Wednesday, February 18, 2015

How modern humans ate their way to dominance

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Science Magazine has posted an interesting article detailing about the genetic changes that occurred in modern humans to diversify our palettes, which in turn helped us rise to dominance on this planet.


As humans adapted to new habitats, they had to become open to new culinary experiences. They ate more starchy tuberous roots, learned to cook their meat and bitter root vegetables, and eventually domesticated plants and animals. Those dietary revolutions helped make us human, giving our bodies the extra calories that enlarged our brains, while allowing our guts, jaws, and teeth to shrink as we ate softer, more easily digestible food.


To figure out how these changes evolved, anthropological geneticist George Perry of Pennsylvania State University, University Park, and his colleagues compared the genomes of modern humans and chimpanzees to the newly published genomes of a Neandertal and one of its close relatives, a mysterious human ancestor known as a Denisovan, known only from a few bones found in a Russian cave. All three groups of humans had lost two bitter taste genes, TAS2R62 and TAS2R64, that are still present in chimpanzees, the team reports this month in the Journal of Human Evolution.


[Full story]


Story: Ann Gibbons, Science Magazine | Photo: Andrew J. Cunningham, Science Magazine



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