Krause Johannes, Lalueza-Fox Carles, Orlando Ludovic, Enard Wolfgang, Green Richard E, Burbano Hernán A, Hublin Jean-Jacques, Hänni Catherine, Fortea Javier, de la Rasilla Marco, Bertranpetit Jaume, Rosas Antonio, Pääbo Svante
Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Curr Biol. 2007 Nov 6;17(21):1908-12. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2007.10.008. Epub 2007 Oct 18.
Although many animals communicate vocally, no extant creature rivals modern humans in language ability. Therefore, knowing when and under what evolutionary pressures our capacity for language evolved is of great interest. Here, we find that our closest extinct relatives, the Neandertals, share with modern humans two evolutionary changes in FOXP2, a gene that has been implicated in the development of speech and language. We furthermore find that in Neandertals, these changes lie on the common modern human haplotype, which previously was shown to have been subject to a selective sweep. These results suggest that these genetic changes and the selective sweep predate the common ancestor (which existed about 300,000-400,000 years ago) of modern human and Neandertal populations. This is in contrast to more recent age estimates of the selective sweep based on extant human diversity data. Thus, these results illustrate the usefulness of retrieving direct genetic information from ancient remains for understanding recent human evolution.
尽管许多动物能通过声音进行交流,但在语言能力方面,没有现存生物能与现代人类相媲美。因此,了解我们的语言能力在何时以及在何种进化压力下进化,是非常有趣的。在这里,我们发现我们已灭绝的近亲尼安德特人与现代人类在FOXP2基因上有两个共同的进化变化,该基因与言语和语言的发展有关。我们还发现,在尼安德特人中,这些变化位于现代人类的常见单倍型上,此前已证明该单倍型经历了选择性清除。这些结果表明,这些基因变化和选择性清除发生在现代人类和尼安德特人群体的共同祖先(约30万至40万年前存在)之前。这与基于现存人类多样性数据对选择性清除的更近期年龄估计形成对比。因此,这些结果说明了从古代遗骸中获取直接遗传信息对于理解近期人类进化的有用性。