Scientific News Hypotheses Historical hypotheses SCIENTISTS USE DNA FRAGMENTS TO TRACE THE MIGRATION OF MODERN HUMANS
SCIENTISTS USE DNA FRAGMENTS TO TRACE THE
MIGRATION OF MODERN HUMANS
Human beings may have made their first journey
out of Africa as recently as 70,000 years ago, according to a new study by
geneticists from Stanford University and the Russian Academy of Sciences.
Writing in the American Journal of Human Genetics, the researchers estimate that
the entire population of ancestral humans at the time of the African expansion
consisted of only about 2,000 individuals.
"This estimate does not preclude the
presence of other populations of Homo sapiens sapiens [modern humans] in Africa,
although it suggests that they were probably isolated from one another
genetically, and that contemporary worldwide populations descend from one or
very few of those populations," said Marcus W. Feldman, the Burnet C. and
Mildred Finley Wohlford Professor at Stanford and co-author of the study.
The small size of our ancestral population may
explain why there is so little genetic variability in human DNA compared with
that of chimpanzees and other closely related species, Feldman added.
The study, published in the May edition of the
journal, is based on research conducted in Feldman`s Stanford laboratory in
collaboration with co-authors Lev A. Zhivotovsky of the Russian Academy and
former Stanford graduate student Noah A. Rosenberg, now at the University of
Southern California.
"Our results are consistent with the `out-of-Africa`
theory, according to which a sub-Saharan African ancestral population gave rise
to all populations of anatomically modern humans through a chain of migrations
to the Middle East, Europe, Asia, Oceania and America," Feldman noted.
Ancient roots
Since all human beings have virtually identical
DNA, geneticists have to look for slight chemical variations that distinguish
one population from another. One technique involves the use of "microsatellites"
- short repetitive fragments of DNA whose patterns of variation differ among
populations. Because microsatellites are passed from generation to generation
and have a high mutation rate, they are a useful tool for estimating when two
populations diverged.
In their study, the research team compared 377
microsatellite markers in DNA collected from 1,056 individuals representing 52
geographic sites in Africa, Eurasia (the Middle East, Europe, Central and South
Asia), East Asia, Oceania and the Americas.
Statistical analysis of the microsatellite data
revealed a close genetic relationship between two hunter-gatherer populations in
sub-Saharan Africa - the Mbuti pygmies of the Congo Basin and the Khoisan (or
"bushmen") of Botswana and Namibia. These two populations "may
represent the oldest branch of modern humans studied here," the authors
concluded.
The data revealed a genetic split between the
ancestors of these hunter-gatherer populations and the ancestors of contemporary
African farming people - Bantu speakers who inhabit many countries in southern
Africa. "This division occurred between 70,000 and 140,000 years ago and
was followed by the expansion out of Africa into Eurasia, Oceania, East Asia and
the Americas - in that order," Feldman said.
This result is consistent with an earlier study
in which Feldman and others analyzed the Y chromosomes of more than 1,000 men
from 21 different populations. In that study, the researchers concluded that the
first human migration from Africa may have occurred roughly 66,000 years ago.
Population bottlenecks
The research team also found that indigenous
hunter-gatherer populations in Africa, the Americas and Oceania have experienced
very little growth over time. "Hunting and gathering could not support a
significant increase in population size," Feldman explained. "These
populations probably underwent severe bottlenecks during which their numbers
crashed - possibly because of limited resources, diseases and, in some cases,
the effects of long-distance migrations."
Unlike hunter-gatherers, the ancestors of
sub-Saharan African farming populations appear to have experienced a population
expansion that started around 35,000 years ago: "This increase in
population sizes might have been preceded by technological innovations that led
to an increase in survival and then an increase in the overall birth rate,"
the authors wrote. The peoples of Eurasia and East Asia also show evidence of
population expansion starting about 25,000 years ago, they added.
"The exciting thing about these data is that
they are amenable to a combination of mathematical models and statistical
analyses that can help solve problems that are important in paleontology,
archaeology and anthropology," Feldman concluded.
###
The research was supported by grants from the
National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and the Russian
Foundation for Basic Research.
By Mark Shwartz
CONTACT: Mark Shwartz, News Service: (650)
723-9296, mshwartz@stanford.edu
COMMENT: Marc Feldman, Biological Sciences: (650) 725-1867, marc@charles.stanford.edu
EDITORS: The study, "Features of
Evolution and Expansion of Modern Humans, Inferred from Genomewide
Microsatellite Markers," by Lev A. Zhivotovsky, Noah A. Rosenberg and
Marcus W. Feldman, appears in the May 2003 edition of the American Journal of
Human Genetics. A copy can be obtained from Professor Marc Feldman. His photo is
available at http://newsphotos.stanford.edu/
(slug: "Humans_Feldman.jpg").
Relevant Web URLs:
http://www-evo.stanford.edu/
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2003/january8/genetics-18.html
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/november8/chromosome-1108.html
http://www.neanderthal-modern.com/genetic1.htm
News Service website: http://www.stanford.edu/news/
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Most recent news releases from Stanford: http://www.stanford.edu/dept/news/html/releases.html
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University
Publishing date: June 3, 2003
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