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1.
Annu Rev Immunol ; 36: 843-864, 2018 04 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29490162

ABSTRACT

Recent progress in both conceptual and technological approaches to human immunology have rejuvenated a field that has long been in the shadow of the inbred mouse model. This is a healthy development both for the clinical relevance of immunology and for the fact that it is a way to gain access to the wealth of phenomenology in the many human diseases that involve the immune system. This is where we are likely to discover new immunological mechanisms and principals, especially those involving genetic heterogeneity or environmental influences that are difficult to model effectively in inbred mice. We also suggest that there are likely to be novel immunological mechanisms in long-lived, less fecund mammals such as human beings since they must remain healthy far longer than short-lived rodents in order for the species to survive.


Subject(s)
Immune System/physiology , Immunity , Animals , B-Lymphocytes/immunology , B-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Biological Evolution , Biological Variation, Population , Clonal Deletion/immunology , Host-Pathogen Interactions/immunology , Humans , Immunologic Memory , Models, Animal , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell/metabolism , T-Lymphocytes/immunology , T-Lymphocytes/metabolism
2.
Cell ; 2024 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39353437

ABSTRACT

Complex structural variations (cxSVs) are often overlooked in genome analyses due to detection challenges. We developed ARC-SV, a probabilistic and machine-learning-based method that enables accurate detection and reconstruction of cxSVs from standard datasets. By applying ARC-SV across 4,262 genomes representing all continental populations, we identified cxSVs as a significant source of natural human genetic variation. Rare cxSVs have a propensity to occur in neural genes and loci that underwent rapid human-specific evolution, including those regulating corticogenesis. By performing single-nucleus multiomics in postmortem brains, we discovered cxSVs associated with differential gene expression and chromatin accessibility across various brain regions and cell types. Additionally, cxSVs detected in brains of psychiatric cases are enriched for linkage with psychiatric GWAS risk alleles detected in the same brains. Furthermore, our analysis revealed significantly decreased brain-region- and cell-type-specific expression of cxSV genes, specifically for psychiatric cases, implicating cxSVs in the molecular etiology of major neuropsychiatric disorders.

3.
Cell ; 186(5): 923-939.e14, 2023 03 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36868214

ABSTRACT

We conduct high coverage (>30×) whole-genome sequencing of 180 individuals from 12 indigenous African populations. We identify millions of unreported variants, many predicted to be functionally important. We observe that the ancestors of southern African San and central African rainforest hunter-gatherers (RHG) diverged from other populations >200 kya and maintained a large effective population size. We observe evidence for ancient population structure in Africa and for multiple introgression events from "ghost" populations with highly diverged genetic lineages. Although currently geographically isolated, we observe evidence for gene flow between eastern and southern Khoesan-speaking hunter-gatherer populations lasting until ∼12 kya. We identify signatures of local adaptation for traits related to skin color, immune response, height, and metabolic processes. We identify a positively selected variant in the lightly pigmented San that influences pigmentation in vitro by regulating the enhancer activity and gene expression of PDPK1.


Subject(s)
Acclimatization , Skin Pigmentation , Humans , Whole Genome Sequencing , Population Density , Africa , 3-Phosphoinositide-Dependent Protein Kinases
4.
Cell ; 185(24): 4587-4603.e23, 2022 11 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36423581

ABSTRACT

Searches for the genetic underpinnings of uniquely human traits have focused on human-specific divergence in conserved genomic regions, which reflects adaptive modifications of existing functional elements. However, the study of conserved regions excludes functional elements that descended from previously neutral regions. Here, we demonstrate that the fastest-evolved regions of the human genome, which we term "human ancestor quickly evolved regions" (HAQERs), rapidly diverged in an episodic burst of directional positive selection prior to the human-Neanderthal split, before transitioning to constraint within hominins. HAQERs are enriched for bivalent chromatin states, particularly in gastrointestinal and neurodevelopmental tissues, and genetic variants linked to neurodevelopmental disease. We developed a multiplex, single-cell in vivo enhancer assay to discover that rapid sequence divergence in HAQERs generated hominin-unique enhancers in the developing cerebral cortex. We propose that a lack of pleiotropic constraints and elevated mutation rates poised HAQERs for rapid adaptation and subsequent susceptibility to disease.


