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Significations et usages de Human_evolutionary_genetics

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Human evolutionary genetics

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Human evolutionary genetics studies how one human genome differs from the other, the evolutionary past that gave rise to it, and its current effects. Differences between genomes have anthropological, medical and forensic implications and applications. Genetic data can provide important insight into human evolution.

Contents

Cladistics

A phylogenetic tree like the one shown above is usually derived from DNA or protein sequences from populations. Often mitochondrial DNA or Y chromosome sequences are used to study ancient human demographics. These single-locus sources of DNA do not recombine and are almost always inherited from a single parent, with only one known exception in mtDNA (Schwartz and Vissing 2002). Individuals from the various continental groups tend to be more similar to one another than to people from other continents. The tree is rooted in the common ancestor of chimpanzees and humans, which is believed to have originated in Africa. Horizontal distance corresponds to two things:

  1. Genetic distance. Given below the diagram, the genetic difference between humans and chimps is roughly 2%, or 20 times larger than the variation among modern humans.
  2. Temporal remoteness of the most recent common ancestor. Rough estimates are given above the diagram, in millions of years. The mitochondrial most recent common ancestor of modern humans lived roughly 200,000 years ago, latest common ancestors of humans and chimps between four and seven million years ago.

Chimpanzees and humans belong to different genera, indicated in red. Formation of species and subspecies is also indicated, and the formation of "races" is indicated in the green rectangle to the right (note that only a very rough representation of human phylogeny is given). Note that vertical distances are not meaningful in this representation.

Speciation of humans and the African apes

The separation of humans from their closest relatives, the African apes (chimpanzees and gorillas) has been studied for more than a century and the amount of scientific publications on that subject is huge. Five major questions have been addressed:

  • Which apes are our closest ancestors?
  • When did the separations occur?
  • What was the effective population size of the common ancestor before the split?
  • Are there traces of population structure (subpopulations) preceding the speciation or partial admixture succeeding it?
  • What were the specific events (including fusion of chromosomes 2a and 2b) prior to and subsequent to the separation?

General observations

As discussed before, different parts of the genome show different sequence divergence between different hominoids. It has also been shown that the sequence divergence between DNA from humans and chimpanzees varies greatly. For example the sequence divergence varies between 0% to 2.66% between non-coding, non-repetitive genomic regions of humans and chimpanzees.[1] Additionally gene trees, generated by comparative analysis of DNA segments, do not always fit the species tree. Summing up:

  • The sequence divergence varies significantly between humans, chimpanzees and gorillas.
  • For most DNA sequences, humans and chimpanzees appear to be most closely related, but some point to a human-gorilla or chimpanzee-gorilla clade.
  • The human genome has been sequenced, as well as the chimpanzee genome. Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes, while chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans have 24. Human chromosome 2 is a fusion between two chromosomes that remained separate in the other primates.[2]

Divergence times

The divergence time of humans from other apes is of great interest. One of the first molecular studies, published in 1967 measured immunological distances (IDs) between different primates.[3] Basically the study measured the strength of immunological response that an antigen from one species (human albumin) induces in the immune system of another species (human, chimpanzee, gorilla and Old World monkeys). Closely related species should have similar antigens and therefore weaker immunological response to each other's antigens. The immunological response of a species to its own antigens (e.g. human to human) was set to be 1. The ID between humans and gorillas was determined to be 1.09, that between humans and chimpanzees was determined as 1.14. However the distance to six different Old World monkeys was on average 2.46 indicating that the African apes are far closer related to humans than to monkeys. The authors consider the divergence time between Old World monkeys and hominoids to be 30 million years ago (MYA), based on fossil data, and the immunological distance was considered to grow at a constant rate. They concluded that divergence time of humans and the African apes to be roughly ~5 MYA. That was a surprising result. Most scientists at that time thought that humans and great apes diverged much earlier (>15 MYA). The gorilla was, in ID terms, closer to human than to chimpanzees, however the difference was so slight that the trichotomy could not be resolved with certainty. Later studies based on molecular genetics were able to resolve the trichotomy: chimpanzees are phylogenetically closer to humans than to gorillas. However, it is interesting to note, that the divergence times estimated later, using much more sophisticated methods in molecular genetics, do not differ much from the very first estimate in 1967.

