A new paper in Molecular
Biology and Evolution, published by
Oxford University Press, finds that the relatively high rate of Autism-spectrum
disorders in humans is likely due to how humans evolved in the past.
About one in 31 (3.2%) children in the
United States has been identified with Autism Spectrum Disorder. Globally, the
World Health Organization estimates that around one in 100 children have
autism. From an evolutionary perspective, many scientist believe that autism
and schizophrenia may be unique to humans. It is very rare to find behaviors
associated with the disorders in non-human primates. In addition, behaviors
associated with those disorders generally involve cognitive traits like speech
production and comprehension that are either unique to or much more
sophisticated in humans.
With the development of single cell
RNA-sequencing, it became possible to define specific cell types across the
brain. As investigators published more large-scale datasets, it became clear
that the mammalian brain contains a staggering array of neuronal cell types. In
addition, large-scale sequencing studies have identified extensive genetic
changes in the brain unique to Homo sapiens—genomic elements that did not change much in mammalian evolution in
general but evolved rapidly in humans.
While previous investigations found that
some cell types have remained more consistent throughout evolution than others,
the factors driving these differences in evolutionary rate remain unknown.
Researchers here investigated recently published cross-species single-nucleus
RNA sequencing datasets from three distinct regions of the mammalian brain.
They found that the most abundant type of outer-layer brain neurons, L2/3 IT
neurons, evolved exceptionally quickly in the human lineage compared to other
apes. Surprisingly, this accelerated evolution was accompanied by dramatic
changes in autism-associated genes, which was likely driven by natural
selection specific to the human lineage. The researchers here explain that
although the results strongly suggest natural selection for Autism Spectrum
Disorder-associated genes, the reason why this conferred fitness benefits to
human ancestors is unclear.
Answering this is difficult because we
do not know what human-specific features of cognition, brain anatomy, and
neuronal wiring gave human ancestors a fitness advantage, but the investigators
here speculate that many of these genes are associated with developmental
delay, so their evolution could have contributed to the slower postnatal brain
development in humans compared to chimpanzees. Furthermore, the capacity for
speech production and comprehension unique to humans is often affected by
autism and schizophrenia.
It’s possible that the rapid evolution
of autism-linked genes conferred a fitness advantage by slowing postnatal brain
development or increasing the capacity for language; the lengthier brain
development time in early childhood was beneficial to human evolution because
it led to more complex thinking.
“Our results suggest that some of the
same genetic changes that make the human brain unique also made humans more
neurodiverse,” said the paper’s lead author, Alexander L. Starr.
Source: https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1096746
Journal article: https://academic.oup.com/mbe/article/42/9/msaf189/8245036?
Source: How evolution explains autism rates in humans – Scents of Science
No comments:
Post a Comment