Authors
Joel Sharbrough, Justin C Havird, Gregory R Noe, Jessica M Warren, Daniel B Sloan
Publication date
2017/6
Journal
Genome Biology and Evolution
Volume
9
Issue
6
Pages
1567-1581
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Some human populations interbred with Neanderthals and Denisovans, resulting in substantial contributions to modern-human genomes. Therefore, it is now possible to use genomic data to investigate mechanisms that shaped historical gene flow between humans and our closest hominin relatives. More generally, in eukaryotes, mitonuclear interactions have been argued to play a disproportionate role in generating reproductive isolation. There is no evidence of mtDNA introgression into modern human populations, which means that all introgressed nuclear alleles from archaic hominins must function on a modern-human mitochondrial background. Therefore, mitonuclear interactions are also potentially relevant to hominin evolution. We performed a detailed accounting of mtDNA divergence among hominin lineages and used population-genomic data to test the hypothesis that mitonuclear incompatibilities …
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Scholar articles
J Sharbrough, JC Havird, GR Noe, JM Warren… - Genome Biology and Evolution, 2017