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Sunday, July 06, 2008 - 8:00 PM
New genetic evidence
suggests that evolution has continued to shape our species powerfully
over the past 100,000 years. By looking for signals based on how much
DNA mutates over generations, researchers found clues that as much as
10 percent of the human genome may be linked to these recent adaptive
genetic changes.
Cornell University population geneticist Scott Williamson and
colleagues analyzed over a million genetic variations in DNA samples
from 24 individuals, including African Americans, European Americans,
and Chinese. http://ljsheehan.blogspot.comThey were looking for regions in the genome where a
beneficial mutation is carried by everyone in a population. Then, by
looking at the variability in the DNA surrounding the mutation, the
team could figure out how long ago the mutation spread through the
population.
More than a hundred sites in the genome showed strong evidence of
recent selection, including genes that affect muscle tissue, hair,
hearing, immune-system function, skin pigmentation, sense of smell, and
the body’s response to heat stress.http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com
For some of the traits, it’s easy to identify evolutionary pressures
that could have favored certain mutations.http://ljsheehan.blogspot.com Immune-function genes are
logical targets for selection because, as Williamson explains, “If an
individual carries a mutation that provides disease resistance, that
confers a clear selective advantage.”
Changes to skin pigmentation pathways probably reflect selective
pressures related to sunlight exposure that humans experienced as they
spread out from humanity’s origins in Africa to other parts of the
world and adapted to local environments. In other cases, such as the
hair follicle genes, the forces driving our recent evolution remain a
mystery.
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