Dorus_2004_Cell_119_1027

Reference

Title : Accelerated evolution of nervous system genes in the origin of Homo sapiens - Dorus_2004_Cell_119_1027
Author(s) : Dorus S , Vallender EJ , Evans PD , Anderson JR , Gilbert SL , Mahowald M , Wyckoff GJ , Malcom CM , Lahn BT
Ref : Cell , 119 :1027 , 2004
Abstract :

Human evolution is characterized by a dramatic increase in brain size and complexity. To probe its genetic basis, we examined the evolution of genes involved in diverse aspects of nervous system biology. We found that these genes display significantly higher rates of protein evolution in primates than in rodents. Importantly, this trend is most pronounced for the subset of genes implicated in nervous system development. Moreover, within primates, the acceleration of protein evolution is most prominent in the lineage leading from ancestral primates to humans. Thus, the remarkable phenotypic evolution of the human nervous system has a salient molecular correlate, i.e., accelerated evolution of the underlying genes, particularly those linked to nervous system development. In addition to uncovering broad evolutionary trends, our study also identified many candidate genes--most of which are implicated in regulating brain size and behavior--that might have played important roles in the evolution of the human brain.

PubMedSearch : Dorus_2004_Cell_119_1027
PubMedID: 15620360
Gene_locus related to this paper: pantr-dpp6

Related information

Gene_locus pantr-dpp6
Gene_locus_frgt macfa-q5isn3

Citations formats

Dorus S, Vallender EJ, Evans PD, Anderson JR, Gilbert SL, Mahowald M, Wyckoff GJ, Malcom CM, Lahn BT (2004)
Accelerated evolution of nervous system genes in the origin of Homo sapiens
Cell 119 :1027

Dorus S, Vallender EJ, Evans PD, Anderson JR, Gilbert SL, Mahowald M, Wyckoff GJ, Malcom CM, Lahn BT (2004)
Cell 119 :1027