Instituto Patagónico de Ciencias Sociales y Humanas, Centro Nacional Patagónico, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, U9120ACD, Puerto Madryn, Argentina.
Ciencia Forense, Facultad de Medicina, Circuito de la Investigación Científica s/n, Ciudad Universitaria, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Del. Coyoacán, CP 04510, Mexico.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Nov 21;114(47):12442-12447. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1703790114. Epub 2017 Oct 30.
Both modern humans (MHs) and Neanderthals successfully settled across western Eurasian cold-climate landscapes. Among the many adaptations considered as essential to survival in such landscapes, changes in the nasal morphology and/or function aimed to humidify and warm the air before it reaches the lungs are of key importance. Unfortunately, the lack of soft-tissue evidence in the fossil record turns difficult any comparative study of respiratory performance. Here, we reconstruct the internal nasal cavity of a Neanderthal plus two representatives of climatically divergent MH populations (southwestern Europeans and northeastern Asians). The reconstruction includes mucosa distribution enabling a realistic simulation of the breathing cycle in different climatic conditions via computational fluid dynamics. Striking across-specimens differences in fluid residence times affecting humidification and warming performance at the anterior tract were found under cold/dry climate simulations. Specifically, the Asian model achieves a rapid air conditioning, followed by the Neanderthals, whereas the European model attains a proper conditioning only around the medium-posterior tract. In addition, quantitative-genetic evolutionary analyses of nasal morphology provided signals of stabilizing selection for MH populations, with the removal of Arctic populations turning covariation patterns compatible with evolution by genetic drift. Both results indicate that, departing from important craniofacial differences existing among Neanderthals and MHs, an advantageous species-specific respiratory performance in cold climates may have occurred in both species. Fluid dynamics and evolutionary biology independently provided evidence of nasal evolution, suggesting that adaptive explanations regarding complex functional phenotypes require interdisciplinary approaches aimed to quantify both performance and evolutionary signals on covariation patterns.
现代人(MHs)和尼安德特人都成功地在整个欧亚大陆西部的寒冷气候景观中定居。在被认为对在这种景观中生存至关重要的许多适应中,旨在加湿和加热空气的鼻腔形态和/或功能的变化非常重要。不幸的是,化石记录中缺乏软组织证据使得对呼吸性能的任何比较研究都变得困难。在这里,我们重建了一个尼安德特人和两个气候差异较大的 MH 人群(西南欧人和东北亚人)的代表的鼻腔内部。重建包括粘膜分布,通过计算流体动力学在不同气候条件下实现真实的呼吸周期模拟。在模拟寒冷/干燥气候时,在前部气道中发现了影响加湿和加热性能的跨标本差异很大的流体停留时间。具体而言,亚洲模型实现了快速的空气调节,随后是尼安德特人,而欧洲模型仅在后中气道附近达到适当的调节。此外,对鼻腔形态的定量遗传进化分析为 MH 人群提供了稳定选择的信号,去除北极人群使协变模式与遗传漂变的进化兼容。这两个结果都表明,从尼安德特人和 MH 之间存在的重要颅面差异出发,在寒冷气候中,两种物种可能都具有有利的特定物种呼吸性能。流体动力学和进化生物学独立提供了鼻腔进化的证据,这表明需要采用跨学科方法来量化性能和进化信号,以对复杂功能表型的适应解释。