Nature has a lengthy, fascinating article up
about archaeology and milk. Apart from being a potential reality check for 10 year olds dreaming of that job after watching Indiana Jones movies, it explains the importance of how (some) humans developed the ability to digest lactose, then spread out to Europe. Here are some highlights:
During the most recent ice age, milk was essentially a toxin to
adults because — unlike children — they could not produce the lactase
enzyme required to break down lactose, the main sugar in milk. But as
farming started to replace hunting and gathering in the Middle East
around 11,000 years ago, cattle herders learned how to reduce lactose in
dairy products to tolerable levels by fermenting milk to make cheese or
yogurt. Several thousand years later, a genetic mutation spread through
Europe that gave people the ability to produce lactase — and drink milk
— throughout their lives. That adaptation opened up a rich new source
of nutrition that could have sustained communities when harvests failed.
This two-step milk revolution may have been a prime factor
in allowing bands of farmers and herders from the south to sweep
through Europe and displace the hunter-gatherer cultures that had lived
there for millennia. “They spread really rapidly into northern Europe
from an archaeological point of view,” says Mark Thomas, a population
geneticist at University College London. That wave of emigration left an
enduring imprint on Europe, where, unlike in many regions of the world,
most people can now tolerate milk. “It could be that a large proportion
of Europeans are descended from the first lactase-persistent dairy
farmers in Europe,” says Thomas.
This figure sounds surprisingly low:
Only 35% of the human population can digest lactose beyond the age of about seven or eight (ref. 2).
The effect of the genetic mutation which I happily share was possibly profound:
Most people who retain the ability to digest milk can trace their
ancestry to Europe, where the trait seems to be linked to a single
nucleotide in which the DNA base cytosine changed to thymine in a
genomic region not far from the lactase gene. There are other pockets of
lactase persistence in West Africa (see Nature 444, 994–996; 2006), the Middle East and south Asia that seem to be linked to separate mutations3 (see 'Lactase hotspots').
The single-nucleotide switch in Europe happened relatively
recently. Thomas and his colleagues estimated the timing by looking at
genetic variations in modern populations and running computer
simulations of how the related genetic mutation might have spread
through ancient populations4.
They proposed that the trait of lactase persistence, dubbed the LP
allele, emerged about 7,500 years ago in the broad, fertile plains of
Hungary.
Once the LP allele appeared, it offered a major selective advantage. In a 2004 study5,
researchers estimated that people with the mutation would have produced
up to 19% more fertile offspring than those who lacked it. The
researchers called that degree of selection “among the strongest yet
seen for any gene in the genome”
Compounded over several hundred generations, that
advantage could help a population to take over a continent. But only if
“the population has a supply of fresh milk and is dairying”, says
Thomas. “It's gene–culture co-evolution. They feed off of each other.”
I suggest everyone have a strawberry shake in honour of this research. Unless you're lactose intolerant, of course...
No comments:
Post a Comment