Divergence times and ancestral effective population size

The sequences of the DNA segments diverge earlier than the species. A large effective population size in the ancestral population (left) preserves different variants of the DNA segments (=alleles) for a longer period of time. Therefore, on average, the gene divergence times (tA for DNA segment A; tB for DNA segment B) will deviate more from the time the species diverge (tS) compared to a small ancestral effective population size (right).

Current methods to determine divergence times use DNA sequence alignments and molecular clocks. Usually the molecular clock is calibrated assuming that the orangutan split from the African apes (including humans) 12-16 MYA. Some studies also include some old world monkeys and set the divergence time of them from hominoids to 25-30 MYA. Both calibration points are based on very little fossil data and have been criticized.[4] If these dates are revised, the divergence times estimated from molecular data will change as well. However, the relative divergence times are unlikely to change. Even if we can't tell absolute divergence times exactly, we can be pretty sure that the divergence time between chimpanzees and humans is about sixfold shorter than between chimpanzees (or humans) and monkeys.

One study (Takahata et al., 1995) used 15 DNA sequence from different regions of the genome from human and chimpanzee and 7 DNA sequences from human, chimpanzee and gorilla.[5] They determined that chimpanzees are more closely related to humans than gorillas. Using various statistical methods, they estimated the divergence time human-chimp to be 4.7 MYA and the divergence time between gorillas and humans (and chimps) to be 7.2 MYA. Additionally they estimated the effective population size of the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees to be ~100,000. This was somewhat surprising since the present day effective population size of humans is estimate to be only ~10,000. If true that means that the human lineage would have experienced an immense decrease of its effective population size (and thus genetic diversity) in its evolution. (see Toba catastrophe theory)

A and B are two different loci. In the upper figure they fit to the species tree. The DNA that is present in today's gorillas diverged earlier from the DNA that is present in today's humans and chimps. Thus both loci should be more similar between human and chimp than between gorilla and chimp or gorilla and human. In the lower graph, locus A has a more recent common ancestor in human and gorilla compared to the chimp sequence. Whereas chimp and gorilla have a more recent common ancestor for locus B. Here the gene trees are incongruent to the species tree.

Another study (Chen & Li, 2001) sequenced 53 non-repetitive, intergenic DNA segments from a human, a chimpanzee, a gorilla, and orangutan.[1] When the DNA sequences were concatenated to a single long sequence, the generated neighbor-joining tree supported the Homo-Pan clade with 100% bootstrap (that is that humans and chimpanzees are the closest related species of the four). When three species are fairly closely related to each other (like human, chimpanzee and gorilla), the trees obtained from DNA sequence data may not be congruent with the tree that represents the speciation (species tree). The shorter internodal time span (TIN) the more common are incongruent gene trees. The effective population size (Ne) of the internodal population determines how long genetic lineages are preserved in the population. A higher effective population size causes more incongruent gene trees. Therefore, if the internodal time span is known, the ancestral effective population size of the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees can be calculated.

When each segment was analyzed individually, 31 supported the Homo-Pan clade, 10 supported the Homo-Gorilla clade, and 12 supported the Pan-Gorilla clade. Using the molecular clock the authors estimated that gorillas split up first 6.2-8.4 MYA and chimpanzees and humans split up 1.6-2.2 million years later (internodal time span) 4.6-6.2 MYA. The internodal time span is useful to estimate the ancestral effective population size of the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees.

