Sazzini M, Schiavo G, De Fanti S, Martelli P L, Casadio R, Luiselli D
1] Laboratory of Molecular Anthropology, Department of Biological, Geological and Environmental Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy [2] Centre for Genome Biology, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
Department of Agro-Food Technologies, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
Heredity (Edinb). 2014 Sep;113(3):259-67. doi: 10.1038/hdy.2014.24. Epub 2014 Mar 26.
Adaptation to low temperatures has been reasonably developed in the human species during the colonization of the Eurasian landmass subsequent to Out of Africa migrations of anatomically modern humans. In addition to morphological and cultural changes, also metabolic ones are supposed to have favored human isolation from cold and body heat production and this can be hypothesized also for most Neandertal and at least for some Denisovan populations, which lived in geographical areas that strongly experienced the last glacial period. Modulation of non-shivering thermogenesis, for which adipocytes belonging to the brown adipose tissue are the most specialized cells, might have driven these metabolic adaptations. To perform an exploratory analysis aimed at looking into this hypothesis, variation at 28 genes involved in such functional pathway was investigated in modern populations from different climate zones, as well as in Neandertal and Denisovan genomes. Patterns of variation at the LEPR gene, strongly related to increased heat dissipation by mitochondria, appeared to have been shaped by positive selection in modern East Asians, but not in Europeans. Moreover, a single potentially cold-adapted LEPR allele, different from the supposed adaptive one identified in Homo sapiens, was found also in Neandertal and Denisovan genomes. These findings suggest that independent mechanisms for cold adaptations might have been developed in different non-African human groups, as well as that the evolution of possible enhanced thermal efficiency in Neandertals and in some Denisovan populations has plausibly entailed significant changes also in other functional pathways than in the examined one.
在解剖学意义上的现代人类走出非洲后迁移至欧亚大陆的过程中,人类已相当程度地发展出了对低温的适应能力。除了形态和文化上的变化,代谢变化也被认为有助于人类抵御寒冷并产生体热,对于大多数尼安德特人以及至少部分丹尼索瓦人群体而言也可作此假设,他们生活在受末次冰期影响强烈的地理区域。非颤抖性产热的调节可能驱动了这些代谢适应,在这一过程中,棕色脂肪组织中的脂肪细胞是最为特殊的细胞。为了进行一项探索性分析以探究这一假设,研究了来自不同气候区的现代人群以及尼安德特人和丹尼索瓦人基因组中参与该功能途径的28个基因的变异情况。与线粒体增加散热密切相关的瘦素受体(LEPR)基因的变异模式,似乎在现代东亚人中受到了正选择的影响,而在欧洲人中则不然。此外,在尼安德特人和丹尼索瓦人的基因组中也发现了一个与智人中确定的假定适应性等位基因不同的、可能适应寒冷的LEPR等位基因。这些发现表明,不同的非非洲人类群体可能独立发展出了适应寒冷的机制,而且尼安德特人和一些丹尼索瓦人群体中可能增强的热效率的进化,除了所研究的功能途径外,在其他功能途径中也可能带来了显著变化。