The history of Homo sapienswiki.biol.uw.edu.pl/t/img_auth.php/1/1a/Lecture_1_2013_EN.pdf · ! 6 –...

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Transcript of The history of Homo sapienswiki.biol.uw.edu.pl/t/img_auth.php/1/1a/Lecture_1_2013_EN.pdf · ! 6 –...

Evolution of human diversity

The history of Homo sapiens

!1

The primates

Chimpanzee

OrangutanGorilla

Human

Millions years ago

GibbonMacaque

HumanChimpanzeeBonoboGorillaOrangutanGibbon

HumanBonobo ChimpanzeeOrangutanMacaque Gorilla!2

The last most recent common ancestor of humans and chimps

!3

} 6 – 7 MYA – fossils } Problems assigning fossils to lineages

} 5 – 6 MYA – sequence comparisons } Different models give different results (up to 2x)

} Not earlier than 8 MYA } As distant from humans, as from chimps

} we do not come from chimps or any other modern primate

Complex relations

!4

} Many primate fossils found, some existed at the same time } Difficult to establish phylogeny

} Ancestors or side lineages?

Sahelanthropus tchadensis - Toumaï} Close to the MRCA of humans

and chimps? } Skull the size of chimp, but

proportions more “human” } About the time of speciation } Could be a side lineage?

} Only a fragment of one skull found

} ~ 6-7 MYA

!5

Orrorin tugenensis

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} Discovered: 2001 } ~ 5 - 6 MYA } Ancestor of Homo?

} If so, was Australopithecus a side lineage? } Some characteristics more human-like than

Australopithecus

} Bipedal? } based on bone structure – at least

partially

} Habitat – forest or savanna? } forest or border

Ardipithecus ramidus - Ardi

!7

} Discovered in 1994, published in 2009 } 4.4 MYA } Oldest hominin } At least partially bipedal } Ancestor of Australopithecus (?)

Ardipithecus ramidus - Ardi

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Ardipithecus

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Debate

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} It is difficult to assign the older fossils to a lineage } human lineage (hominins)? } chimpanzee lineage? } another lineage, with no surviving descendants

Evolution is not a straight line!

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Australopithecus

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} Many species found } gracile and robust

} 4 – 2 MYA } Most famous: A. afarensis

} Lucy (~3.6 mln lat) } Mrs. Ples

} A. africanus } The Taung child

} A. boisei - Olduvai

Australopithecus sediba

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} Described in 2010, Age: ~ 2 MY } Many traits between Australopithecus and Homo

Australopithecus sediba

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Skull volume closer to Australopithecus (~420 cm3), but some morphological traits closer to Homo - lateral asymmetry – language?

http://www.sciencemag.org

Human ancestry?

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} Australopithecus afarensis -> Homo habilis } A. sediba – side lineage

!} A. africanus -> A. sediba -> Homo

} A. afarensis – side lineage

Homo

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} ~ 2.3 MYA } older than A. sediba – one had to be a side branch

} The Olduvai culture tools (1.9 MYA) – Homo habilis

} Homo erectus, H. ergaster (“pithecanthropus”) – 1.5 MYA, extinct 70 000 YBP } First to leave Africa } First to use fire } Hunting (spears) } Social structures

Narzędzie sprzed 1,8 mln. lat z Olduvai British Museum

!17

Homo

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} Fossils found in Republic of Georgia (Dmanisi) (~1.8 MYA) suggest that H. habilis, H. ergaster and H. rudolfensis could be the same species as H. erectus

} Based on morphological variation (no ancient DNA that old)

The cradle of humanity

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Australopithecus afarensis (Lucy) oldest Homo fossils (a jawbone ~ 2.3 MY)

Australopithecus, Homo habilis, H. erectus, H. sapiens

Australopithecus africanus A. sediba

The cradle of humanity

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The first migrations from Africa