A parsimonious analysis revealed that 24 loci supported the Homo-Pan clade, 7 supported the Homo-Gorilla clade, 2 supported the Pan-Gorilla clade and 20 gave no resolution. Additionally they took 35 protein coding loci from databases. Of these 12 supported the Homo-Pan clade, 3 the Homo-Gorilla clade, 4 the Pan-Gorilla clade and 16 gave no resolution. Therefore only ~70% of the 52 loci that gave a resolution (33 intergenic, 19 protein coding) support the 'correct' species tree. From the fraction of loci which did not support the species tree and the internodal time span they estimated previously, the effective population of the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees was estimated to be ~52 000 to 96 000. This value is not as high as that from the first study (Takahata), but still much higher than present day effective population size of humans.[dubious ]

A third study (Yang, 2002) used the same dataset that Chen and Li used but estimated the ancestral effective population of 'only' ~12,000 to 21,000, using a different statistical method.[6]

Genetic differences between humans and other great apes

The alignable sequences within genomes of humans and chimpanzees differ by about 35 million single nucleotide substitutions. Additionally about 3% of the complete genomes differ by deletions, insertions and duplications.[7]

Since mutation rate is relatively constant, roughly one half of these changes occurred in the human lineage. Only a very tiny fraction of those fixed differences gave rise to the different phenotypes of humans and chimpanzees and finding those is a great challenge. The vast majority of the differences are neutral and do not affect the phenotype.[citation needed]

Molecular evolution may act in different ways, through protein evolution, gene loss, differential gene regulation and RNA evolution. All are thought to have played some part in human evolution.

Gene loss

Many different mutations can inactivate a gene, but few will change its function in a specific way. Inactivation mutations will therefore be readily available for selection to act on. Gene loss could thus be a common mechanism of evolutionary adaptation (the "less-is-more" hypothesis).[8]

80 genes were lost in the human lineage after separation from the last common ancestor with the chimpanzee. 36 of those were olfactory receptors. Genes involved in chemoreception and immune response are overrepresented.[9] Another study estimated that 86 genes had been lost.[10]

Hair keratin gene KRTHAP1

A gene for type I hair keratin was lost in the human lineage. Keratins are a major component of hairs. Humans still have nine functional type I hair keratin genes but the loss of that particular gene may have caused the thinning of human body hair. The gene loss occurred relatively recently in human evolution—less than 240,000 years ago.[11]

Myosin gene MYH16

Stedman et al. (2004) stated that the loss of the sarcomeric myosin gene MYH16 in the human lineage led to smaller masticatory muscles. They estimated that the mutation that led to the inactivation (a two base pair deletion) occurred 2.4 million years ago, predating the appearance of Homo ergaster/erectus in Africa. The period that followed was marked by a strong increase in cranial capacity, promoting speculation that the loss of the gene may have removed an evolutionary constraint on brain size in the genus Homo.[12]

Another estimate for the loss of the MYH16 gene is 5.3 million years ago, long before Homo appeared.[13]

Other

Gene addition

Segmental duplications (SDs or LCRs) have had roles in creating new primate genes and shaping human genetic variation.

Selection pressures

Human accelerated regions are areas of the genome that differ between humans and chimpanzees to a greater extent than can be explained by genetic drift over the time since the two species shared a common ancestor. These regions show signs of being subject to natural selection, leading to the evolution of distinctly human traits. Two examples are HAR1F, which is believed to be related to brain development and HAR2 (a.k.a HACNS1) that may have played a role in the development of the opposable thumb.

Genetic differences between humans and Neanderthals

An international group of scientists has completed a draft of 63 percent of the Neanderthal genome, consisting of 3.7 billion base pairs.[15] Some parts of the Neanderthal genome have more in common with chimps than humans[clarification needed], while other parts are shared by both Neanderthals and humans. Neanderthals and most humans share a lactose-intolerant variant of the lactase gene that encodes an enzyme that is unable to break down lactose in milk after weaning. Humans and Neanderthals also share the FOXP2 gene variant associated with brain development and with speech in humans, indicating that Neanderthals may have been able to speak. Chimps have two amino acid differences in FOXP2 compared with human FOXP2.

Apes and Human DNA

Data from both mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and nuclear DNA (nDNA) indicates that primates belong to the group of Euarchontoglires, together with Rodentia, Lagomorpha, Dermoptera, and Scandentia.[16] This is further supported by Alu-like short interspersed nuclear elements (SINEs) which have been found only in members of the Euarchontoglires.[17]

Sequence divergence between humans and apes

The draft sequence of the common chimpanzee genome published in the summer 2005 showed the regions that are similar enough to be aligned with one another account for 2400 million of the human genome’s 3164.7 million bases[18] – that is, 75.8% of the genome. This 75.8% of the human genome is 1.23% different from the chimpanzee genome in single nucleotide polymorphisms[18] (changes of single DNA “letters” in the genome). Another type of difference, called indels (insertions/deletions) account for another ~3 % difference between the alignable sequences.[18] In addition, variation in copy number of large segments (> 20 kb) of similar DNA sequence provides a further 2.7% difference between the two species.[19] Hence the total similarity of the genomes could be as low as about 70%.

