Harris Eugene E, Meyer Diogo
Department of Biological Sciences and Geology, Queensborough Community College, City University of New York, New York 11222, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2006;Suppl 43:89-130. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.20518.
In the last decade, advances in human population genetics and comparative genomics have resulted in important contributions to our understanding of human genetic diversity and genetic adaptation. For the first time, we are able to reliably detect the signature of natural selection from patterns of DNA polymorphism. Identifying the effects of natural selection in this way provides a crucial piece of evidence needed to support hypotheses of human adaptation. This review provides a detailed description of the theory and analytical approaches used to detect signatures of natural selection in the human genome. We discuss these methods in relation to four classic human traits--skin color, the Duffy blood group, bitter-taste sensation, and lactase persistence. By highlighting these four traits we are able to discuss the ways in which analyses of DNA polymorphism can lead to inferences regarding past histories of selection. Specifically, we can infer the importance of specific regimes of selection (i.e. directional selection, balancing selection, and purifying selection) in the evolution of a trait because these different types of selection leave different patterns of DNA polymorphism. In addition, we demonstrate how these types of data can be used to estimate the time frame in which selection operated on a trait. As the field has advanced, a general issue that has come to the forefront is how specific demographic events in human history, such as population expansions, bottlenecks, and subdivision of populations, have also left a signature across the genome that can interfere with our detection of the footprint of selection at particular genes. Therefore, we discuss this general problem with respect to the four traits reviewed here, and describe the ways in which the signature of selection can be teased from a background signature of demographic history. Finally, we move from a discussion of analyses of selection motivated by a "candidate-gene" approach, in which a priori information led to the analysis of specific gene, to discussion of "genome-scanning" approaches that are directed at discovering new genes that have been under positive selection. Such scans can be designed to detect those genes that have been positively selected in our divergence from chimpanzees, as well as those genes that have been under selection as human populations have migrated, differentiated, and adapted to specific geographic environments. We predict that both approaches will be applied in the future, enabling a greater insight into human species-wide adaptations, as well as the specific adaptations of human populations.
在过去十年中,人类群体遗传学和比较基因组学的进展为我们理解人类遗传多样性和遗传适应做出了重要贡献。我们首次能够从DNA多态性模式中可靠地检测到自然选择的印记。以这种方式识别自然选择的影响为支持人类适应假说提供了关键证据。本综述详细描述了用于检测人类基因组中自然选择印记的理论和分析方法。我们结合四个经典的人类特征——肤色、达菲血型、苦味感知和乳糖酶持久性来讨论这些方法。通过突出这四个特征,我们能够讨论DNA多态性分析如何得出关于过去选择历史的推断。具体而言,我们可以推断特定选择模式(即定向选择、平衡选择和净化选择)在一个特征进化中的重要性,因为这些不同类型的选择会留下不同的DNA多态性模式。此外,我们展示了如何利用这些类型的数据来估计选择作用于一个特征的时间框架。随着该领域的发展,一个凸显出来的普遍问题是,人类历史上的特定人口事件,如人口扩张、瓶颈效应和群体细分,如何也在整个基因组中留下了印记,从而干扰我们对特定基因选择足迹的检测。因此,我们针对这里所综述的四个特征讨论这个普遍问题,并描述从人口历史的背景印记中梳理出选择印记的方法。最后,我们从讨论由“候选基因”方法推动的选择分析(其中先验信息导致对特定基因的分析)转向讨论“基因组扫描”方法,这些方法旨在发现经历正选择的新基因。这样的扫描可以设计用于检测那些在我们与黑猩猩分化过程中经历正选择的基因,以及那些在人类群体迁移、分化并适应特定地理环境过程中经历选择的基因。我们预测这两种方法在未来都将得到应用,从而更深入地了解全人类的适应性以及人类群体的特定适应性。