Department of Evolutionary Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Genome Res. 2017 Sep;27(9):1563-1572. doi: 10.1101/gr.219493.116. Epub 2017 Jul 18.
Natural selection that affected modern humans early in their evolution has likely shaped some of the traits that set present-day humans apart from their closest extinct and living relatives. The ability to detect ancient natural selection in the human genome could provide insights into the molecular basis for these human-specific traits. Here, we introduce a method for detecting ancient selective sweeps by scanning for extended genomic regions where our closest extinct relatives, Neandertals and Denisovans, fall outside of the present-day human variation. Regions that are unusually long indicate the presence of lineages that reached fixation in the human population faster than expected under neutral evolution. Using simulations, we show that the method is able to detect ancient events of positive selection and that it can differentiate those from background selection. Applying our method to the 1000 Genomes data set, we find evidence for ancient selective sweeps favoring regulatory changes and present a list of genomic regions that are predicted to underlie positively selected human specific traits.
自然选择在人类进化的早期就影响了现代人,可能塑造了一些使现代人与他们最近灭绝和现存的亲属区别开来的特征。检测人类基因组中古老自然选择的能力可以为这些人类特有的特征的分子基础提供深入了解。在这里,我们介绍了一种通过扫描扩展的基因组区域来检测古老选择的方法,这些区域中我们最近灭绝的亲属——尼安德特人和丹尼索瓦人——超出了当今人类的变异范围。异常长的区域表明存在谱系,这些谱系在人类群体中达到固定的速度比中性进化预期的要快。通过模拟,我们表明该方法能够检测到古老的正选择事件,并且能够将其与背景选择区分开来。将我们的方法应用于 1000 基因组数据集,我们发现了支持调控变化的古老选择的证据,并提供了一份预测潜在的人类特有的受正选择影响的基因组区域列表。