| Literature DB >> 27561111 |
Abstract
A brief introduction considering Darwin's work, the evolutionary synthesis, and the scientific biological field around the 1970s and subsequently, with the molecular revolution, was followed by selected examples of recent investigations dealing with the selection-drift controversy. The studies surveyed included the comparison between essential genes in humans and mice, selection in Africa and Europe, and the possible reasons why females in humans remain healthy and productive after menopause, in contrast with what happens in the great apes. At the end, selected examples of investigations performed in Latin America, related to the action of selection for muscle performance, acetylation of xenobiotics, high altitude and tropical forest adaptations were considered. Despite dissenting views, the influence of positive selection in a considerable portion of the human genome cannot presently be dismissed.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27561111 PMCID: PMC5004836 DOI: 10.1590/1678-4685-GMB-2016-0020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Mol Biol ISSN: 1415-4757 Impact factor: 1.771
The main contents of Darwin's "The Descent of Man".
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Proofs of descent of human from some inferior forms How humans developed from some inferior forms Comparison between the mental abilities of humans and of inferior animals Development of the intellectual and moral faculties during the primitive and civilized ages Human affinity and genealogy The human races
Principles of sexual selection Sexual secondary characteristics in the inferior classes of the animal world Sexual secondary characteristics of insects Sexual secondary characteristics of fishes, amphibians, and reptiles Sexual secondary characteristics of birds Sexual secondary characteristics of mammals
Human sexual secondary characteristics Conclusion |
Figure 1Group photograph of the participants of the 1974 Burg Wartenstein Symposium, The Role of Natural Selection in Human Evolution. First row, from left to right: 1. P.V. Tobias; 2. N.E. Morton; 3. W.M. Fitch; 4. J.S. Friedlander; 5. J. Huizinga; 6. J. Gomila; 7. J.V. Neel; 8. F. Vogel; 9. D.F. Roberts; 10. A.G. Motulsky; 11. T.E. Reed; 12. L. Osmundsen; 13. L.D. Sanghvi. Second row, also left to right: 14. F.J. Ayala; 15. B. Clarke; 16. P.A. Jacobs; 17. N. Freire-Maia; 18. H. Harris; 19. F.M. Salzano; and 20. S. Ohno.
The main contents of the book "The Role of Natural Selection in Human Evolution", published in 1975.
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Scientific hypotheses, natural selection and the neutrality theory of protein evolution, by F.J. Ayala Evolutionary rates in proteins and the cost of natural selection: implications for neutral mutations, by W.M. Fitch Rates of biochemical and chromosomal changes in the vertebrates, by S. Ohno Enzyme polymorphisms and the neutral hypothesis of molecular evolution, by H. Harris
Long or short hominid phylogenies? Paleontological and molecular evidences, by P.V. Tobias
Models of population structure and reality, by J.S. Friedlander Kinship, fitness, and evolution, by N.E. Morton Fertility differentials and their significance for human evolution, by J. Gomila Frequency-dependant and density-dependent natural selection, by B. Clarke
Natural selection and human morphology, by T. Bielicki Interpopulation variability in polymorphic systems, by F.M. Salzano Selection and the blood group polymorphisms, by T.E. Reed ABO blood groups, the HLA system and disease, by F. Vogel G6PD and abnormal hemoglobin polymorphisms – evidence regarding malarial selection, by A.G. Motulsky
Adaptation and genetic load, by N. Freire-Maia The genetic consequences of inbreeding, by L.D. Sanghvi The load due to chromosome abnormalities in man, by P.A. Jacobs
The study of "natural" selection in man: last chance, by J.V. Neel Fertility, mortality and culture: the changing pattern of natural selection, by D.F. Roberts Cultural and biological adaptation in man, by J. Huizinga
Some key problems in the study of natural selection in man, by F.M. Salzano and all contributors |
Example of an organismal approach to the assessment of human essential genes.
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Initial set of genes considered: 1,716 disease genes
listed in OMIM Fraction with mouse orthologs that have been
experimentally deleted and the results cataloged in
MGI Final list, after pruning, of genes leading to death before puberty or infertility: 120
A total of 27 (22%) of the 120 mouse orthologs of human essential genes are nonessential Gene expression evolution is not the cause of the changes in gene essentiality in the two species Accelerated protein sequence evolution driven by positive selection was associated with changes in gene essentiality in at least an appreciable fraction of the 27 genes mentioned in II.1 |
OMIM: Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man database.
MGI: Mouse Genome Informatics database.
Example of a cellular approach to the assessment of human essential genes.
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Use of the bacterial clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) system to serum for genes required for proliferation and survival in the near-haploid human KBM7 chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) cell line Independently, generation at random through retroviral gene-trap mutagenesis, selection for a phenotype, and monitoring by sequencing the viral integration sites to pinpoint the causal genes For both methods, computation of a score for each gene that reflects the fitness cost imposed by the inactivation of the gene Comparison with functional profiling experiments conducted
in the yeast Comparison of two CML and two Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines
Of the 18,166 genes targeted by the library, 1878 (10%) scored as essential for optimal proliferation Results with the second method (item I.2) provided essentially the same picture Essential genes were more broadly retained across species, showed higher levels of conservation between closely related species, and contained fewer inactivating polymorphisms in humans, than their dispensable counterparts Essential genes also tended to have higher expression and encoded proteins that engage in more protein-protein interactions Differences in essential genes in the four cell lines studied might represent attractive targets for antineoplastic therapies |
Main findings of the African Genome Project.
