Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

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Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford

Transcript of Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Page 1: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Human origins and evolution

Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford

Page 2: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Questions about human origins

• What defines a human?

• What does the fossil record tell us?

• What are the genetic changes that make us human?

• What are the genetic changes that make people(s) different?

Page 3: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

What makes us human?

• Upright posture, bipedalism

• Advanced tool-making capability

• Big brain, relative to body size, and small canine teeth

• Global dispersal

• Use of fire to modify environment

• Language and ‘consciousness’ (self-awareness)

• Complex culture

Page 4: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Human brain size

• Humans have an encephalisation quotient of about 6.5 – 8.0– The biggest of any mammal!

Mammals: Ebrain = 0.12 x Mbody

2/3

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What is culture?

• Language

• Beliefs

• Rituals

• Law

• Morality

• Manners

• Visual arts

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Great ape phylogeny

• Human and chimp ancestors split about 6 MYA

Hacia JG (2001)

Page 7: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

A recent X?

• Suggestion of a more recent divergence time for X chromosome– Patterson et al (2006)

Page 8: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Some terminology

• Hominid is a term used to describe Humans and any lineages that share a common ancestor with humans more recently than the human-chimp split

Page 9: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

An overview of the fossils

Human – chimp splitOrigin of H. sapiens sapiens

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Australopithecus

• 3.9 – 3 MYA

• Both gracile and robust forms (latter called Paranthropus)

• Evidence for sexual dimorphism within these species

Australopithecus boisei

Australopithecus robustus

Australopithecus afarensis (Lucy)

Australopithecus africanus

Page 12: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

The Laetoli footprints

• First evidence of bipedalism

• 3.7 MYA

• Three sets of tracks in volcanic ash

Page 13: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Lucy

• 3.2 MYA from Ethiopia

• Lucy was bipedal, an adaptation for travel across savannah woodlands and grasslands

• Big teeth, still not a big brain.

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Early Homo species

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Homo habilis

• 2.6 – 1.4 MYA

• Some, but not all, have slightly bigger brains

• Maker of tools (Oldowan tools)

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Striding out, standing tall, and at last, a big brain

• Turkana boy (1.5 million years ago): the earliest individual with estimated brain size (909cc) significantly above primate allometry curve.

• Homo ergaster

Brain size versus height

Page 17: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

H. ergaster lived in Eurasia at same time as in Africa

• Dmanisi fossils date to 1.7 mya

• Caucasus Mountains, Republic of Georgia (well north of the tropics)

• Associated Oldowan tools

• H. ergaster is the first species of hominin adapted for endurance running.

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Why leave Africa? The role of Pleistocene climate change

Onset of Lower Pleistocene glaciations at ~2 million years ago with formation of permanent ice sheets and sharp cooling. Africa becomes drier.

Warm

• Middle Pleistocene climate: colder and more variable; long cold glacial periods punctuated by short, warmer interglacials

• Migrations of many species between Africa and Eurasia during interglacials

Page 19: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

What is life in the Pleistocene like for early Homo species?

• Hunting game as well as scavenging

• Control of fire– Possibly from 2MYA

• Improving the tool kit – more elaborate

Acheulean stone tools: e.g. handaxe for butchering

• Increasingly complex social behaviour

Page 20: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Homo erectus did cross sea barriers

• Archaeology on Flores, dates to 840,000 years ago

• H. florensiensis (Hobbits) on Flores date to as recently as 20,000 yrs ago

Hobbit on left compared with modern human

Page 21: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Homo sapiens neanderthalensis

• From H. heidelbergensis (0.75 – 0.25 MYA)

• Only found in Europe and near East

• Diverged from AMH lineage about 0.8 MYA

• More robust than AMH, but shared many features of culture– Music – Jewellery– Complex tools– Ritual (burial of dead)– Language ability?

Page 22: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Homo sapiens sapiens

• Anatomically modern humans (AMH)

• Modern anatomy at 200,000 years ago (Ethiopia – Omo I and II)

• Out-of-Africa event 70,000 years ago

Page 23: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Out of Africa: diversity among early modern Homo sapiens

(a) Skhul 5, Israel, 90,000 Yrs

(b) Cro-Magnon 1, France, 23-27 KYrs

(c) Kow Swamp, robust Aboriginal Australian, 9-13 KYrs

Shared features: Cranial vault height high and domed, brow ridges lighter or absent, chin present

Page 24: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Dispersal of AMHs out of Africa

• Into Middle East by 90,000 years ago, and then retreat. (Neanderthal distribution expands)

• Reach Australia by 60,000 years ago, apparently via south Asian coastal route.

