No severe bottleneck during human evolution: evidence from two apolipoprotein C-II deficiency alleles. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • The DNA sequences of a Japanese and a Venezuelan apolipoprotein (apo) C-II deficiency allele, of a normal Japanese apo C-II gene, and of a chimpanzee apo C-II gene were amplified by PCR, and their nucleotide sequences were determined on multiple clones of the PCR products. The normal Japanese sequence is identical to--and the chimpanzee sequence differs by only three nucleotides from--a previously published normal Caucasian sequence. In contrast, the two human mutant sequences each differ from the normal apo C-II gene sequence by several nucleotides, including deletions. The data suggest that both mutant alleles arose greater than 500,000 years ago. It is shown that a defective allele can persist in a population for only a short time if a bottleneck occurs. Therefore, the antiquity of the two alleles suggests no severe bottleneck during human evolution. Moreover, the fact that one allele is from Japan and the other is from a Venezuelan Caucasian family is more consistent with the multiregional evolution model of modern human origins than with the complete replacement or "out of Africa" model.

publication date

  • February 1, 1991

Research

keywords

  • Alleles
  • Apolipoproteins C
  • Biological Evolution

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC1683008

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0026065376

PubMed ID

  • 1990844

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 48

issue

  • 2