Department of Biological Sciences and Geology, Queensborough Community College, City University of New York, Bayside, NY 10364, USA.
Am J Phys Anthropol. 2010;143 Suppl 51:13-45. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.21439.
Evolutionary biology has tended to focus on adaptive evolution by positive selection as the primum mobile of evolutionary trajectories in species while underestimating the importance of nonadaptive evolutionary processes. In this review, I describe evidence that suggests that primate and human evolution has been strongly influenced by nonadaptive processes, particularly random genetic drift and mutation. This is evidenced by three fundamental effects: a relative relaxation of selective constraints (i.e., purifying selection), a relative increase in the fixation of slightly deleterious mutations, and a general reduction in the efficacy of positive selection. These effects are observed in protein-coding, regulatory regions, and in gene expression data, as well as in an augmentation of fixation of large-scale mutations, including duplicated genes, mobile genetic elements, and nuclear mitochondrial DNA. The evidence suggests a general population-level explanation such as a reduction in effective population size (N(e)). This would have tipped the balance between the evolutionary forces of natural selection and random genetic drift toward genetic drift for variants having small selective effects. After describing these proximate effects, I describe the potential consequences of these effects for primate and human evolution. For example, an increase in the fixation of slightly deleterious mutations could potentially have led to an increase in the fixation rate of compensatory mutations that act to suppress the effects of slightly deleterious substitutions. The potential consequences of compensatory evolution for the evolution of novel gene functions and in potentially confounding the detection of positively selected genes are explored. The consequences of the passive accumulation of large-scale genomic mutations by genetic drift are unclear, though evidence suggests that new gene copies as well as insertions of transposable elements into genes can potentially lead to adaptive phenotypes. Finally, because a decrease in selective constraint at the genetic level is expected to have effects at the morphological level, I review studies that compare rates of morphological change in various mammalian and island populations where N(e) is reduced. Furthermore, I discuss evidence that suggests that craniofacial morphology in the Homo lineage has shifted from an evolutionary rate constrained by purifying selection toward a neutral evolutionary rate.
进化生物学一直倾向于将正选择的适应性进化作为物种进化轨迹的原始动力,而低估了非适应性进化过程的重要性。在这篇综述中,我描述了一些证据,表明灵长类动物和人类的进化受到了非适应性过程的强烈影响,特别是随机遗传漂变和突变。这表现在三个基本效应上:选择约束的相对放松(即纯化选择)、轻微有害突变固定率的相对增加,以及正选择效率的普遍降低。这些效应在蛋白质编码、调控区和基因表达数据中都有观察到,同时也观察到大规模突变的固定率增加,包括重复基因、移动遗传元件和核线粒体 DNA。这些证据表明了一种普遍的群体水平解释,例如有效种群数量(N(e))的减少。这将使自然选择和随机遗传漂变之间的进化力量平衡向具有小选择效应的变异的遗传漂变倾斜。在描述了这些直接效应之后,我描述了这些效应对灵长类动物和人类进化的潜在影响。例如,轻微有害突变固定率的增加可能导致补偿性突变的固定率增加,这些突变可以抑制轻微有害替代的效应。探讨了补偿性进化对新基因功能进化的潜在影响以及对正选择基因检测的潜在干扰。遗传漂变被动积累大规模基因组突变的潜在后果尚不清楚,尽管有证据表明,新的基因拷贝以及转座元件插入基因可能导致适应性表型。最后,由于遗传水平上选择约束的降低预计会对形态水平产生影响,我回顾了比较各种哺乳动物和岛屿种群形态变化率的研究,这些种群的 N(e)都降低了。此外,我还讨论了一些证据,表明在人类谱系中,颅面形态已经从受纯化选择约束的进化速度转变为中性进化速度。