• 40,000 years ago: substantial presence of moderns in Europe and Asia (little evidence in archaeological record at earlier dates)

• Last Neanderthals about 25,000 years ago

• Bottleneck in dispersal out of Africa - implicated by genetic data– Note that this bottleneck is not associated with speciation,

only with modest structure between sub-Saharan and other human populations.

Page 25: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

What does genetic variation tell us about human evolution?

• Modern humans appear in the fossil record about 200K years ago

• The mitochondrial Eve dates back to about 150K years ago

• The Y-chromosome Adam dates back to about 70K years ago

• AMHs left Africa about 70KYA

• For most of our genome, however, the common ancestor is about 500K – 1M years ago– This predates the origin of Homo sapiens considerably

Page 26: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Did early humans interbreed with Neanderthals?

Ovchinnikov et al (2000)

Neanderthals

mtDNA sequences say no…

Page 27: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

But…

• There is some evidence for this in the presence of unusual haplotypes found in Europe composed of SNPs not found in non-European populations

Plagnol and Wall (2006)

Page 28: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Deeper trees in the human genome

• There is growing evidence that some regions of our genome have truly ancient common ancestors

• Dystrophin has an ancient haplotype found primarily outside Africa suggesting a colonisation of >160KYA

• There is an inversion found primarily in Europeans that is roughly 3MY old

Stefansson et al (2005)

Haplotype 1

Haplotype 2

Page 29: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

What are the genetic differences that make us human?

Page 30: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Chromosomal changes

• Human chromosome 2 is a fusion of two chromosomes in great apes

• There are several inversion differences between the chromosomes

Feuk et al (2005)

Page 31: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Gene loss

• Loss of enzymes that make sialic acid – Sugar on cell

surface that mediates a variety of recognition events involving pathogenic microbes and toxins

• Myosin heavy chain– Associated with

gracilization

Wang et al (2006)

Page 32: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Gene evolution

• FOXP2 is a highly conserved gene (across the mammalia), expressed in the brain. Mutations in the gene in humans are associated with specific language impairment

• Across the entire mammalian phylogeny, there have only been a very few amino acid changing substitutions

• However, two amino acid changes have become fixed in the lineage leading to modern humans since the split with the chimpanzee lineage

Enard et al. (2002)

Page 33: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

What are the genetic differences that make people and peoples

different?

Page 34: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

How do we differ? – Let me count the ways

• Single nucleotide polymorphisms– 1 every few hundred bp

• Short indels (=insertion/deletion)– 1 every few kb

• Microsatellite (STR) repeat number– 1 every few kb

• Minisatellites– 1 every few kb

• Repeated genes– rRNA, histones

• Large inversions, deletions– Y chromosome, Copy Number Variants (CNVs)

TGCATTGCGTAGGCTGCATTCCGTAGGC

TGCATT---TAGGCTGCATTCCGTAGGC

TGCTCATCATCATCAGCTGCTCATCA------GC

≤100bp

1-5kb

Page 35: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Detecting recent adaptive evolution

• Let’s look closely at the dynamics of the fixation process for adaptive mutations

• The fixation of a beneficial mutation is associated with a change in the patterns of linked neutral genetic variation

• This is known as the hitch-hiking effect (Maynard Smith and Haigh 1974)

• Looking for the signature of hitch-hiking can be a good way of detecting very recent fixation events

Page 36: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Diversity is not evenly distributed across genes II

• Adaptive evolution ‘wipes out’ diversity nearby due to the hitch-hiking effects of a selective sweep– e.g. Duffy-null locus in sub-Saharn africa, protects against P. vivax

Pop1

Pop2

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 C 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 C 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

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European

African

FY*O mutation

Ancestral alleleDerived alleleMissing dataHamblin and Di Rienzo (2000)

Page 37: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Long haplotypes

• A selective sweep at the Lactase gene in Europeans

Page 38: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.

Strong population differentiation

Lamason et al (Science 2005)

• SLC24A5

Page 39: Human origins and evolution Gil McVean, Department of Statistics, Oxford.
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Classes of selected genes

Voight et al. (2005)