 |
 |
 |
|
Conventional microscope image of the exoskeleton and some body parts of
the modern human head louse, Pediculus humanus (left). Scanning
electron microscope image of a modern human head louse, Pediculus
humanus (right).
Credit: Vincent S. Smith, University of Glasgow
| |
October 4, 2004 - A University of Utah study showing how lice
evolved with the people they infested reveals that a now-extinct species
of early human came into direct contact with our species about 25,000
years ago and spread the parasites to our ancestors.
The study found modern humans have two genetically distinct
types of head lice. One type is found worldwide and evolved on the
ancestors of our species, Homo sapiens. The second type is found
only in the Americas, evolved on another early human species (possibly
Homo erectus) and jumped to Homo sapiens during fights,
sex, sharing of clothes or perhaps cannibalism.
"We've discovered the 'smoking louse' that reveals direct
contact between two early species of humans," probably in Asia about
25,000 to 30,000 years ago, says study leader Dale Clayton, a professor
of biology at the University of Utah. "Kids today have head lice that
evolved on two species of cavemen. One species led to us. The other
species went extinct."
Alan Rogers, a co-author of the study and professor of
anthropology at the University of Utah, says: "The record of our past is
written in our parasites."
The analysis of lice genes also confirmed two other key
developments in human evolution. First, it verified studies showing how
and when various species branched off the family tree of primates and
humans. Second, it confirmed the "out of Africa" theory that the
population of Homo sapiens mushroomed after a small band of the
early humans left Africa sometime between 150,000 and 50,000 years ago.
The study will be published online Oct. 5 in the Public Library
of Science journal PloS Biology. The study's first author is
former University of Utah postdoctoral fellow David L. Reed, now
assistant curator of mammals at the University of Florida's Florida
Museum of Natural History. Other authors are Vincent Smith of Scotland's
University of Glasgow, and Shaless Hammon, who worked in Clayton's lab
as a high school student.
Did Modern Humans Date Other Species - or Kill Them?
Transmission of the second type of lice from a now-extinct human
species to Homo sapiens may have happened during mating, so Reed
plans a study of pubic or crab lice - which only spread sexually - to
confirm or disprove that possibility. Clayton and Rogers say it's also
possible our ancestors got the second kind of head lice by fighting with
or cannibalizing another human species - or by sharing or stealing their
clothing.
Clayton says evidence of contact between two species of humans
is surprising because "Homo erectus has long been thought to have
gone extinct hundreds of thousands of years ago," although recent
studies suggested Homo sapiens might have had contact with
Homo erectus in Asia 50,000 years ago.
Reed says: "Not only did modern humans live contemporaneously
with close cousins such as Neanderthals, but also with more archaic
hominids such as Homo erectus, a species that we have not shared
a common ancestor with for over a million years. It is amazing to know
that we had physical contact with another species of human. We either
battled with them, or lived with them or even mated with them.
Regardless, we touched them, and that is pretty dramatic to think
about."
Reed wonders if contact with our species proved fatal.
"When scientists first determined that we (Homo sapiens)
were contemporaneous with Neanderthals (Homo neanderthalensis) in
Europe, it was suspicious that our contact with them immediately
preceded their extinction," Reed says. "Our study has provided evidence
that we had contact with Homo erectus in Asia just prior to the
extinction of that species as well. Did we cause the extinction of two
other species of humans?"
Findings Show Lice and Different Human Species Evolved Together
Our genes reveal the evolutionary history only of modern humans.
Fossil evidence is scant for now-extinct species of early humans.
Because lice evolved in concert with the humans they infested, lice
"have recorded events in human evolutionary history in their DNA," Reed
says.
The researchers analyzed the physical appearance and genetic
material (mitochondrial DNA) of modern human head lice, Pediculus
humanus, to construct a family tree for lice showing when various
species branched off from each other. Genes of modern lice also were
used to reconstruct their population histories over time.
The researchers found the family tree of the lice closely
mirrors the previously published family tree of humans and their primate
ancestors. That was consistent with the well-known phenomenon that any
single species or lineage of lice (like other parasites) tends to stick
only to one species of host and rarely jumps to other hosts.
