Molecular Anthropology Genetics Research Tutorial 1 www.abdn.ac.uk/~gen155/lectures/restut.ppt.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Population Genetics 3 We can learn a lot about the origins and movements of populations from genetics Did all modern humans come from Africa? Are we derived.
Advertisements

Y CHROMOSOME VARIATION Males from Cis-Baikal Sites of Lokomotiv, Shamanka II, and Ust’-Ida Examine the genetic relationships between prehistoric Cis- Baikal.
M168 M89 M91 M96 M60 M304 M170 M130 M201 M52 NEXT.
CLOUD Surname DNA Project. Genetic Genealogy A Report on The CLOUD DNA Project. 1.Our Data Examined 2.Intro to Genetic Genealogy & DNA Genealogical.
Gene tree analyses of Aboriginal Australians Rosalind Harding University of Oxford.
From Africa to Aotearoa The story of human migrations.
Genetic perspectives on prehistoric social practices Brigitte Pakendorf MPI for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Genetic Genealogy A Report on The CLOUD DNA Project. 1.Our Data Examined 2.Intro to Genetic Genealogy & DNA Genealogical DNA and its Components 4.Examining.
CHAPTER 20: HUMAN EVOLUTION Understanding “Mitochondrial Eve” and the Out of Africa hypothesis.
1 ANCIENT AND MODERN DNA IN THE AMERICAS: IMPLICATIONS FOR THE PEOPLING OF THE NEW WORLD Frederika A. Kaestle, Ripan S. Malhi, Jason A. Eshleman, David.
Molecular Evolution. Morphology You can classify the evolutionary relationships between species by examining their features Much of the Tree of Life was.
Homo floresiensis Pierolapithecus catalaunicus Great-great-grandfather ape. A new fossil (reconstruction, above, and face, inset) may be closely related.
Genomes as the Hub of Biology UNIT 2. The hub of biology As biologists, we seek not only to understand how a single organism works, but how organisms.
Phylogenetic reconstruction
Patterns of population structure and admixture among human populations Katarzyna Bryc OEB 275br February 19, 2013.
1 PREHISTORY 1 st SECONDARY EDUCATION Así Hablo Zaratustra (Amanecer) Richard Strauss (1864 – 1949) D. Mariano Llorente.
Human Evolution What were our ancestors like? Where did we evolve? Why big brains? Relationships between populations?
Y-chromosome diversity in Central Africa Aussois, September 2005 Gemma Berniell-Lee, Jaume Bertranpetit, David Comas.
Islands in Africa: a study of structure in the source population for modern humans Rosalind Harding Depts of Statistics, Zoology & Anthropology, Oxford.
Tracing the dispersal of human populations By analysis of polymorphisms in the Non-recombining region of the Human Y Chromosome Underhill et al 2000 Nature.
Neandertal mtDNA evidence: reported 1997 Dr. Svante Pääbo (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology). mtDNA sequence from type specimen of “neanderthalensis”
Dispersal models Continuous populations Isolation-by-distance Discrete populations Stepping-stone Island model.
Evolutionary Genome Biology Gabor T. Marth, D.Sc. Department of Biology, Boston College Medical Genomics Course – Debrecen, Hungary, May 2006.
Human Migrations Saeed Hassanpour Spring Introduction Population Genetics Co-evolution of genes with language and cultural. Human evolution: genetics,
There used to be several species of Homo - eventually gave rise to Homo erectus - about 1.8 millions yr ago ( may be older) - originated in East Africa.
Chapter 1 Early people Test Review.
Chapter 2 Opener How do we classify organisms?. Figure 2.1 Tracing the path of evolution to Homo sapiens from the universal ancestor of all life.
Aussois The Berbers Linguistic and genetic diversity J.-M. DUGOUJON and G. PHILIPPSON UMR 8555 CNRS Toulouse UMR 5596 CNRS Lyon.
1 Human Evolution Chapter Human evolution Closest living relatives Fossil hominids (“missing links”) Origin and spread of Homo sapiens.
Genetic Genealogy, History and Prehistory, and DNA Ancestry Tracing “DNA and Your Health” Seminar Presented by Donald N. Yates, Ph.D.
Out-of-Africa Theory: The Origin Of Modern Humans
EQ: How did humans live during the Paleolithic Age?