The figures above do not take into account differences in the organization of the alignable sequences within the genomes of humans and chimps. Short stretches of alignable sequence may be in very different orders and locations within the two genomes. At present we cannot fully assess the difference in structure of the two genomes, because the human genome was used as a scaffold when the chimpanzee draft genome was assembled. When genomes are sequenced, relatively short sequences of DNA are produced, and these sequences have to be fitted together like a jigsaw puzzle. This requires multiple overlapping reads to accurately assemble the overall sequence. The human genome sequence is relatively accurate, with 8 to 9-fold coverage, but the chimpanzee draft genome only has 3.6-fold coverage.[18] The human genome was sequenced using a hierarchical shotgun method which can deal with duplications and difficult-to-assemble sequences better than the whole genome shotgun method that was used for the chimpanzee draft genome. The human genome was used as a template for the assembly of the draft chimpanzee genome, on the assumption that the two genomes would be similar.

Almost half of that 1.23% SNP change belongs to the human at 0.53%, whose genetic variance is lower than a chimp, and just over half to the chimp at 0.7%. If we also take into account that random "genetic drift" takes up the bulk of the 0.54% difference, then that percentage difference where SNPs have a potential positive impact on human abilities, is between 0.01% and 0.02%. The bonobo is a sibling species of common chimpanzee and is genetically about as different from humans as are common chimps.

Percentage sequence divergence between humans and other hominids[1]
LocusHuman-ChimpHuman-GorillaHuman-Orangutan
Alu elements2--
Non-coding (Chr. Y)1.68 ± 0.192.33 ± 0.25.63 ± 0.35
Pseudogenes (autosomal)1.64 ± 0.101.87 ± 0.11-
Pseudogenes (Chr. X)1.47 ± 0.17--
Noncoding (autosomal)1.24 ± 0.071.62 ± 0.083.08 ± 0.11
Genes (Ks)1.111.482.98
Introns0.93 ± 0.081.23 ± 0.09-
Xq13.30.92 ± 0.101.42 ± 0.123.00 ± 0.18
Subtotal for X chromosome1.16 ± 0.071.47 ± 0.08-
Genes (Ka)0.80.931.96

The sequence divergence has generally the following pattern: Human-Chimp < Human-Gorilla << Human-Orangutan, highlighting the close kinship between humans and the African apes. Alu elements diverge quickly due to their high frequency of CpG dinucleotides which mutate roughly 10 times more often than the average nucleotide in the genome. The mutation rate is higher in the male germ line, therefore the divergence in the Y chromosome—which is inherited solely from the father—is higher than in autosomes. The X chromosome is inherited twice as often through the female germ line as through the male germ line and therefore shows slightly lower sequence divergence. The sequence divergence of the Xq13.3 region is surprisingly low between humans and chimpanzees.[20]

Mutations altering the amino acid sequence of proteins (Ka) are the least common. In fact ~29% of all orthologous proteins are identical between human and chimpanzee. The typical protein differs by only two amino acids.[7]

The measures of sequence divergence shown in the table only take the substitutional differences, for example from an A (adenine) to a G (guanine), into account. DNA sequences may however also differ by insertions and deletions (indels) of bases. These are usually stripped from the alignments before the calculation of sequence divergence is performed. The overall sequence divergence between humans and chimpanzees for example is close to 5% if indels would be included.

Modern humans

Molecular biologists starting with Allan Wilson[21] on mtDNA have produced observations relevant to human evolution.