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About 2 MYA …

!23

Multiregional hypothesis = regional continuity

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Multiregional evolution

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} Human ancestors left Africa ~ 2 million years ago and evolved in parallel on different continents

} Gene flow (continuity) between regional populations } if that were the case, TMRCA of modern humans should

be ~ 2 MYA } mtDNA studies showed TMRCA ~ 200 000 years

The OAR model (Out of Africa Replacement)

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OAR

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} Out of Africa } ~ 200 000 an ancestral population (already

anatomically modern H. sapiens) migrated from Africa to other continents

} New migrants displaced the previous hominids, without mixing and drove them to extinction

} All modern humans are descendants of this last wave of migration

} mtDNA is highly polymorphic } inherited as a single genetic unit (uniparental

inheritance) } sets of polymorphism inherited together as

haplotypes } haplogroups (clusters of haplotypes sharing

common polymorphisms) correlate with population history - used in anthropology, forensics etc.

mtDNA polymorphism

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mtDNA haplogroups

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mtDNA tree

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Y chromosome haplogroups

Jobling & Tyler-Smith (2003) Nature Rev. Genet. 4, 598-612!32

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!34

Conclusions} mtDNA and chromosome Y trees are both rooted

in African populations } TMRCA -100 000—200 000 years } Supports OAR (recent African descent)

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Human genetic diversity is low

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} Two  chimpanzees  (e.g.  Central  and  Western  African)  have  up  to  5  x  more  genetic  differences  than  most  distant  humans  

} Human  genetic  diversity  highest  in  Africa  } Bottlenecks  

} Migrations  -­‐  serial  founder  effect  } Natural  disaster  70  000  years  ago  (Toba  volcano)? } Population  reduced  in  Africa  before  migrations  (~170  000years  ago,  climate  change)?

Population bottleneck

An episode of reduction in population size, leading to reduced allelic diversity

!37

Founder effect

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} A new population started by a small subgroup of original population can have radically different allele frequencies

} Some rare human genetic diseases are frequent in particular isolated populations

} Reduction in human genetic diversity – serial founder effect } genetic diversity decreases with

increasing distance from African ancestors

The island of the colorblind

!39

} In 1775 the Pingelap atoll was devastated by a typhoon, killing ~90% of the population, ~20 people survived

} One of them was the ruler Nahnmwarki Mwanenised, who was a carrier of the rare autosomal recessive achromatopsia

} Currently 10% of islanders are colorblind, a 30% are carriers } In the USA the incidence of achromatopsia is 1:33 000

} Achromatopsia (nonfunctional cones) is not daltonism!

• The ‘Star cluster’ of Y haplotypes in Mongolia ~1,000 (700-1300) years ago • Currently in ~8% men in Central-Eastern Asia, ~0.5% worldwide • Genghis Khan?

Zerjal et al. (2003) Am. J. Hum. Genet. 72, 717-721

Recent changes in diversity

!40

Neanderthals} Earliest fossil traces (Asia) ~ 400 000 years b.p. } Lived in Europe, extinct~30 000 years b.p. } Modern humans colonized Europe~ 40 000 - 50

000 years b.p. } Were Neanderthals ancestors of Europeans, did

they interbreed with humans?

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Neanderthals

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} Human and Neanderthal lineages split ~ 600 000 years ago } Was in Europe before H. sapiens (earlier migration) } Culture (burials), tools, probably speech

Wikimedia commons, Anthropological Institute, University of Zürich

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The Neanderthal genome project

} mtDNA fragments of several specimens (1997) } ~ 106 bp of nDNA (2006) } 60% of nuclear genome (2010) } more complete genome of several specimens

(2013)

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Krings M., Stone A., Schmitz R.W., Krainitzki H., Stoneking M., and Pääbo S. (1997), Cell, 90:19-30.

mtDNA

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Knight A. (2003): Journal of Human Evolution, 44:627-32.

mtDNA tree

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mtDNA - conclusions} Neanderthal mtDNA outside the human tree } Not closer to Europeans than to other populations } No sign of interbreeding in Neanderthal maternal

lineage } Low population genetic diversity

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nDNA results - evolution

!48

Genome sequencing conclusions

} Human and Neanderthal lineages split long before the last common ancestor of modern humans

} Neanderthals were not our ancestors } What about interbreeding?