 On a blank sheet of paper, quickly chart your family tree  Begin with the names of your mother and father’s parents, your grandparents, and work down.
The Tree of Life. Questions 6.5 Billion Humans 6.5 Billion Humans Who were the first modern people in Africa? Who were the first modern people in Africa?
Human Genetics, part II Liisa Kauppi (Keeney lab) Human populations: origins Implications of population history for disease mapping.
Background Information First species of Homo, Homo habilis, evolved in Africa around 2 million years ago. Later, a descendant of Homo habilis, Homo erectus.
Phylogenetics and Coalescence Lab 9 October 24, 2012.
The Search for Genetic Eve and Adam. Divergence Points 5-7 Million Years Ago (MYA)– Divergence from the Chimpanzee Lineage 5-7 Million Years Ago (MYA)–
APPLICATIONS OF MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS
Biology 101 DNA: elegant simplicity A molecule consisting of two strands that wrap around each other to form a “twisted ladder” shape, with the.
APPLICATIONS OF MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS
16. Molecular Phylogenetics
Discuss results of forensics analysis Review mini satellites and microsatellites Present Y chromosome study of human origins and migration Discuss one.
Population Genetics and Human Evolution
Copyright © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 13 The Emergence, Dispersal, and Bioarchaeology of Homo sapiens.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Lectures by Greg Podgorski, Utah State University Current Issues in Biology, Volume.
C MODERN HUMANS Cont…..
Restriction enzyme analysis The new(ish) population genetics Old view New view Allele frequency change looking forward in time; alleles either the same.
Evolutionary Genome Biology Gabor T. Marth, D.Sc. Department of Biology, Boston College
Archaeology/paleontology (“ancient DNA” analysis) Conservation biology Forensic science Taxonomy Power & pitfalls of PCR (polymerase chain reaction) Rapid.
Our Current Understanding of Human Demographic History and Migrations NeandertalModern Homo Sapiens.
Period before Recorded (Written) History Ended with the Invention of Writing and Recordkeeping Different for Different Civilizations.
Paleolithic Age (2.5 million-10,000 B.C.)
Out-of-Africa Theory: The Origin Of Modern Humans.
Inferences on human demographic history using computational Population Genetic models Gabor T. Marth Department of Biology Boston College Chestnut Hill,
Hominids 101 (WH.2). What does Prehistory mean? Time before humans wrote down or recorded records of past events!
The Human Chromosomes 1. Other Structural Variants Inversion DeletionCopy number variant.
Lecture 24: Human Origins and Signatures of Selection April 11, 2014.
Forensic informativity of domestic dog mtDNA control region sequences
The Heritage of Pathogen Pressures and Ancient Demography in the Human Innate- Immunity CD209/CD209L Region  Luis B. Barreiro, Etienne Patin, Olivier Neyrolles,
Our Understanding of Human Evolution is Primarily Based on Fossils
Our Understanding of Human Evolution is Primarily Based on Fossils
When doing GENETIC mapping, Molecular Markers can be used as a locus
What is Generally Agreed Upon?
Prehistory Events that occurred before writing was developed.
Modern Homo Sapiens Regional-Continuity Model (Milford Wolpoff, UMich)
A Predominantly Indigenous Paternal Heritage for the Austronesian-Speaking Peoples of Insular Southeast Asia and Oceania  Cristian Capelli, James F. Wilson,
The Dual Origin of the Malagasy in Island Southeast Asia and East Africa: Evidence from Maternal and Paternal Lineages  Matthew E. Hurles, Bryan C. Sykes,
A Y Chromosome Census of the British Isles
The Heritage of Pathogen Pressures and Ancient Demography in the Human Innate- Immunity CD209/CD209L Region  Luis B. Barreiro, Etienne Patin, Olivier Neyrolles,
Presentation transcript:

Molecular Anthropology Genetics Research Tutorial 1

Human Origins AustralopithecusEarly Homo spH sapiens Neanderthals Mya Mya = million years ago Birth of Jesus was Mya

