From drjamielove At yahoo.com Sun Nov 12 14:22:58 2006 From: drjamielove At yahoo.com (drjamielove@yahoo.com) Date: Sun Nov 12 15:09:26 2006 Subject: [Chromosomes] Human Chromosome Two: Evidence of First-degree Consanguity in Human Evolution Message-ID: <1163359378.575868.120460@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com> The Robertsonsian fusion that formed human chromosome number two (from ancestral 2A and 2B, as it is preserved in the other apes) should have caused a serious reproductive barrier, overcome only by consanguity of the highest order; mating amongst first-degree relatives. Any breeding outside the immediate family would have lead to unacceptable chromosomal imbalances. No aneuploidy of human #2 (p or q or all) has ever survived. I cannot imagine a scenario in which this fusion (2a and 2b) could have survived, and become fixed in our species, unless immediately followed by consanguity in our lineage. I often mention this paradox to my Genetics students and I have searched the literature but I have never found a better explanation nor a statement in a textbook that all of us (humans) are descendants from an incestuous family. Yet it is apparent from the facts (explained above) that we are. The explanation that the "complete" chromosome two is ancestral and that the lineages of the other apes (gorilla, chimpanzee, orangutan) have each and independently experienced centromeric breaks, is not parsimonious and not accepted by experts in evolution. (It might comfort those wishing to blame incest on the non-human apes but it is not very scientific.) If this fusion occurred recently there should be an excessive amount of homozygosity (autozygosity) of genes on human chromosome two as compared with the genes on other chromosomes (assuming that, after the consanguity, the descendants eventually outbreed and the "new" number two chromosome somehow became fixed in our descendants). I do not know if anyone has surveyed the SNPs and alleles for these chromosomal comparisons but such data might allow a molecular clock method to determine if the event occurred recently (Homo sps) or farther back in time (Australopithecus sps). I am not suggesting that this fusion is what makes us human. Indeed, I doubt that it is. However, maintaining a balanced chromosomal complement would have provided a strong reproductive barrier. Mating with someone with the "old" 2A and 2B karyotype would have resulted in reduced fecundity due to lethal aneuploidy and errors in meiotic disjunction. We often speak of humanity as having evolved through a bottle neck of a few dozen individuals. Perhaps, at least with regards to our number two chromosome, that bottle neck was one male and one female from the same family. Placed in the context of fairy tales, I conclude that Adam and Eve were brother and sister or parent and offspring. I look forward to your discussion. Sincerely, Dr Jamie Love