Scientists already knew that early ancestors of our species,
Homo sapiens, diverged from other archaic humans about 1.2
million years ago. (There is semantic debate over whether those archaic
humans should be called Homo erectus, or whether the name should
be reserved for their more recent descendants.) The new study showed two
almost identical-looking but genetically different strains of head lice
diverged 1.18 million years ago. That indicates each of the two kinds of
head lice infested a different species of early human as the human
species diverged.
Genes from both types of head lice are found on people today,
suggesting that after infesting Homo erectus or another archaic
human species for 1 million years, the second louse type jumped from
that soon-to-be-extinct species and onto Homo sapiens.
"In order for the archaic human lice to still exist on modern
humans, archaic and modern humans had to coexist in time and space,"
Clayton says.
What Lice Say About Theories of Human Evolution
Some of the findings conflict with two major theories of human
evolution - the "replacement model" and "multiregional model" and
instead fit best with a third theory known as the "diffusion wave
model."
(1) The replacement model says that after primitive human
ancestors first left Africa about 2 million years ago, a second wave
spread out from Africa sometime after 150,000 years ago and certainly by
50,000 years ago, and then replaced other now-extinct species of early
humans in Africa, Asia and Europe without breeding with them.
Clayton says that model doesn't fit the louse data because if
Homo sapiens from Africa replaced archaic humans elsewhere
without interacting with them, the type of lice on archaic humans would
have gone extinct with their hosts instead of jumping to modern humans.
(2) The multiregional model says early humans from Africa and
elsewhere in the world mated with other each other, so Homo sapiens
gradually evolved in many regions worldwide. But if so much
interbreeding occurred, the two groups of lice probably would not have
remained genetically distinct for the last 1.18 million years, Rogers
says.
(3) The diffusion wave model falls between the other two
theories. Like the replacement theory, it says modern humans arose in
Africa and spread across the world, Rogers says. Like the multiregional
theory, it says those early humans mated with humans elsewhere. The
diffusion wave theory adds a new twist, namely, that the genes of humans
spreading from Africa came to dominate the modern human genetic
blueprint because when they mated with archaic humans, the children were
less fit.
"As they come out of Africa, they replace other populations
while interbreeding with them," Clayton says.
The findings in lice are most consistent with the diffusion wave
hypothesis, which allows some interbreeding among various forms of early
humans but also says the genes of early humans who left Africa came to
dominate Homo sapiens, he adds.
Lice Genes Confirm Key Events in Human Evolution
The new study confirmed several events in primate and human
evolution. The researchers found chimp lice and human lice diverged
roughly 5.6 million years ago, consistent with previous evidence that
chimps and human ancestors diverged from a common ancestor about 5.5
million years ago.
The study also supports the controversial view that there was a
"bottleneck" or reduction in the global Homo sapiens population
to only about 10,000 people about 100,000 to 50,000 years ago. Rogers
and others have proposed the bottleneck may have occurred because of a
mass die-off of early humans due to a globally catastrophic volcanic
eruption. Others believe the population bottleneck seen in human genes
happened because only a small group of human ancestors left Africa in
the second wave 150,000 to 50,000 years ago, then reproduced to cause a
sudden population expansion.
The new study used the mutation rate in lice and comparisons of
genetic differences among lice to find a similar population bottleneck
in the group of head lice that infested early Homo sapiens, but
no such bottleneck in the population of the lice on the archaic human
species. That means archaic humans didn't go through the same population
shrinkage and thus must have spread their lice to Homo sapiens
sometime after 50,000 years ago. Rogers speculates contact occurred
25,000 or 30,000 years ago.
The findings provide independent confirmation of the second "out
of Africa" event because genetic analysis shows the population of lice -
like their Homo sapiens hosts - also dramatically expanded after
the bottleneck.
Related Media Coverage:
Science - Oct. 8,
2004 Issue
USA Today
Washington Post
New York Times
(Sign-up Required)
New York Times in Seattle Post-Intelligencer (Story no Longer Available)
Sydney (Australia) Morning Herald (Sign-up
Required)
New
Scientist
Washington Post in
Atlanta Journal Constitution (Sign-up Required)
Washington Post in Arizona Republic, Phoenix (Story no Longer Available)
Deseret
News
Salt Lake Tribune (Story no Longer Available)
UU news release on
Innovations Report, Germany
UU
news release on Newswise distribution service
University of Utah Public Relations
201 S Presidents Circle, Room 308
Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-9017
(801) 581-6773 fax: 585-3350
www.utah.edu/unews
| |