Literature DB >> 7476132

Improved analyses of human mtDNA sequences support a recent African origin for Homo sapiens.

D Penny1, M Steel, P J Waddell, M D Hendy.   

Abstract

New quantitative methods are applied to the 135 human mitochondrial sequences from the Vigilant et al. data set. General problems in analyzing large numbers of short sequences are discussed, and an improved strategy is suggested. A key feature is to focus not on individual trees but on the general "landscape" of trees. Over 1,000 searches were made from random starting trees with only one tree (a local optimum) being retained each time, thereby ensuring optima were found independently. A new tree comparison metric was developed that is unaffected by rearrangements of trees around many very short internal edges. Use of this metric showed that downweighting hypervariable sites revealed more evolutionary structure than studies that weighted all sites equally. Our results are consistent with convergence toward a global optimum. Crucial features are that the best optima show very strong regional differentiation, a common group of 49 African sequences is found in all the best optima, and the best optima contain the 16 !Kung sequences in a separate group of San people. The other 86 sequences form a heterogeneous mixture of Africans, Europeans, Australopapuans, and Asians. Thus all major human lineages occur in Africa, but only a subset occurs in the rest of the world. The existence of these African-only groups strongly contradicts multiregional theories for the origin of Homo sapiens that require widespread migration and interbreeding over the entire range of H. erectus. Only when the multiregional model is rejected is it appropriate to consider the root, based on a single locus, to be the center of origin of a population (otherwise different loci could give alternative geographic positions for the root). For this data, several methods locate the root within the group of 49 African sequences and are thus consistent with the recent African origin of H. sapiens. We demonstrate that the time of the last common ancestor cannot be the time of major expansion in human numbers, and our results are thus also consistent with recent models that differentiate between the last common ancestor, expansion out of Africa, and the major expansion in human populations. Such a two-phase model is consistent with a wide range of molecular and archeological evidence.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7476132     DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a040263

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  11 in total

1.  An mtDNA analysis in ancient Basque populations: implications for haplogroup V as a marker for a major paleolithic expansion from southwestern europe.

Authors:  N Izagirre; C de la Rúa
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1999-07       Impact factor: 11.025

2.  Patterns of ancestral human diversity: an analysis of Alu-insertion and restriction-site polymorphisms.

Authors:  W S Watkins; C E Ricker; M J Bamshad; M L Carroll; S V Nguyen; M A Batzer; H C Harpending; A R Rogers; L B Jorde
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2001-02-15       Impact factor: 11.025

3.  A back migration from Asia to sub-Saharan Africa is supported by high-resolution analysis of human Y-chromosome haplotypes.

Authors:  Fulvio Cruciani; Piero Santolamazza; Peidong Shen; Vincent Macaulay; Pedro Moral; Antonel Olckers; David Modiano; Susan Holmes; Giovanni Destro-Bisol; Valentina Coia; Douglas C Wallace; Peter J Oefner; Antonio Torroni; L Luca Cavalli-Sforza; Rosaria Scozzari; Peter A Underhill
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2002-03-21       Impact factor: 11.025

4.  The mitochondrial gene tree comes of age.

Authors:  M Richards; V Macaulay
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2001-05-10       Impact factor: 11.025

5.  Short tandem-repeat polymorphism/alu haplotype variation at the PLAT locus: implications for modern human origins.

Authors:  S A Tishkoff; A J Pakstis; M Stoneking; J R Kidd; G Destro-Bisol; A Sanjantila; R B Lu; A S Deinard; G Sirugo; T Jenkins; K K Kidd; A G Clark
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2000-09-13       Impact factor: 11.025

6.  How rapidly does the human mitochondrial genome evolve?

Authors:  N Howell; I Kubacka; D A Mackey
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1996-09       Impact factor: 11.025

7.  Phylogenetic estimation in humans and neck riddles.

Authors:  R L Cann
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1997-04       Impact factor: 11.025

8.  The geographic distribution of human Y chromosome variation.

Authors:  M F Hammer; A B Spurdle; T Karafet; M R Bonner; E T Wood; A Novelletto; P Malaspina; R J Mitchell; S Horai; T Jenkins; S L Zegura
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1997-03       Impact factor: 4.562

9.  Testing migration patterns and estimating founding population size in Polynesia by using human mtDNA sequences.

Authors:  R P Murray-McIntosh; B J Scrimshaw; P J Hatfield; D Penny
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1998-07-21       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  Rewriting evolution--"been there, done that".

Authors:  David Penny
Journal:  Genome Biol Evol       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 3.416

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