THE EVOLUTIONARY STORY OF HOMO SAPIENS 563
of people carry the mutation (see Fig ure 5.11). It must have conferred a very large
fitness advantage indeed.
Three of the other genes that show strong signs of selection are also involved in
adaptation to the new agricultural diet. One, called SLC22A4, carries a mutation
that increases absorption of the amino acid ergothioneine. That amino acid was
abundant in the European diet before agriculture, but it is present only at low levels
in wheat. Ancient farmers with the mutation gained a large fitness advantage. The
remaining eight genes that show rapid recent adaptation affect skin and eye color,
the immune system, and tooth morphology. Other genes that affect height also
show signatures of selection. Body height was selected to increase in some times
and some places, and to decrease in others. The reasons for those selective pres-
sures are not yet known.
The study by Mathieson and colleagues adds to the dozens of examples of recent
adaptation in humans that have been revealed by the analysis of DNA over the
last decade. Other cases discussed earlier in this book include skin color (see Fig-
ure 5.12), malaria resistance (see Fig ure 5.18), EPA S1 (see F i g u r e 7. 2 3), BRCA1 (see
F i g u r e 7. 2 0), and amylase (see Fig u re 14.4). Still more are shown in Figure 6.28. We
have the fantastic fortune to live in a great age of genetic discovery whose revela-
tions are opening whole new vistas on human evolution.
Our genetic loads
Not all the genetic changes in our recent past have been for the best. Some of the
beneficial mutations that spread by positive selection dragged along with them
deleterious mutations by genetic hitchhiking (see Chapter 5). Genetic variants
tightly linked to the beneficial SLC22A4 mutation that we discussed in the last
section are associated with two digestive disorders, celiac disease and irritable
bowel syndrome. Northern Europeans who benefit from more efficient absorbtion
of ergothioneine are also at greater risk from those diseases.
Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_21.19.ai Date 01-18-2017
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
Kya
Lactase
persistance
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Chromosome
10 12 14 16 18 22
Relative statistical signicance
LCT
TLR1-6-10
SLC45A2
SLC22A4
MHC
ZKSCAN3
FADS1-2DHCR7
GRM5
ATXN2
Chr13:38.8HERC2
FIGURE 21.19 Twelve genes show strong
signals of adaptive evolution in human
populations in Europe and western Asia
over the last 8500 years. Ancient DNA was
collected at points shown on the map
(inset). Comparison of single nucleotide
polymorphisms in those samples with ones
from modern humans living in the same lo-
cations pinpointed loci that evolved under
positive selection. In the main panel, the
genome is displayed from chromosome 1
to 22. The y-axis shows the strength of evi-
dence for positive selection among more
than 1 million single nucleotide polymor-
phisms. Four genes involved in adaptation
to an agricultural diet are indicated by red
diamonds. The strongest signal is for the
mutation that causes lactase persistence,
which allows adults to digest milk and other
dairy products. It appeared in Europe just
4500 years ago. (After [46].)
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