Cambridge: During the period of global growth,the number of males involved in reproduction declined. In a study published recently in Genome Research,
scientists discovered that accumulation of material culture during the
middle and late stages of Neolithic, four to eight thousand years ago,
is associated with a dramatic decline in genetic diversity in male
lineages whereas female genetic diversity was on the rise.
It has been widely recognized that a major bottleneck, or decrease in
genetic diversity, occurred approximately 50 thousand years ago when a
subset of humans left Africa to colonize the rest of the world.
Signatures of this bottleneck can be seen in most genes of non-African
populations regardless of whether they are inherited from both parents
or, as confirmed in this work, only along the father’s or mother’s
genetic lines.
“Most surprisingly to us, we detected another, male-specific,
bottleneck during the period of global growth. The signal for this
bottleneck dates to a time period when humans in different parts of the
world had already for thousands of years been sedentary farmers,” said
senior author Toomas Kivisild from the University of Cambridge’s
Division of Biological Anthropology.
View an infographic of the research story here.
Melissa Wilson-Sayers, one of the lead authors from the School of
Life Sciences at Arizona State University, added: “Instead of ‘survival
of the fittest’ in biological sense, the accumulation of wealth and
power may have increased the reproductive success of a limited number of
socially ‘fit’ males and their sons.”
The researchers said studying genetic history is important for
understanding underlying levels of genetic variation. Having a high
level of genetic diversity is beneficial to humans for several reasons.
First, when the genes of individuals in a population vary greatly, the
group has a greater chance of thriving and surviving — particularly
against disease. It may also reduce the likelihood of passing along
unfavorable genetic traits, which can weaken a species over time.
According to Monika Karmin, co-author from University of Tartu, their
findings further stress the differences in human male and female
genetic histories which also may have implications related to human
health.
“The striking difference in the number of reproductive males and
females in that time window certainly affected the diversity of genes on
the male genetic line,” said Karmin. “We know that some populations are
predisposed to certain types of genetic disorders. Researchers
worldwide are trying to figure out what the underlying genetic structure
is, so now also the fact that the male part of human lineages has gone
trough a severe bottleneck has to be considered.”
“When a doctor tries to provide a diagnosis when you are sick, you’ll
be asked about your environment, what’s going on, and your genetic
history based on your family’s health. If we want to understand human
health on a global scale, we need to know our global genetic history;
that is what we are studying here,” added Wilson-Sayers.
The researchers believe this will be relevant for informing patterns
of genetic diversity across whole human populations, including informing
about susceptibility to diseases, independently in different
populations.