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Gene Mutation Said Linked to Evolution
 

By JOSEPH B. VERRENGIA 
 

Igniting a scientific furor, scientists say they may have found the
genetic mutation that first separated the earliest humans from their
apelike ancestors.

The provocative discovery suggests that this genetic twist - toward
smaller, weaker jaws - unleashed a cascade of profound biological
changes. The smaller jaws would allow for dramatic brain growth necessary
for tool-making, language and other hallmarks of human evolution on the
plains of East Africa.

The mutation is reported in the latest issue of the journal Nature, not
by anthropologists, but by a team of biologists and plastic surgeons at
the University of Pennsylvania and the Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia.

The report provoked strong reactions throughout the hotly contested field
of human origins with one scientist declaring it "counter to the
fundamentals of evolution" and another pronouncing it "super."

The Pennsylvania researchers said their estimate of when this mutation
first occurred - about 2.4 million years ago - generally overlaps with
the first fossils of prehistoric humans featuring rounder skulls, flatter
faces, smaller teeth and weaker jaws.

And, the remarkable genetic divergence persists to this day in every
person, they said.

But nonhuman primates - including our closest animal relative, the
chimpanzee - still carry the original big-jaw gene and thanks to stout
muscles attached to the tops of their heads, they can bite and grind the
toughest foods.

"We're not suggesting this mutation alone defines us as Homo sapiens,"
said Hansell Stedman of the University of Pennsylvania School of
Medicine. "But evolutionary events are extraordinarily rare. Over 2
million years since the mutation, the brain has nearly tripled in size.
It's a very intriguing possibility."

University of Michigan biological anthropologist Milford Wolpoff called
the research "just super."

"The other thing that was happening 2 1/2 million years ago is that
people were beginning to make tools, which enabled them to prepare food
outside their mouths," he said. "This is a confluence of genetic and
fossil evidence."

Other researchers strenuously disagreed that human evolution could
literally hinge on a single mutation affecting jaw muscles, and that once
those muscles around the skull were unhooked like bungee cords, the brain
suddenly could grow unfettered.

"Such a claim is counter to the fundamentals of evolution," said C. Owen
Lovejoy of Kent State University. "These kinds of mutations probably are
of little consequence."

Others sought to find some middle ground in the debate.

University and commercial laboratories rapidly are comparing the human
genome with that of chimpanzees to determine what makes people human, and
how hominids split from Old World apes and monkeys some 6 million years
ago.

So far, perhaps 250 genetic differences have been flagged for further
study.

Jaws have been a focus of evolutionary research since Darwin, and the
mutation offers a tantalizing theory. But it is unlikely that one
mutation - even at a crucial evolutionary juncture - would make a person,
they said.

"They have successfully nailed a genetic mutation that works to
deactivate these jaw muscles," said Richard Potts, director of the Human
Origins Program at the Smithsonian Institution. "But their suggestion
connecting it to the brain is way too speculative."

In their experiment, the Penn team isolated a new gene in an overlooked
junk DNA sequence on chromosome 7. It belongs to a class of genes that
express production of the protein myosin, which enables skeletal muscles
to contract.

Originally the scientists were concentrating on determining the
biological underpinnings of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a muscle-wasting
disease. But once they isolated the mutation, they spent the next eight
months deciphering its evolutionary implications.

Different types of myosin are produced in different muscles; in the
chewing and biting muscles of the jaws, the gene MYH16 is expressed. But
the Penn researchers discovered humans have a mutation in the gene that
prevents the MYH16 protein from accumulating. That limits the size and
power of the muscle.

In primates like the macaque, the jaw muscles were 10 times more powerful
than in humans. They contained high levels of the protein, and the thick
muscles were attached to bony ridges of the skull.

When did this genetic split occur? Scientists assume that the rate of
genetic change a species undergoes is relatively constant over time. So
the Penn group looked deep into the fossil record to determine when the
jaws of human ancestors started looking smaller and more streamlined as
compared to more apelike creatures.

Homo habilis was the earliest known species to begin showing skull and
jaw differences from its more apelike cousins more than 2 million years
ago.

The Homo line flourished, with the finer-boned Homo rudolfensis, ergaster
and erectus lines soon emerging.

Meanwhile, the heavier-browed, long-jawed Australopithecus afaransis and
Paranthropus robustus eventually disappeared.

Without the strong bands of muscle constraining the skull, the Penn
researchers said the Homo skull changed shape and grew to accommodate a
much larger brain, while the Australopithicine skulls did not.

The Penn researchers said mutation opened an evolutionary struggle in
which brain conquered brawn, although it probably took another million
years to complete.

The mutation also offers a glimpse of behavioral changes, the Penn
researchers said. Apes use their powerful bites to maintain social
control, while early humans may have had to rely more on cooperation.

Critics said the study wrongly assumes that evolution works so neatly.

The first early humans with the mutation probably would have had weaker
mouths, but still had large teeth and jaws. Many additional mutations
would have been needed.

"The mutation would have reduced the Darwinian fitness of those
individuals," said anthropologist Bernard Wood of George Washington
University. "It only would've become fixed if it coincided with mutations
that reduced tooth size, jaw size and increased brain size. What are the
chances of that?" 

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