Subject(s)
Hominidae , Neanderthals , Animals , Humans , Hominidae/genetics , Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid , Neanderthals/genetics , Genome, Human , Genomics
5.
Cell ; 185(11): 1842-1859.e18, 2022 05 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35561686

ABSTRACT

The precise genetic origins of the first Neolithic farming populations in Europe and Southwest Asia, as well as the processes and the timing of their differentiation, remain largely unknown. Demogenomic modeling of high-quality ancient genomes reveals that the early farmers of Anatolia and Europe emerged from a multiphase mixing of a Southwest Asian population with a strongly bottlenecked western hunter-gatherer population after the last glacial maximum. Moreover, the ancestors of the first farmers of Europe and Anatolia went through a period of extreme genetic drift during their westward range expansion, contributing highly to their genetic distinctiveness. This modeling elucidates the demographic processes at the root of the Neolithic transition and leads to a spatial interpretation of the population history of Southwest Asia and Europe during the late Pleistocene and early Holocene.


Subject(s)
Farmers , Genome , Agriculture , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Europe , Genetic Drift , Genomics , History, Ancient , Human Migration , Humans
6.
Cell ; 181(2): 362-381.e28, 2020 04 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32220312

ABSTRACT

During human evolution, the knee adapted to the biomechanical demands of bipedalism by altering chondrocyte developmental programs. This adaptive process was likely not without deleterious consequences to health. Today, osteoarthritis occurs in 250 million people, with risk variants enriched in non-coding sequences near chondrocyte genes, loci that likely became optimized during knee evolution. We explore this relationship by epigenetically profiling joint chondrocytes, revealing ancient selection and recent constraint and drift on knee regulatory elements, which also overlap osteoarthritis variants that contribute to disease heritability by tending to modify constrained functional sequence. We propose a model whereby genetic violations to regulatory constraint, tolerated during knee development, lead to adult pathology. In support, we discover a causal enhancer variant (rs6060369) present in billions of people at a risk locus (GDF5-UQCC1), showing how it impacts mouse knee-shape and osteoarthritis. Overall, our methods link an evolutionarily novel aspect of human anatomy to its pathogenesis.


Subject(s)
Chondrocytes/physiology , Knee Joint/physiology , Osteoarthritis/genetics , Animals , Biological Evolution , Chondrocytes/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Genetic Predisposition to Disease/genetics , Growth Differentiation Factor 5/genetics , Growth Differentiation Factor 5/metabolism , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Knee/physiology , Mice , NIH 3T3 Cells , Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid/genetics , Risk Factors
7.
Cell ; 173(6): 1370-1384.e16, 2018 05 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29856955

ABSTRACT

The cerebral cortex underwent rapid expansion and increased complexity during recent hominid evolution. Gene duplications constitute a major evolutionary force, but their impact on human brain development remains unclear. Using tailored RNA sequencing (RNA-seq), we profiled the spatial and temporal expression of hominid-specific duplicated (HS) genes in the human fetal cortex and identified a repertoire of 35 HS genes displaying robust and dynamic patterns during cortical neurogenesis. Among them NOTCH2NL, human-specific paralogs of the NOTCH2 receptor, stood out for their ability to promote cortical progenitor maintenance. NOTCH2NL promote the clonal expansion of human cortical progenitors, ultimately leading to higher neuronal output. At the molecular level, NOTCH2NL function by activating the Notch pathway through inhibition of cis Delta/Notch interactions. Our study uncovers a large repertoire of recently evolved genes active during human corticogenesis and reveals how human-specific NOTCH paralogs may have contributed to the expansion of the human cortex.


Subject(s)
Cerebral Cortex/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation , Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Neurogenesis , Neurons/metabolism , Receptor, Notch2/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Calcium-Binding Proteins , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Cluster Analysis , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Humans , In Situ Hybridization , Neural Stem Cells/metabolism , Signal Transduction
8.
Cell ; 174(6): 1424-1435.e15, 2018 09 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30078708

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.


