1 / 17

The Search for Genetic Eve and Adam

The Search for Genetic Eve and Adam. Divergence Points . 5-7 Million Years Ago (MYA)– Divergence from the Chimpanzee Lineage 4.4+ MYA Ardipithecus Ramidus – first know Hominid It is not known if this was part of human descent chain or even actually bipedal.

amie
Télécharger la présentation

The Search for Genetic Eve and Adam

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Search for Genetic Eve and Adam

  2. Divergence Points • 5-7 Million Years Ago (MYA)– Divergence from the Chimpanzee Lineage • 4.4+ MYA Ardipithecus Ramidus – first know Hominid • It is not known if this was part of human descent chain or even actually bipedal. • 3.9 – 4.2 MYA Australopithecus Anamensis – Definitely bipedal

  3. From Anamensis to Sapiens • Australopithecus Anamensis • Australopithecus Afarensis • Homo Habilus • Homo Erectus – 1.81 – 1.61 MYA • Homo Sapiens • Transition Species – 400,000 years ago • Homo Sapiens Sapiens – 200,000 years ago • Homo Sapiens Neanderthalensis – 200,000 years ago • Evidence seems to indicate that H. Sapiens Sapiens and H. Sapiens Neanderthalensis are not as far apart as once thought. They may be sub-branchs of the same tree that recombined.

  4. Theory’s of Human Evolution • Multi-regional Model • H. Sapiens Sapiens transitioned from H. Erectus across a wide portion of Africa and Eurasia. • Fossil evidence shows that either H. Sapiens spread very fast after transition or transitioned in multiple areas. This is supported by H. Sapiens Sapiens and H. Sapiens Neanderthalensis. • Genetic exchange across the area would have occurred to accomplish this.

  5. Theory’s of Human Evolution • Problems with Multiregional Model • Would require persistent and extensive migration patterns to disperse the necessary genes. • H. Erectus existed in China and Java for at least 100,000 years after emergence of H. Sapiens Sapiens indicating a slow migration from the transition point.

  6. Theory’s of Human Evolution • Out of Africa Theory • Noted from the fact that African populations have more differences between themselves than the rest of the human genotypes. • It is thought that transition was actually from a small number of individuals.

  7. Theory’s of Human Evolution • Back to Africa Theory • Early H. Sapieans transitional forms evolved in central to west Eurasia, then migrated to Africa and hybridized with H. Erectus and other hominids. • The fact that Eurasians are more closely related to each other than to Africans supports this. • This transition would still have been from an originally relatively small number of individuals.

  8. Searching for Eve • Mitochondrial DNA Technique • mtDNA exists outside the cell nucleus • mtDNA is exclusively inherited along the maternal line

  9. mtDNA Study • A.C. Wilson and R.L. Cann, 'The Recent African Genesis of Humans,' Scientific American, April 1992, pp. 68-73 • Used 100 ethnically diverse individuals. • The common mtDNA ancestral sequence was coalesced to a “Eve” about 200,000 years ago.

  10. Searching for Adam • The Y chromosome is exclusively passed thru the Paternal lineage • The ZFY gene on the Chromosome was picked for a study.

  11. ZFY Study • R. L. Dorit, H. Akashi, and W. Gilbert, 'Absence of Polymorphism at the ZFY Locus on the Human Y Chromosome,' Science, vol. 268, pp. 1183-1185, 1995 • Compared 38 men of diverse geographical origins. • Their common ZFY ancestral sequence was coalesced to a “Adam” about 270,000 years ago.

  12. Problems with Studies • mtDNA is 16,000 nucleotides in size. • Human DNA has 6,000,000,000 nucleotides • 400,000 times as much DNA exists which could and would have been inherited from other individuals than “Eve”. • mitochondria genes do not normally recombine. • They seem to follow the mathematical rules more associated with bacterial genetics than human genetics. • Seemingly small increases in efficiency <1% can quickly and easily become the predominate characteristic in the population.

  13. Problems with Studies • In the search for “Adam”, the search did not include enough of the chromosome • The ZFY gene is only a portion of the overall chromosome, total coalesced could be very different. • Both studies shown had too few starting candidates • “Eve” and “Adam” coalesced at very different time spans. • “Adam” coalesced well into the transition period between H. Erectus and H. Sapiens

  14. Genealogy • Gene Genealogy • A gradually coalesced towards a unique DNA sequence (the root of the tree) • Individual Genealogy • An increase by a factor of two each generation of ancestors which contributed to the genetic make-up of the individual.

  15. Human Diversity • It has been estimated from analysis of the HLA immune genetic complex that human populations have never sunk down below a 50 or 100 thousand population [Ayala & Escalnte, et al1995, p205]. • The Genetic make-up of Humans would have come from many individuals over the course of many generations, not a single “Eve” or “Adam”.

  16. Conclusion • There is not any single individual at this time that could be identified as the Mother or Father of the Human race. • We have many genetic Mothers and Fathers however the their genes have all been jumbled up through generations of sexual reproduction. • It is possible future techniques “may” allow the discovery of a genetic “Adam” but it is very likely that this “Adam” might not be what we consider Human. • It is doubtful that any individual “Eve” could ever be identified because of the gene scrambling seen thru sexual reproduction.

  17. References • C Ayala, F.J. 1995. Adam, Eve, and Other Ancestors: A Story of Human Origins Told by Genes. HPLS 17:303-313. [similar to: Ayala, F.J. 1995. Genes and Origins: The Story of Modern Humans. Book review of The History and Geography of Human Genes by L.L. Cavalli-Sforza, P. Menozzi, and A. Piazzo. J. Mol. Evol. 41:683-688.] • Science and Nature: Genes. The Truth About Adam and Evehttp://www.bbc.co.uk/science/genes/dna_detectives/adam_and_eve/index.shtml • Ayala, F.J. The myth of eve: molecular biology and human origins. Science 270,1930-1936 (1995). • King MC Motulsky AG 2002 Mapping human history. Science 298; 2342-2342. • Evolution - May 1999: Re: Mitochondrial Eve Discussion Thread at American Scientific Affiliation (ASA) • ScienceDaily New Fossil Study Rejects "Eve Theory" And Supports Diverse Ancestry Of Modern Humans www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2001/01/010111194453.htm • New fossil study rejects ‘Eve theory’ and supports diverse ancestry of modern humans; Diane Swanbrow, The University Record, January 22, 200, http://www.umich.edu/~urecord/

More Related