European Human Prehistory Most of European history is prehistory We (modern-type humans) got here about years ago: the Palaeolithic (old stone age) - primarily hunter-gatherer economy - displacing the indigenous Neanderthal type humans Farming spread across Europe from the Middle East (Fertile Crescent) from around 7000 Ya - Neolithic (new stone age)

European time chart

Neanderthal, Cro-Magnon and modern Low forehead, prominent eyebrow ridges Very similar to us

Paleolithic Cave Art from Lascaux (Dordogne, France) (About Ya)

The mitochondrial chromosome About 15kb of mtDNA Mutates quite rapidly In eggs but not sperm, so shows maternal inheritance

The human Y chromosome The mammalian X and Y chromosomes evolved from a pair of autosomes The human Y has a block of material that transposed (moved) from the X since the divergence of chimps and humans

Phylogeny based on haplotypes If there has been no recombination, we can deduce the phylogeny of the haplotypes by parsimony acgttgcaagcaaccaacgtacga Outgroup e.g. chimp Modern humans Mutation (SNP)

Dating the mutational events The Y chromosome also has rapidly-mutating microsatellites (short tandemly repeated sequences such as CACACA….) The older a mutation, the more diverse microsatellite alleles associated with it Haplogroup

Ovchinnikov et al (2000) Neanderthal mtDNA from Asia Phylogenetic analysis of Neanderthal and modern human DNAs Evidence for the Out-of-Africa model of modern human origins Estimation of the age of the MRCA for modern humans and Neanderthals Used phylogenies based on distance and parsimony

Capelli et al (2003) A Y-chromosome census of the British Isles Compares Y chromosomes from regions of UK, with those in Denmark, Germany, Ireland, Norway Different parts of UK have differing proportions of indigenous and invading Y chromosomes Uses Y chromosome SNPs (which they call UEPs) and microsatellites Capelli C, Redhead N, Abernethy JK, Gratrix F, Wilson JF, Moen T, Hervig T, Richards M, Stumpf MP, Underhill PA, Bradshaw P, Shaha A, Thomas MG, Bradman N, Goldstein DB. (2003) A Y chromosome census of the British Isles. Curr Biol. 13:

Caramelli et al (2003) Analysis of mtDNA from 24,000 year old anatomically modern (Cro-Magnon) humans Evidence that Cro-Magnon types, not Neanderthals, are the ancestors of modern humans Used multidimensional scaling to represent sequences as points in space, distance between them is a measure of genetic distance Also used a simple measure of genetic distance

Thomas et al (2000) Lemba (Black Jews) are Bantu-speakers living in southern Africa Claim Jewish origin based on stories and customs Study compares their Y-chromosomes with other African and Jewish populations Looked at distribution of haplotypes across populations, and proportions of haplotype sharing between populations Also constructed genealogical tree of haplotypes

The Exercise Look at the 4 set papers Highlight the questions we want you to investigate You can decide what the other interesting questions are, and how they were answered Organise yourself into group(s) to do this - each group should have at least one person who did the population genetics module For each paper you should be able to understand how the main conclusions were reached and what were the important experimental results Be ready to present your paper to the class at next meeting

Additional papers (Not set this year)

Brown et al (1998) Studied the mtDNA of modern Native Americans - 4 main types (A-D) Minor 5th type (X) in Native Americans found also in Europeans but not Asians So how did it get there? By crossing the Atlantic? Used a network based on maximum parsimony to illustrate relationships of haplotypes, and coalescent analysis to estimate ages

Helgason et al (2001) mtDNA analysis to deduce the orgins of people in islands of North Atlantic (Iceland, Orkney, Scottish Western Isles, Skye, etc) Relative contributions of Vikings from Scandinavia (about 1000 years ago) and Picts/Gaels from Britain/Ireland (more ancient) Used (rho) distance between samples as measure of the average number of base changes between a member of one population and a member of the other population

Kayser et al (2000) Study of the mutation rate and mechanism of Y- chromosome microsatellites using father + son DNA Important both for anthropological studies (dating the age of lineages) and in forensics Used father-son DNA samples, a set of microsatellite polymorphisms, to calculate frequency and type of mutation Also estimated the probability of true paternity