Subject(s)
Forkhead Transcription Factors/genetics , Brain/cytology , Brain/metabolism , Cell Line , Databases, Genetic , Exons , Female , Genome, Human , Haplotypes , Humans , Introns , Male , Markov Chains , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Prefrontal Cortex/metabolism
9.
Cell ; 173(6): 1356-1369.e22, 2018 05 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29856954

ABSTRACT

Genetic changes causing brain size expansion in human evolution have remained elusive. Notch signaling is essential for radial glia stem cell proliferation and is a determinant of neuronal number in the mammalian cortex. We find that three paralogs of human-specific NOTCH2NL are highly expressed in radial glia. Functional analysis reveals that different alleles of NOTCH2NL have varying potencies to enhance Notch signaling by interacting directly with NOTCH receptors. Consistent with a role in Notch signaling, NOTCH2NL ectopic expression delays differentiation of neuronal progenitors, while deletion accelerates differentiation into cortical neurons. Furthermore, NOTCH2NL genes provide the breakpoints in 1q21.1 distal deletion/duplication syndrome, where duplications are associated with macrocephaly and autism and deletions with microcephaly and schizophrenia. Thus, the emergence of human-specific NOTCH2NL genes may have contributed to the rapid evolution of the larger human neocortex, accompanied by loss of genomic stability at the 1q21.1 locus and resulting recurrent neurodevelopmental disorders.


Subject(s)
Brain/embryology , Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Neurogenesis/physiology , Receptor, Notch2/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Animals , Cell Differentiation , Embryonic Stem Cells/metabolism , Female , Gene Deletion , Genes, Reporter , Gorilla gorilla , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Neocortex/cytology , Neural Stem Cells/metabolism , Neuroglia/metabolism , Neurons/metabolism , Pan troglodytes , Receptor, Notch2/genetics , Sequence Analysis, RNA
10.
Cell ; 171(6): 1340-1353.e14, 2017 Nov 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29195075

ABSTRACT

Approximately 15 genes have been directly associated with skin pigmentation variation in humans, leading to its characterization as a relatively simple trait. However, by assembling a global survey of quantitative skin pigmentation phenotypes, we demonstrate that pigmentation is more complex than previously assumed, with genetic architecture varying by latitude. We investigate polygenicity in the KhoeSan populations indigenous to southern Africa who have considerably lighter skin than equatorial Africans. We demonstrate that skin pigmentation is highly heritable, but known pigmentation loci explain only a small fraction of the variance. Rather, baseline skin pigmentation is a complex, polygenic trait in the KhoeSan. Despite this, we identify canonical and non-canonical skin pigmentation loci, including near SLC24A5, TYRP1, SMARCA2/VLDLR, and SNX13, using a genome-wide association approach complemented by targeted resequencing. By considering diverse, under-studied African populations, we show how the architecture of skin pigmentation can vary across humans subject to different local evolutionary pressures.


Subject(s)
Skin Pigmentation , Africa , Black People/genetics , Humans , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(26): e2405889121, 2024 Jun 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38889149

ABSTRACT

Neandertals and Denisovans, having inhabited distinct regions in Eurasia and possibly Oceania for over 200,000 y, experienced ample time to adapt to diverse environmental challenges these regions presented. Among present-day human populations, Papua New Guineans (PNG) stand out as one of the few carrying substantial amounts of both Neandertal and Denisovan DNA, a result of past admixture events with these archaic human groups. This study investigates the distribution of introgressed Denisovan and Neandertal DNA within two distinct PNG populations, residing in the highlands of Mt Wilhelm and the lowlands of Daru Island. These locations exhibit unique environmental features, some of which may parallel the challenges that archaic humans once confronted and adapted to. Our results show that PNG highlanders carry higher levels of Denisovan DNA compared to PNG lowlanders. Among the Denisovan-like haplotypes with higher frequencies in highlander populations, those exhibiting the greatest frequency difference compared to lowlander populations also demonstrate more pronounced differences in population frequencies than frequency-matched nonarchaic variants. Two of the five most highly differentiated of those haplotypes reside in genomic areas linked to brain development genes. Conversely, Denisovan-like haplotypes more frequent in lowlanders overlap with genes associated with immune response processes. Our findings suggest that Denisovan DNA has provided genetic variation associated with brain biology and immune response to PNG genomes, some of which might have facilitated adaptive processes to environmental challenges.


