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Human Evolutio n What were our ancestors like? Where did we evolve? Why big brains?

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HumanEvolution

What were our ancestors like?

Where did we evolve? Why big brains?

Relationships between populations?

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Who are the closest living relatives of humans? How do we know?

Bonobo Chimp Gorilla Orang

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Where are they now?

Orangs Gorillas

Chimps Bonobos

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Early evidence: immunology

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Mitochondrial gene phylogeny

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Why might different genes yield different phylogenies?

2 3 5

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Why might different genes yield different phylogenies?

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What was the common ancestor like?

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Recent human phylogeny (best guess)

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Do we share genes with Neanderthals or Homo erectus?

mtDNA from Neanderthal

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Relationships among contemporary humans: mitochondrial DNA

Europe, Asia, Australia

Asian / Australian

African

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Interpretation of mitochondrial DNA evidence

Did we have one female ancestor in the last 200,000 years?

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Methods to determine ancestry: coalescent

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Common ancestry and genetic markers

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Genetic study of human traits

• Brain size – two loci of interest– microcephalin (MCPH1)– Abnormal spindle-like microcephaly

associated (ASPM)– Selected?

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ASPM and selection

Ka / Ks

McDonald-Kreitman test

fixed polymorphic

replacements 19 6

silent 7 10

Evans et al 2004

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Distribution of ASPM

Mekel-Bobrov et al 2005.Haplotype: 62kb

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Microcephalin and selection?

Wang and Su 2004.

Ka / Ks

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Microcephalin distribution

Evans et al 2005Haplotype: 29 kb

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Microcephalin origins

Evans et al 2006

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Relationships among human populations: Fst

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Evolution and races

• When did we stop being furry? How to know? . . .

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Evolution and races

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Evolution and races: natural selection on skin colour

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Genetic Basis of Human Skin Colour

• Partially known – one of ~6 loci identified

• Melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R)

• Unusual pattern of sequence diversity

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Human genetic diversity

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Forces acting on human populations

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Sexual selection and humans

Diamond, 1992

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Sexual selection and humans

Diamond, 1992

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ReferencesCurrat, M. et al. 2006. Comment on “Ongoing adaptive evolution of ASPM” and

“Microcephalin, a gene regulating brain size”. Science 313:172a.Diamond, J. 1992. The third chimpanzee. HarperCollins.Evans, P. D. et al. 2004. Adaptive evolution of ASPM, a major determinant of cerebral

cortical size in humans. Human molecular genetics 13:489-494.Evans, P. D. et al. 2005. Microcephalin, a gene regulating brain size, continues to evolve

adaptively in humans. Science 309:1717-1720.Evans, P. D. et al. 2006. Evidence that the adaptive allele of the brain size gene

microcephalin introgressed into Homo sapiens from an archaic Homo lineage. PNAS 103:18178-18183.

Jablonski, N. G. and Chapin, G. 2000. The evolution of human skin coloration. Journal of human evolution 39: 57-106.

Kittler, R. et al. 2003. Molecular evolution of Pediculus humanus and the origin of clothing. Current Biology 13:1414-1417.

McKee, J. K. et al. 2005. Undertanding human evolution (5th ed.) Pearson Prentice Hall.Mekel-Bobrov, N. et al. 2005. Ongoing adaptive evolution of ASPM, a brain size

determinant in Homo sapiens. Science 309: 1720-1722.Rosenberg, N. A. et al. 2002. Genetic structure of human populations Science 298:

2381-2385.Templeton, A. 2002. Out of Africa again and again. Nature 416:45-51.Varki and Altheide. 2005. Comparing the human and chimpanzee genomes: searching

for needles in a haystack. Genome research 15:1746-1758.Wang, Y and Su, B. 2004. Human molecular genetics 13: 1131-1137.

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Study questions1. Explain lineage sorting. Why is it more likely to occur with

relatively short times between speciation events? How might this explain different results for different genes for the human/chimp/gorilla relationships?

2. Is it accurate to say that humans evolved from chimps? Why or why not?

3. In a study of Old World monkeys (Hayasaka et al. 1996) three individual rhesus macaques that were studied did not form a monophyletic group. Instead, one of the rhesus macaques had mtDNA more closely related to Japanese and Taiwanese macaques (which are different species). Give at least two hypotheses explaining this.

4. Different ethnic groups within Africa are more genetically distinct from each other than all other ethnic groups combined. Explain why this might be the case.

5. Does the root of the human mtDNA tree in Africa imply that there was a single female alive 200,000 years ago? Explain.

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Study questions6. The human Y-chromosome tree appears younger than the

human mtDNA tree. Does this mean that females evolved before males?

7. Would skin color be a good trait to use for human phylogeny? Explain empirically (using data on the relationships of human populations) and theoretically (the role of traits under strong selection in phylogeny reconstruction).

8. Are hypotheses of sexual selection shaping human anatomy scientific?

9. Describe the role of each evolutionary force in human evolution.

10. What do studies of chimps and bonobos tell us about human nature? What are the limits of these studies?