 MYA
- Both gracile and robust forms (latter called
Paranthropus) - Evidence for sexual dimorphism within these
species
Australopithecus robustus
Australopithecus africanus
Australopithecus afarensis (Lucy)
Australopithecus boisei
12The Laetoli footprints
- First evidence of bipedalism
- 3.7 MYA
- Three sets of tracks in volcanic ash
13Lucy
- 3.2 MYA from Ethiopia
- Lucy was bipedal, an adaptation for travel across
savannah woodlands and grasslands - Big teeth, still not a big brain.
14Early Homo species
15Homo habilis
- 2.6 1.4 MYA
- Some, but not all, have slightly bigger brains
- Maker of tools (Oldowan tools)
16Striding out, standing tall, and at last, a big
brain
Brain size versus height
- Turkana boy (1.5 million years ago) the earliest
individual with estimated brain size (909cc)
significantly above primate allometry curve. - Homo ergaster
17H. ergaster lived in Eurasia at same time as in
Africa
- Dmanisi fossils date to 1.7 mya
- Caucasus Mountains, Republic of Georgia (well
north of the tropics) - Associated Oldowan tools
- H. ergaster is the first species of hominin
adapted for endurance running.
18Why leave Africa? The role of Pleistocene climate
change
- Middle Pleistocene climate colder and more
variable long cold glacial periods punctuated by
short, warmer interglacials - Migrations of many species between Africa and
Eurasia during interglacials
Warm
Onset of Lower Pleistocene glaciations at 2
million years ago with formation of permanent ice
sheets and sharp cooling. Africa becomes drier.
19What is life in the Pleistocene like for early
Homo species?
- Hunting game as well as scavenging
- Control of fire
- Possibly from 2MYA
- Improving the tool kit
- more elaborate Acheulean stone tools e.g.
handaxe for butchering - Increasingly complex social behaviour
20Homo erectus did cross sea barriers
- Archaeology on Flores, dates to 840,000 years ago
- H. florensiensis (Hobbits) on Flores date to as
recently as 20,000 yrs ago
Hobbit on left compared with modern human
21Homo sapiens neanderthalensis
- From H. heidelbergensis (0.75 0.25 MYA)
- Only found in Europe and near East
- Diverged from AMH lineage about 0.8 MYA
- More robust than AMH, but shared many features of
culture - Music
- Jewellery
- Complex tools
- Ritual (burial of dead)
- Language ability?
22Homo sapiens sapiens
- Anatomically modern humans (AMH)
- Modern anatomy at 200,000 years ago (Ethiopia
Omo I and II) - Out-of-Africa event 70,000 years ago
23Out of Africa diversity among early modern Homo
sapiens
- Skhul 5, Israel, 90,000 Yrs
- Cro-Magnon 1, France, 23-27 KYrs
- Kow Swamp, robust Aboriginal Australian, 9-13 KYrs
Shared features Cranial vault height high and
domed, brow ridges lighter or absent, chin present
24Dispersal of AMHs out of Africa
- Into Middle East by 90,000 years ago, and then
retreat. (Neanderthal distribution expands) - Reach Australia by 60,000 years ago, apparently
via south Asian coastal route. - 40,000 years ago substantial presence of moderns
in Europe and Asia (little evidence in
archaeological record at earlier dates) - Last Neanderthals about 25,000 years ago
- Bottleneck in dispersal out of Africa -
implicated by genetic data - Note that this bottleneck is not associated with
speciation, only with modest structure between
sub-Saharan and other human populations.
25What does genetic variation tell us about human
evolution?
- Modern humans appear in the fossil record about
200K years ago - The mitochondrial Eve dates back to about 150K
years ago - The Y-chromosome Adam dates back to about 70K
years ago - AMHs left Africa about 70KYA
- For most of our genome, however, the common
ancestor is about 500K 1M years ago - This predates the origin of Homo sapiens
considerably
26Did early humans interbreed with Neanderthals?
Neanderthals
mtDNA sequences say no
Ovchinnikov et al (2000)
27But
- There is some evidence for this in the presence
of unusual haplotypes found in Europe composed of
SNPs not found in non-European populations
Plagnol and Wall (2006)
28Deeper trees in the human genome
- There is growing evidence that some regions of
our genome have truly ancient common ancestors - Dystrophin has an ancient haplotype found
primarily outside Africa suggesting a
colonisation of gt160KYA - There is an inversion found primarily in
Europeans that is roughly 3MY old
Haplotype 1
Haplotype 2
Stefansson et al (2005)
29What are the genetic differences that make us
human?
30Chromosomal changes
- Human chromosome 2 is a fusion of two chromosomes
in great apes - There are several inversion differences between
the chromosomes
Feuk et al (2005)
31Gene loss
- Loss of enzymes that make sialic acid
- Sugar on cell surface that mediates a variety of
recognition events involving pathogenic microbes
and toxins - Myosin heavy chain
- Associated with gracilization
Wang et al (2006)
32Gene evolution
- FOXP2 is a highly conserved gene (across the
mammalia), expressed in the brain. Mutations in
the gene in humans are associated with specific
language impairment - Across the entire mammalian phylogeny, there have
only been a very few amino acid changing
substitutions - However, two amino acid changes have become fixed
in the lineage leading to modern humans since the
split with the chimpanzee lineage
Enard et al. (2002)
33What are the genetic differences that make people
and peoples different?
34How do we differ? Let me count the ways
- Single nucleotide polymorphisms
- 1 every few hundred bp
- Short indels (insertion/deletion)
- 1 every few kb
- Microsatellite (STR) repeat number
- 1 every few kb
- Minisatellites
- 1 every few kb
- Repeated genes
- rRNA, histones
- Large inversions, deletions
- Y chromosome, Copy Number Variants (CNVs)
TGCATTGCGTAGGC TGCATTCCGTAGGC
TGCATT---TAGGC TGCATTCCGTAGGC
TGCTCATCATCATCAGC TGCTCATCA------GC
100bp
1-5kb
35Detecting recent adaptive evolution
- Lets look closely at the dynamics of the
fixation process for adaptive mutations - The fixation of a beneficial mutation is
associated with a change in the patterns of
linked neutral genetic variation - This is known as the hitch-hiking effect (Maynard
Smith and Haigh 1974) - Looking for the signature of hitch-hiking can be
a good way of detecting very recent fixation
events
36Diversity is not evenly distributed across genes
II
- Adaptive evolution wipes out diversity nearby
due to the hitch-hiking effects of a selective
sweep - e.g. Duffy-null locus in sub-Saharn africa,
protects against P. vivax
FYO mutation
African
Pop1
Pop2
European
Ancestral allele
Derived allele
Missing data
Hamblin and Di Rienzo (2000)
37Long haplotypes
- A selective sweep at the Lactase gene in Europeans
38Strong population differentiation
Lamason et al (Science 2005)
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40Classes of selected genes
Voight et al. (2005)