Subject(s)
Haplotypes , Neanderthals , Papua New Guinea , Humans , Animals , Neanderthals/genetics , Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Genetics, Population
12.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(26): e2319175121, 2024 Jun 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38885385

ABSTRACT

Cumulative culture, the accumulation of modifications, innovations, and improvements over generations through social learning, is a key determinant of the behavioral diversity across Homo sapiens populations and their ability to adapt to varied ecological habitats. Generations of improvements, modifications, and lucky errors allow humans to use technologies and know-how well beyond what a single naive individual could invent independently within their lifetime. The human dependence on cumulative culture may have shaped the evolution of biological and behavioral traits in the hominin lineage, including brain size, body size, life history, sociality, subsistence, and ecological niche expansion. Yet, we do not know when, in the human career, our ancestors began to depend on cumulative culture. Here, we show that hominins likely relied on a derived form of cumulative culture by at least ~600 kya, a result in line with a growing body of existing evidence. We analyzed the complexity of stone tool manufacturing sequences over the last 3.3 My of the archaeological record. We then compare these to the achievable complexity without cumulative culture, which we estimate using nonhuman primate technologies and stone tool manufacturing experiments. We find that archaeological technologies become significantly more complex than expected in the absence of cumulative culture only after ~600 kya.


Subject(s)
Archaeology , Hominidae , Animals , Humans , Cultural Evolution , Tool Use Behavior , Biological Evolution , Fossils , Technology , History, Ancient
13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(15): e2320484121, 2024 Apr 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38557183

ABSTRACT

Ethnographic records show that wooden tools played a pivotal role in the daily lives of hunter-gatherers including food procurement tools used in hunting (e.g., spears, throwing sticks) and gathering (e.g. digging sticks, bark peelers), as well as, domestic tools (e.g., handles, vessels). However, wood rarely survives in the archeological record, especially in Pleistocene contexts and knowledge of prehistoric hunter-gatherer lifeways is strongly biased by the survivorship of more resilient materials such as lithics and bones. Consequently, very few Paleolithic sites have produced wooden artifacts and among them, the site of Schöningen stands out due to its number and variety of wooden tools. The recovery of complete wooden spears and throwing sticks at this 300,000-y-old site (MIS 9) led to a paradigm shift in the hunter vs. scavenger debate. For the first time and almost 30 y after their discovery, this study introduces the complete wooden assemblage from Schöningen 13 II-4 known as the Spear Horizon. In total, 187 wooden artifacts could be identified from the Spear Horizon demonstrating a broad spectrum of wood-working techniques, including the splitting technique. A minimum of 20 hunting weapons is now recognized and two newly identified artifact types comprise 35 tools made on split woods, which were likely used in domestic activities. Schöningen 13 II-4 represents the largest Pleistocene wooden artifact assemblage worldwide and demonstrates the key role woodworking had in human evolution. Finally, our results considerably change the interpretation of the Pleistocene lakeshore site of Schöningen.


Subject(s)
Artifacts , Weapons , Humans , Bone and Bones , Archaeology , Wood
14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 121(9): e2312377121, 2024 Feb 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38363870

ABSTRACT

Genomic time series from experimental evolution studies and ancient DNA datasets offer us a chance to directly observe the interplay of various evolutionary forces. We show how the genome-wide variance in allele frequency change between two time points can be decomposed into the contributions of gene flow, genetic drift, and linked selection. In closed populations, the contribution of linked selection is identifiable because it creates covariances between time intervals, and genetic drift does not. However, repeated gene flow between populations can also produce directionality in allele frequency change, creating covariances. We show how to accurately separate the fraction of variance in allele frequency change due to admixture and linked selection in a population receiving gene flow. We use two human ancient DNA datasets, spanning around 5,000 y, as time transects to quantify the contributions to the genome-wide variance in allele frequency change. We find that a large fraction of genome-wide change is due to gene flow. In both cases, after correcting for known major gene flow events, we do not observe a signal of genome-wide linked selection. Thus despite the known role of selection in shaping long-term polymorphism levels, and an increasing number of examples of strong selection on single loci and polygenic scores from ancient DNA, it appears to be gene flow and drift, and not selection, that are the main determinants of recent genome-wide allele frequency change. Our approach should be applicable to the growing number of contemporary and ancient temporal population genomics datasets.


