angry, resentful, and abusive ...
And the Evolutionary Beat Goes On . . .
By Shankar  Vedantam
Washington Post Staff Writer Monday,
July 24, 2006; Page A07
Stephen Jay Gould would have been pleased.
No, not about his mug shot at the endpoint of evolution in the illustration  above, but about the growing evidence that evolution is not just real but is  actually happening to human beings right now.
"From 1970 to 2000, there was a widespread view that although natural  selection is very important, it is relatively rare," said Jonathan  Pritchard, a geneticist at the University of Chicago. "That view was driven  largely because we did not have data to identify the signals of natural  selection. . . . In the last five years or so, there has been a tremendous  growth in our understanding of how much selection there is."
That insight has only deepened as scientists have gained the ability to read the  entire human genome, the chain of "letters" that spell out humanity's  genetic identity.
"Signals of natural selection are incredibly widespread across the human  genome," Pritchard said. "Everywhere we look, there appears to be very  widespread signals of natural selection in many genes and many processes."
Pritchard helped write a recent paper that identified some of those changes. The  paper was published in the public access journal PLoS Biology.
The research offers a fascinating snapshot into how the human genome has  continued to change as humans adapted to new circumstances over the past 10,000  years. As people went from hunter-gatherers to agricultural societies, for  instance, there is evidence of genetic adaptations to new diseases and diets.
Europeans seem to be adapting to the increased availability of dairy products,  with genetic changes that allow the enzyme lactase, which breaks down lactose in  milk, to be available throughout life, not just in infancy. Similarly, East  Asians show genetic changes that affect the metabolism of the sugar sucrose,  while the Yoruba people in sub-Saharan Africa show genetic changes that alter  how they metabolize the sugar mannose.
Where starvation was once widespread in humans' evolutionary history, making it  genetically advantageous to conserve calories as much as possible, the abundance  of food in many countries today has led to the opposite problem -- risk factors  and diseases related to metabolic overload, including obesity and diabetes --  suggesting these could be areas in which natural selection may currently be  active, as genetic variations that help protect against such disorders gain  selective advantage.
There are also a host of changes at the genetic level that scientists do not yet  understand -- they are probably useful, but it is not clear how.
Several changes seem related to fertility and reproduction, areas of very high  relevance to natural selection. The basic protein structure of sperm may have  changed in East Asians and the Yoruba; East Asians also show genetic changes  related to sperm motility; and Europeans show genetic changes related to egg  viability, fertilization and the female immune response to sperm.
Pritchard said his research does not speak directly to Gould's "punctuated  equilibrium" hypothesis that suggests that evolution progresses in leaps  and starts. That is because Gould focused on large changes in form or structure,  whereas Pritchard studies subtler changes at the genetic level.
"If you met a human from 10,000 years ago," Pritchard quipped,  "they may look a little different, but if you dressed them right, they  would probably blend in. Gould's talking about changes in body plan and broader  changes."
To spot natural selection at work, Pritchard and Bruce Lahn, also a geneticist  at the University of Chicago who has conducted independent research in the same  area, first look for places along the human genome to identify sites that show  changes in some people but not in others. Then they look at the genetic material  surrounding the changed part.
If the surrounding area looks very different from one person to the next, the  particular change probably occurred a long time ago, because the general area  has had time to accumulate other changes in the DNA. If there are not many  differences in the surrounding genetic sequence, that indicates the particular  change is relatively new.
Then scientists figure out how widespread that particular change is in large  populations. Changes that are both new and widespread reveal the hand of natural  selection -- since advantageous genetic changes will quickly spread through the  population.
Next, scientists try to guess what the genetic change is accomplishing. If the  change is in a part of the genome known to be involved in the immune system, the  change may have something to do with responding to new diseases. Other changes  may have to do with brain functioning or skin color.
Europeans, for example, show strong changes over the past 10,000 years in genes  that affect skin color -- as humans moved into northern Europe, where there was  less ultraviolet light, there was a strong evolutionary advantage to having  lighter skin to allow in more ultraviolet light, which is needed to synthesize  Vitamin D.
Lahn found changes in two genes, dubbed ASPM and MCPH1, that are known to be  involved in brain development. He published his results recently in the journal  Science.
While genetic changes, especially related to the brain, may prompt people to  think different populations are evolving different mental abilities, both Lahn  and Pritchard pooh-poohed this idea. For one thing, they pointed out, biology is  complex, and the same genes often play multiple roles in the body. A gene that  affects brain development may also play a role in the immune system, so it is  not possible to say with certainty that natural selection has favored the change  because of its effect on the brain.
Well, that's persuasive! I guess the Marxist Gould would have had nothing to worry about this new research puncturing his favorite dogmas ...
Besides, Pritchard added, scientists found about the same number of changes in all three groups they studied, suggesting that evolution is taking place everywhere, adapting different groups to the particulars of their ecological niches.
Note to WaPo reporter: that fact doesn't imply what you think it implies. Instead, it implies the exact opposite.
Come to  think of it, the late Stephen Jay Gould might have been upset with the above  illustration. Contrary to the popular imagination, evolution is not a linear  process that culminates in the triumphal ascent of humans at the top of the  genetic heap. The process is analogous to a bush, where twigs and leaves push  out in every direction.
When biologists talk about evolution and the survival of the fittest, they do  not necessarily mean the strongest, fastest or smartest. Fitness is whatever  works in a particular environment, and the new research shows that as  environments change, notions of fitness change, too.
As I wrote in 1999 in "Darwin's Enemies on the Left:"
The left fears Darwinian science because its dogma of our factual equality cannot survive the relentlessly accumulating evidence of our genetic variability. Gould, a famous sports nut, cannot turn on his TV without being confronted by lean East Africans outdistancing the world's runners, massive Samoans flattening quarterbacks, lithe Chinese diving and tumbling for gold medals, or muscular athletes of West African descent out-sprinting, out-jumping, and out-hitting all comers. No wonder Gould is reduced to insisting we chant: "Say it five times before breakfast tomorrow: … Human equality is a contingent fact of history" -- like Dorothy trying to get home from Oz.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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