Age of the common ancestor

By estimating the rate at which mutations occur in mtDNA, the age of the common ancestral mtDNA type can be estimated: "the common ancestral mtDNA (type a) links mtDNA types that have diverged by an average of nearly 0.57%. Assuming a rate of 2%-4% per million years, this implies that the common ancestor of all surviving mtDNA types existed 140,000-290,000 years ago."[21] This observation is robust, and this common direct female line ancestor (or mitochondrial most recent common ancestor (mtMRCA)) of all extant humans has become known as Mitochondrial Eve. The observation that the mtMRCA is the direct matrilineal ancestor of all living humans does not mean either that she was the first anatomically modern human, nor that no other female humans lived concurrently with her. Other women would have lived at the same time and passed nuclear genes down to living humans, but their mitochondrial lineages were lost over time. This could be due to random events such as producing only male children.

African origin for modern humans

There is evidence that modern human mtDNA has an African origin: "We infer from the tree of minimum length... that Africa is a likely source of the human mitochondrial gene pool. This inference comes from the observation that one of the two primary branches leads exclusively to African mtDNAs... while the second primary branch also leads to African mtDNAs... By postulating that the common ancestral mtDNA... was African, we minimize the number of intercontinental migrations needed to account for the geographic distribution of mtDNA types."[21]

The broad study of African genetic diversity headed by Sarah Tishkoff found the San people to express the greatest genetic diversity among the 113 distinct populations sampled, making them one of 14 "ancestral population clusters".The research also located the origin of modern human migration in south-western Africa, near the coastal border of Namibia and Angola.[22]

