The report from
researchers at Indiana University Bloomington and three other academic
institutions appears in the December issue of Public Library of Science
Biology. The gene encodes prodynorphin, an opium-like protein
implicated in the anticipation and experience of pain, social
attachment and bonding, as well as learning and memory. “Humans
have the ability to turn on this gene more easily and more intensely
than other primates,” said IU Bloomington computational biologist
Matthew Hahn, who did the brunt of the population genetics work for the
paper. “Given its function, we believe regulation of this gene was
likely important in the evolution of modern humans’ mental capacity." Prodynorphin
is a precursor molecule of the neurotransmitters alpha-endorphin,
dynorphin A, and dynorphin B, collectively called opioids because their
action is similar to stimulatory effects caused by the drug opium. The
notion that humans are more perceptive than other primates would hardly
be news. But the list of genes known to have tracked or guided
humanity’s separation from the other apes is a short one. Genes
controlling the development of the brain almost always turn out to be
identical or nearly so in chimpanzees and human beings. And as it turns
out, the protein prodynorphin is identical in humans and chimps. It’s
the prodynorphin gene's promoter sequence – upstream DNA that controls
how much of the protein is expressed – where the big differences are.
“Only about 1 to 1.5 per cent of our DNA differs from chimpanzees,”
Hahn said. “We found that in a stretch of DNA about 68 base pairs in
length upstream of prodynorphin, 10percent of the sequence was
different between us and chimps.” Hahn said this ‘evolutionary burst’ is responsible for differences in gene expression rates. This
report supports a growing consensus among evolutionary anthropologists
that hominid divergence from the other great apes was fuelled not by
the origin of new genes, but by the quickening (or slowing) of the
expression of existing genes. Hahn and his colleagues at Duke
University, University College London and Medical University of Vienna
first became interested in primate prodynorphin after noticing an
unusual amount of variation in the human version’s promoter. The
scientists decided to examine the prodynorphin gene in human beings
around the world and in non-human primates to see whether such
variation was commonplace and whether that variation affected gene
expression. For more information, visit http://newsinfo.iu.edu |