Subject(s)
Gene Flow , Selection, Genetic , Humans , DNA, Ancient , Gene Frequency , Genetic Drift , Genetics, Population
15.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(10): e2213896120, 2023 03 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36848554

ABSTRACT

DNA is replicated according to a defined spatiotemporal program that is linked to both gene regulation and genome stability. The evolutionary forces that have shaped replication timing programs in eukaryotic species are largely unknown. Here, we studied the molecular causes and consequences of replication timing evolution across 94 humans, 95 chimpanzees, and 23 rhesus macaques. Replication timing differences recapitulated the species' phylogenetic tree, suggesting continuous evolution of the DNA replication timing program in primates. Hundreds of genomic regions had significant replication timing variation between humans and chimpanzees, of which 66 showed advances in replication origin firing in humans, while 57 were delayed. Genes overlapping these regions displayed correlated changes in expression levels and chromatin structure. Many human-chimpanzee variants also exhibited interindividual replication timing variation, pointing to ongoing evolution of replication timing at these loci. Association of replication timing variation with genetic variation revealed that DNA sequence evolution can explain replication timing variation between species. Taken together, DNA replication timing shows substantial and ongoing evolution in the human lineage that is driven by sequence alterations and could impact regulatory evolution at specific genomic sites.


Subject(s)
DNA Replication Timing , Pan troglodytes , Animals , Humans , Pan troglodytes/genetics , DNA Replication Timing/genetics , Macaca mulatta/genetics , Phylogeny , Eukaryota
16.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(24): e2301760120, 2023 06 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37279270

ABSTRACT

Humans are unique among mammals in having a functionally naked body with a hair-covered scalp. Scalp hair is exceptionally variable across populations within Homo sapiens. Neither the function of human scalp hair nor the consequences of variation in its morphology have been studied within an evolutionary framework. A thermoregulatory role for human scalp hair has been previously suggested. Here, we present experimental evidence on the potential evolutionary function of human scalp hair and variation in its morphology. Using a thermal manikin and human hair wigs at different wind speeds in a temperature and humidity-controlled environment, with and without simulated solar radiation, we collected data on the convective, radiative, and evaporative heat fluxes to and from the scalp in relation to properties of a range of hair morphologies, as well as a naked scalp. We find evidence for a significant reduction in solar radiation influx to the scalp in the presence of hair. Maximal evaporative heat loss potential from the scalp is reduced by the presence of hair, but the amount of sweat required on the scalp to balance the incoming solar heat (i.e., zero heat gain) is reduced in the presence of hair. Particularly, we find that hair that is more tightly curled offers increased protection against heat gain from solar radiation.


Subject(s)
Body Temperature Regulation , Hair , Scalp , Hair/anatomy & histology , Hair/physiology , Body Temperature Regulation/physiology , Humans , Biological Evolution , Water , Wind , Solar Energy
17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(25): e2218096120, 2023 06 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37311000

ABSTRACT

How did humans evolve from individualistic to collective foraging with sex differences in production and widespread sharing of plant and animal foods? While current evolutionary scenarios focus on meat, cooking, or grandparental subsidies, considerations of the economics of foraging for extracted plant foods (e.g., roots, tubers), inferred to be important for early hominins (∼6 to 2.5 mya), suggest that early hominins shared such foods with offspring and others. Here, we present a conceptual and mathematical model of early hominin food production and sharing, prior to the emergence of frequent hunting, cooking, and increased lifespan. We hypothesize that extracted plant foods were vulnerable to theft, and that male mate guarding protected females from food theft. We identify conditions favoring extractive foraging and food sharing across mating systems (i.e., monogamy, polygyny, promiscuity), and we assess which system maximizes female fitness with changes in the profitability of extractive foraging. Females extract foods and share them with males only when: i) extracting rather than collecting plant foods pays off energetically; and ii) males guard females. Males extract foods when they are sufficiently high in value, but share with females only under promiscuous mating and/or no mate guarding. These results suggest that if early hominins had mating systems with pair-bonds (monogamous or polygynous), then food sharing by adult females with unrelated adult males occurred before hunting, cooking, and extensive grandparenting. Such cooperation may have enabled early hominins to expand into more open, seasonal habitats, and provided a foundation for the subsequent evolution of human life histories.