Y chromosome findings

The Y chromosome is much larger than mtDNA, and is relatively homogeneous; therefore it has taken much longer to find distinct lineages and to analyse them. Conversely, because the Y chromosome is so large by comparison, it holds more genetic information. Y chromosome studies show similar findings to those made with mtDNA. The estimate for the age of the ancestral Y chromosome for all extant Y chromosomes is given at about 70,000 years ago and is also placed in Africa; the individual who contributed this Y chromosomal heritage is sometimes referred to as Y chromosome Adam. The difference in dates between Y chromosome Adam and mitochondrial Eve is usually attributed to a higher extinction rate for Y chromosomes due to greater differential reproductive success between individual men, which means that a small number of very successful men may produce many children, while a larger number of less successful men will produce far fewer children.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Chen, F.C. & Li, W.H. (2001). "Genomic divergences between humans and other hominoids and the effective population size of the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees". Am J Hum Genet 68 (2): 444–456. doi:10.1086/318206. PMID 11170892. PMC 1235277. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pubmed&pubmedid=11170892. 
  2. ^ Ken Miller in the Kitzmiller v. Dover trial transcripts.
  3. ^ Sarich, V.M. & Wilson, A.C. (1967). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Immunological time scale for hominid evolution"]. Science 158 (805): 1200–1203. doi:10.1126/science.158.3805.1200. PMID 4964406. 
  4. ^ Yoder, A.D. & Yang, Z. (1 July 2000). "Estimation of primate speciation dates using local molecular clocks". Mol Biol Evol 17 (7): 1081–1090. PMID 10889221. http://mbe.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/17/7/1081. 
  5. ^ Takahata, N.; Satta, Y. & Klein, J. (1995). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Divergence time and population size in the lineage leading to modern humans"]. Theor Popul Biol 48 (2): 198–221. doi:10.1006/tpbi.1995.1026. PMID 7482371. 
  6. ^ Yang, Z. (1 December 2002). "Likelihood and Bayes estimation of ancestral population sizes in hominoids using data from multiple loci" (abstract page). Genetics 162 (4): 1811–1823. PMID 12524351. PMC 1462394. http://www.genetics.org/cgi/content/abstract/162/4/1811. 
  7. ^ a b Chimpanzee Sequencing & Analysis Consortium (2005). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Initial sequence of the chimpanzee genome and comparison with the human genome"]. Nature 437 (7055): 69–87. doi:10.1038/nature04072. PMID 16136131. 
  8. ^ Olson, M.V. (1999). "When less is more: gene loss as an engine of evolutionary change". Am J Hum Genet 64 (1): 18–23. doi:10.1086/302219. PMID 9915938. PMC 1377697. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pubmed&pubmedid=9915938. 
  9. ^ Wang, X.; Grus, W.E. & Zhang, J. (2006). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Gene losses during human origins"]. PLoS Biol 4 (3): e52. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0040052. PMID 16464126. 
  10. ^ [Expression error: Missing operand for > "The Evolution of Mammalian Gene Families"]. Public Library of Science (PLoS) Biology 1: e85. December 2006. 
  11. ^ Winter, H.; Langbein, L.; Krawczak, M.; Cooper, D.N.; Suarez, L.F.J.; Rogers, M.A.; Praetzel, S.; Heidt, P.J. & Schweizer, J. (2001). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Human type I hair keratin pseudogene phihHaA has functional orthologs in the chimpanzee and gorilla: evidence for recent inactivation of the human gene after the Pan-Homo divergence"]. Hum Genet 108 (1): 37–42. doi:10.1007/s004390000439. PMID 11214905. 
  12. ^ Stedman, H.H.; Kozyak, B.W.; Nelson, A.; Thesier, D.M.; Su, L.T.; Low, D.W.; Bridges, C.R.; Shrager, J.B.; Purvis, N.M. & Mitchell, M.A. (2004). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Myosin gene mutation correlates with anatomical changes in the human lineage"]. Nature 428 (6981): 415–418. doi:10.1038/nature02358. PMID 15042088. 
  13. ^ Perry, G.H.; Verrelli, B.C. & Stone, A.C. (2005). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Comparative analyses reveal a complex history of molecular evolution for human MYH16"]. Mol Biol Evol 22 (3): 379–382. doi:10.1093/molbev/msi004. PMID 15470226. 
  14. ^ Wang, Xiaoxia; Grus, WE; Zhang, J (2006). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Gene Losses during Human Origins"]. PLoS Biology 4 (3): e52. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0040052. PMID 16464126. 
  15. ^ Saey, Tina H. (2009). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Team decodes Neandertal DNA"]. Science News 175 (6): 5–6. 
  16. ^ Murphy, W.J.; Eizirik, E.; O'Brien, S.J.; Madsen, O.; Scally, M.; Douady, C.J.; Teeling, E.; Ryder, O.A.; Stanhope, M.J.; de Jong, W.W. & Springer, M.S. (2001). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Resolution of the early placental mammal radiation using Bayesian phylogenetics"]. Science 294 (5550): 2348–2351. doi:10.1126/science.1067179. PMID 11743200. 
  17. ^ Kriegs, J.O.; Churakov, G.; Kiefmann, M.; Jordan, U.; Brosius, J. & Schmitz, J. (2006). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Retroposed elements as archives for the evolutionary history of placental mammals"]. PLoS Biol 4 (4): e91. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0040091. PMID 16515367. 
  18. ^ a b c d The Chimpanzee Sequencing and Analysis Consortium (2005). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Initial sequence of the chimpanzee genome and comparison with the human genome"]. Nature 437 (1 September 2005): 69–87. doi:10.1038/nature04072. 
  19. ^ Cheng, Z.; Ventura, M.; She, X.; Khaitovich, P.; Graves, T.; Osoegawa, K.; Church, D; Pieter DeJong, P.; Wilson, R. K.; Paabo, S.; Rocchi, M & Eichler, E. E. (2005). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "A genome-wide comparison of recent chimpanzee and human segmental duplications"]. Nature 437 (1 September 2005): 88–93. doi:10.1038/nature04000. 
  20. ^ Kaessmann, H.; Heissig, F.; von Haeseler, A. & Pääbo, S. (1999). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "DNA sequence variation in a non-coding region of low recombination on the human X chromosome"]. Nat Genet 22 (1): 78–81. doi:10.1038/8785. PMID 10319866. 
  21. ^ a b c Rebecca L. Cann, Mark Stoneking, Allan C. Wilson (1987) Mitochondrial DNA and human evolution in Nature 325: 31-36 PubMed
  22. ^ BBC World News "Africa's genetic secrets unlocked", 1 May 2009; the results were published in the online edition of the journal Science.
  • Schwartz M, Vissing J (2002) Paternal Inheritance of Mitochondrial DNA. N Engl J Med 347:576-580

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