Laboratory of Anthropology, Genetics and Peopling history (AGP), Department of Anthropology, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland.
BMC Evol Biol. 2010 Aug 3;10:237. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-10-237.
The Strait of Gibraltar is a crucial area in the settlement history of modern humans because it represents a possible connection between Africa and Europe. So far, genetic data were inconclusive about the fact that this strait constitutes a barrier to gene flow, as previous results were highly variable depending on the genetic locus studied. The present study evaluates the impact of the Gibraltar region in reducing gene flow between populations from North-Western Africa and South-Western Europe, by comparing formally various genetic loci. First, we compute several statistics of population differentiation. Then, we use an original simulation approach in order to infer the most probable evolutionary scenario for the settlement of the area, taking into account the effects of both demography and natural selection at some loci.
We show that the genetic patterns observed today in the region of the Strait of Gibraltar may reflect an ancient population genetic structure which has not been completely erased by more recent events such as Neolithic migrations. Moreover, the differences observed among the loci (i.e. a strong genetic boundary revealed by the Y-chromosome polymorphism and, at the other extreme, no genetic differentiation revealed by HLA-DRB1 variation) across the strait suggest specific evolutionary histories like sex-mediated migration and natural selection. By considering a model of balancing selection for HLA-DRB1, we here estimate a coefficient of selection of 2.2% for this locus (although weaker in Europe than in Africa), which is in line with what was estimated from synonymous versus non-synonymous substitution rates. Selection at this marker thus appears strong enough to leave a signature not only at the DNA level, but also at the population level where drift and migration processes were certainly relevant.
Our multi-loci approach using both descriptive analyses and Bayesian inferences lead to better characterize the role of the Strait of Gibraltar in the evolution of modern humans. We show that gene flow across the Strait of Gibraltar occurred at relatively high rates since pre-Neolithic times and that natural selection and sex-bias migrations distorted the demographic signal at some specific loci of our genome.
直布罗陀海峡是现代人类定居历史上的一个关键区域,因为它代表了非洲和欧洲之间可能的联系。到目前为止,遗传数据还不能确定这个海峡是否构成了基因流动的障碍,因为之前的结果因所研究的遗传基因座而异,差异很大。本研究通过比较不同的遗传基因座,评估了直布罗陀地区对减少来自北非和西南欧人群之间基因流动的影响。首先,我们计算了几个种群分化的统计数据。然后,我们使用一种原始的模拟方法,以便在考虑到一些基因座上的人口和自然选择效应的情况下,推断出该地区定居的最可能的进化情景。
我们表明,今天在直布罗陀海峡地区观察到的遗传模式可能反映了一种古老的群体遗传结构,这种结构尚未被新石器时代移民等最近的事件完全抹去。此外,在海峡两岸观察到的基因座之间的差异(即 Y 染色体多态性揭示的强烈遗传边界,以及 HLA-DRB1 变异揭示的无遗传分化)表明存在特定的进化历史,如性别介导的迁移和自然选择。通过考虑 HLA-DRB1 的平衡选择模型,我们在这里估计了这个基因座的选择系数为 2.2%(尽管在欧洲比在非洲弱),这与从同义与非同义替换率估计的结果一致。因此,这个标记上的选择似乎足够强,不仅在 DNA 水平上留下了痕迹,而且在人口水平上也留下了痕迹,在人口水平上,漂移和迁移过程肯定是相关的。
我们使用描述性分析和贝叶斯推断的多基因座方法,更好地描述了直布罗陀海峡在现代人类进化中的作用。我们表明,自新石器时代以来,直布罗陀海峡的基因流动发生在相对较高的速率,并且自然选择和性别偏倚的迁移在我们基因组的一些特定基因座上扭曲了人口信号。