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A total of 1,481 individuals from 18 ethno-linguistic groups living in sub-Saharan Africa were studied DNAs were investigated with the Human Omni 2.5M genotyping array and whole-genome sequences from 320 individuals were obtained
Not less than 29.8 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from Ethiopian, Zulu, and Bagandan whole-genome sequences were found A substantial proportion of unshared (11%-23%) and novel (16%-24%) variants were observed, with the highest proportion found among Ethiopian populations Highly differentiated SNPs between European and African populations, as well as among African populations, were examined for indications of selection in response to local adaptive factors Enrichment of loci known to be under positive selection was observed among the most differentiated sites Novel gene regions related to malaria, Lassa fever, trypanosomiasis, and trachoma susceptibilities, osmoregulation, and essential and secondary hypertension were identified |
Genome-wide patterns of selection in Europe.
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A total of 230 ancient individuals from West Eurasia
dated to 6.5-0.3 kya In solution hybridization with synthesized
oligonucleotide probes was performed; the targeted
sites included nearly all SNPs on the Affymetrix Human
Origins and Illumina 610-Quad arrays, and specifically
47,384 SNPs with evidence of functional importance Genetic affinities were tested considering 1,055,209
autosomal SNPs when analyzing the 230 ancient
individuals alone, or 592,169 SNPs when co-analyzing
them with 2,345 present-day persons genotyped on the
Human Origins array
Significant signals of selection on major genes
In addition, evidence of selection on height was also
obtained |
kya=kilo (one thousand) years ago.
Prevalences of ACTN3*R577X around the world.
| Geographical populations | No. of individuals studied |
|
|---|---|---|
| Africa | 794 | 9.3 |
| Middle East | 356 | 39.2 |
| Europe | 445 | 44.3 |
| Central and South Asia | 199 | 50.2 |
| East Asia | 581 | 47.7 |
| Oceania | 35 | 49.5 |
| Americas | 394 | 76.4 |
NAT2 haplotype frequencies and mode of subsistence in populations around the world.
| Population | Mode of subsistence | No. studied | NAT2
haplotypes (%) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| *4 | *5B | *6A | *7B | Others | |||
|
| |||||||
| Mesoamericans | Agriculturalists | 16 | 35 | 25 | 0 | 44 | 6 |
| Amazonian and Central Brazil | Hunter-gatherers | 166 | 31 | 36 | 5 | 25 | 3 |
| Southern | Agriculturalists | 68 | 44 | 10 | 6 | 38 | 2 |
| Chaco | Agriculturalists | 44 | 77 | 14 | 0 | 9 | 0 |
|
| |||||||
| Mexicans | Urban | 68 | 25 | 10 | 16 | 46 | 3 |
| Andeans | Agriculturalists | 134 | 36 | 25 | 16 | 13 | 10 |
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| |||||||
| Eskimo | Hunter-gatherers | 76 | 26 | 35 | 25 | 12 | 2 |
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| Several | 2,100 | 10 | 30 | 22 | 2 | 36 |
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| Several | 9,848 | 22 | 40 | 27 | 2 | 9 |
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| Several | 8,500 | 48 | 11 | 23 | 10 | 8 |
The phenotype associated to *4 is rapid; for the three others, slow.
Genes with signals of positive selection suggesting human adaptations to tropical forests in Africa and the Americas.
| Gene | Chromosome and cluster | Biological function |
|---|---|---|
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| 1,1 | Cholesterol trafficking and metabolism |
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| 4,3 | Lipid metabolism |
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| 4,4 | Muscle development |
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| 4,4 | Muscle development |
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| 4,4 | Muscle development |
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| 4,4 | Muscle development |
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| 5,5 | Unknown |
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| 5,5 | Immunity to viral infections |
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| 5,5 | Free-radical detoxification |
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| 6,6 | Regulation of body temperature |
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| 6,6 | Cell proliferation |
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| 6,6 | Unknown |
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| 7,7 | Sperm function |
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| 7,7 | Vascular system, calcium metabolism |
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| 7,7 | Vascular system, calcium metabolism |
Clusters 1 and 2 show indications of positive selection in the Americas; Clusters 4 and 5 positive selection in Africa; Clusters 6-7, convergent evolution in Africa and the Americas.
| Genes | Potential function |
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| Lactase persistence |
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| Skin pigmentation |
| MHC region | Immunity |
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| Fatty acid metabolism |
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| Immunity |
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| Unknown |
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| Vitamin D metabolism |
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| Skin pigmentation |
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| Ergothioneine transport |
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| Autophagy, Lung function |
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| Unknown |
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| Eye color |