!49

The 2010 genome analysis

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} Confirmed the final split of lineages ~270 000 - 440 000 years ago

} SNP polymorphic sites – Neanderthal alleles found in human genomes, but only from Europe, Asia, and Oceania

} No Neanderthal SNPs in African genomes

Did humans and Neanderthals interbreed?

!51

} ~ 4% of polymorphisms in Eurasian genomes of Neanderthal origin !

} Low level of interbreeding between Neanderthals and ancestors of Eurasian populations

Scenarios

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} Amount of Neanderthal alleles is the same in Europe, Asia and Papua New Guinea } Interbreeding with the ancestors of E, A i PNG,

somewhere in the Middle East } Intermixing was rare

} wavefront effect – rapid expansion of migrant population amplifies the alleles intermixed from the encountered local populations

Not just Neanderthals

!53

} Fossils from the Denisova cave (Altai mountains) } Contemporary of Neanderthals

} probably a sister group } Traces of interbreeding in human populations from Oceania

} intermixing episode during migration to SE Asia

Interbreeding

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} Recent Denisovan genome sequence (2013) suggests interbreeding with H. sapiens, H. neanderthalensis and a fourth unknown hominid

The Sima de los Huesos mystery

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} DNA from a 400 000 years old bone fragment from Northern Spain- mtDNA closer to Denisovan than Neanderthal } bones and teeth look closer to Neanderthal } ancestor of Denisovans and Neanderthals? } a separate lineage?

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Conclusions

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} OAR is essentially supported, but more complex than thought

} Migrants could interbreed with earlier populations

Not so simple story

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} mtDNA of modern Europeans is different from European mtDNA from before 10 000 years ago } neolithic migrations (~7 000 YBP) } subsequent migrations

} also early and late Neanderthal mtDNA is different } significant inbreeding among Neanderthals - small

population size (cause of extinction?)

European prehistory

!59

} First settlement from Africa (~ 50 000 YBP) } Glacial period - repeopling from southern refugia and

postglacial recolonization (18 000 - 10 000 YBP) } Neolithic farmer migration from Near East (7 000 YBP) } later migrations

} Indo-European migration 4 000 - 1 000 YBP

European prehistory

!60

} 3 ancestral populations } West European Hunter-Gatherers (earliest) } Ancient North Eurasians (Siberia), also contributed to Native

Americans } Early European Farmers (Middle East, Neolithic revolution)

} Based on ancient DNA sequences from 7 000 - 8 000 year old skeletons

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Descendants of the first Europeans?

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} All European populations are a mixture of pre-neolithic (hunter-gatherer) and neolithic (farming) ancestry

} The only signs of continuity from pre-neolithic times - the Basque

Out of Africa - human genetic diversity

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Genetic diversity gradient

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More than genes

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} Genetic diversity correlates with language diversity

The diversity of languages

!66

classification based on phonemes (sounds)

phoneme diversity

Atkinson, Science (2011) 332: 346-349

The spread of language

!67

The question of race

!68

} Lewontin’s argument } variation within group higher than between groups } traits allowing to distinguish races - ~6% of all variability

} Traditional classification of races is based on traits that are not a good measure of genetic similarity } skin colour (~6 genes), nose and eye shape – under selection

} Some traits do show correlation (covariance) } gradients, not groups

} A continuum of genetic variability reflecting population history is real

The question of race

!69

} A continuum of genetic variability reflecting population history is real

} But it does not allow to create meaningful divisions } A monophyletic group that would include all the

descendants of a common ancestor of Africans would also include all non-Africans