| Literature DB >> 30078708 |
Elizabeth Grace Atkinson1, Amanda Jane Audesse2, Julia Adela Palacios3, Dean Michael Bobo4, Ashley Elizabeth Webb5, Sohini Ramachandran6, Brenna Mariah Henn7.
Abstract
FOXP2, initially identified for its role in human speech, contains two nonsynonymous substitutions derived in the human lineage. Evidence for a recent selective sweep in Homo sapiens, however, is at odds with the presence of these substitutions in archaic hominins. Here, we comprehensively reanalyze FOXP2 in hundreds of globally distributed genomes to test for recent selection. We do not find evidence of recent positive or balancing selection at FOXP2. Instead, the original signal appears to have been due to sample composition. Our tests do identify an intronic region that is enriched for highly conserved sites that are polymorphic among humans, compatible with a loss of function in humans. This region is lowly expressed in relevant tissue types that were tested via RNA-seq in human prefrontal cortex and RT-PCR in immortalized human brain cells. Our results represent a substantial revision to the adaptive history of FOXP2, a gene regarded as vital to human evolution.Entities:
Keywords: FOXP2; demography; human brain; human evolution; language; natural selection; population structure
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30078708 PMCID: PMC6128738 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2018.06.048
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582