Subject(s)
Animal Feed , Meat , Female , Male , Adult , Animals , Humans , Cell Communication , Cooking , Plant Extracts
18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(38): e2311118120, 2023 09 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37695892

ABSTRACT

The nucleus accumbens (NAc) is central to motivation and action, exhibiting one of the highest densities of neuropeptide Y (NPY) in the brain. Within the NAc, NPY plays a role in reward and is involved in emotional behavior and in increasing alcohol and drug addiction and fat intake. Here, we examined NPY innervation and neurons of the NAc in humans and other anthropoid primates in order to determine whether there are differences among these various species that would correspond to behavioral or life history variables. We quantified NPY-immunoreactive axons and neurons in the NAc of 13 primate species, including humans, great apes, and monkeys. Our data show that the human brain is unique among primates in having denser NPY innervation within the NAc, as measured by axon length density to neuron density, even after accounting for brain size. Combined with our previous finding of increased dopaminergic innervation in the same region, our results suggest that the neurochemical profile of the human NAc appears to have rendered our species uniquely susceptible to neurophysiological conditions such as addiction. The increase in NPY specific to the NAc may represent an adaptation that favors fat intake and contributes to an increased vulnerability to eating disorders, obesity, as well as alcohol and drug dependence. Along with our findings for dopamine, these deeply rooted structural attributes of the human brain are likely to have emerged early in the human clade, laying the groundwork for later brain expansion and the development of cognitive and behavioral specializations.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Addictive , Nucleus Accumbens , Animals , Humans , Neuropeptide Y , Brain , Obesity , Dopamine , Ethanol
19.
Mol Biol Evol ; 41(3)2024 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38466119

ABSTRACT

Ancient DNA can directly reveal the contribution of natural selection to human genomic variation. However, while the analysis of ancient DNA has been successful at identifying genomic signals of selection, inferring the phenotypic consequences of that selection has been more difficult. Most trait-associated variants are noncoding, so we expect that a large proportion of the phenotypic effects of selection will also act through noncoding variation. Since we cannot measure gene expression directly in ancient individuals, we used an approach (Joint-Tissue Imputation [JTI]) developed to predict gene expression from genotype data. We tested for changes in the predicted expression of 17,384 protein coding genes over a time transect of 4,500 years using 91 present-day and 616 ancient individuals from Britain. We identified 28 genes at seven genomic loci with significant (false discovery rate [FDR] < 0.05) changes in predicted expression levels in this time period. We compared the results from our transcriptome-wide scan to a genome-wide scan based on estimating per-single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) selection coefficients from time series data. At five previously identified loci, our approach allowed us to highlight small numbers of genes with evidence for significant shifts in expression from peaks that in some cases span tens of genes. At two novel loci (SLC44A5 and NUP85), we identify selection on gene expression not captured by scans based on genomic signatures of selection. Finally, we show how classical selection statistics (iHS and SDS) can be combined with JTI models to incorporate functional information into scans that use present-day data alone. These results demonstrate the potential of this type of information to explore both the causes and consequences of natural selection.


Subject(s)
DNA, Ancient , Selection, Genetic , Humans , United Kingdom , Genome , Genotype , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Genome-Wide Association Study
20.
Trends Genet ; 38(1): 45-58, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34284881

ABSTRACT

Structural variation (SV) is a large difference (typically >100 bp) in the genomic structure of two genomes and includes both copy number variation and variation that does not change copy number of a genomic region, such as an inversion. Improved reference genomes, combined with widespread genome sequencing using short-read sequencing technology, and increasingly using long-read sequencing, have reignited interest in SV. Recent large-scale studies and functional focused analyses have highlighted the role of SV in human evolution. In this review, we highlight human-specific SVs involved in changes in the brain, population-specific SVs that affect response to the environment, including adaptation to diet and infectious diseases, and summarise the contribution of archaic hominin admixture to present-day human SV.


Subject(s)
DNA Copy Number Variations , Hominidae , Animals , DNA Copy Number Variations/genetics , Genome , Genome, Human/genetics , Genomic Structural Variation/genetics , Genomics , Hominidae/genetics , Humans , Sequence Analysis, DNA
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