Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Mol Biol Evol. 2011 Jan;28(1):625-38. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msq237. Epub 2010 Oct 20.
The anatomical basis and adaptive function of the expansion in primate brain size have long been studied; however, we are only beginning to understand the genetic basis of these evolutionary changes. Genes linked to human primary microcephaly have received much attention as they have accelerated evolutionary rates along lineages leading to humans. However, these studies focus narrowly on apes, and the link between microcephaly gene evolution and brain evolution is disputed. We analyzed the molecular evolution of four genes associated with microcephaly (ASPM, CDK5RAP2, CENPJ, MCPH1) across 21 species representing all major clades of anthropoid primates. Contrary to prevailing assumptions, positive selection was not limited to or intensified along the lineage leading to humans. In fact we show that all four loci were subject to positive selection across the anthropoid primate phylogeny. We developed clearly defined hypotheses to explicitly test if selection on these loci was associated with the evolution of brain size. We found positive relationships between both CDK5RAP2 and ASPM and neonatal brain mass and somewhat weaker relationships between these genes and adult brain size. In contrast, there is no evidence linking CENPJ and MCPH1 to brain size evolution. The stronger association of ASPM and CDK5RAP2 evolution with neonatal brain size than with adult brain size is consistent with these loci having a direct effect on prenatal neuronal proliferation. These results suggest that primate brain size may have at least a partially conserved genetic basis. Our results contradict a previous study that linked adaptive evolution of ASPM to changes in relative cortex size; however, our analysis indicates that this conclusion is not robust. Our finding that the coding regions of two widely expressed loci has experienced pervasive positive selection in relation to a complex, quantitative developmental phenotype provides a notable counterexample to the commonly asserted hypothesis that cis-regulatory regions play a dominant role in phenotypic evolution.
灵长类动物大脑大小扩张的解剖学基础和适应功能一直是研究的重点;然而,我们才刚刚开始了解这些进化变化的遗传基础。与人类原发性小头症相关的基因受到了广泛关注,因为它们沿着导致人类进化的谱系加速了进化速度。然而,这些研究集中在类人猿上,并且微头症基因进化与大脑进化之间的联系存在争议。我们分析了四个与微头症相关的基因(ASPM、CDK5RAP2、CENPJ、MCPH1)在代表所有主要类人猿分支的 21 个物种中的分子进化。与流行的假设相反,正选择不仅限于或沿着导致人类的谱系加剧。事实上,我们表明,这四个基因座都受到了整个类人猿进化过程中的正选择。我们制定了明确的假设,明确测试这些基因座上的选择是否与大脑大小的进化有关。我们发现 CDK5RAP2 和 ASPM 与新生儿脑质量之间存在正相关关系,而这两个基因与成人脑大小之间的关系稍弱。相比之下,没有证据表明 CENPJ 和 MCPH1 与大脑大小的进化有关。ASPM 和 CDK5RAP2 进化与新生儿脑大小的关系强于与成人脑大小的关系,这与这些基因座对产前神经元增殖有直接影响一致。这些结果表明,灵长类动物的大脑大小可能至少有部分保守的遗传基础。我们的结果与之前将 ASPM 的适应性进化与相对皮层大小的变化联系起来的研究相矛盾;然而,我们的分析表明,这一结论并不稳健。我们发现,两个广泛表达的基因座的编码区与一个复杂的、定量的发育表型相关的普遍正选择,为 cis 调控区域在表型进化中起主导作用的普遍假设提供了一个显著的反例。