GEE Seminar - Professor Iain Mathieson, University of Pennsylvania
08 June 2022, 12:00 pm–1:00 pm

Title: 'Natural Selection in Britain from the Stone Age to the Present Day'
Event Information
Open to
- UCL staff | UCL students | UCL alumni
Availability
- Yes
Organiser
-
Amy Godfrey
Location
-
Hybrid MeetingG08 David Davies LT, Roberts Building---
Academic Host: Karoline Kuchenbaecker
Abstract: Large datasets of ancient and present-day genomes allow us to investigate historical and ongoing episodes of natural selection in humans. Using time series of hundreds of ancient genomes from Britain, we show that the dominant selective pressure in the past 5,000 years was lack of vitamin D and consequent calcium deficiency, with limited evidence of polygenic selection on complex traits. In contrast, when we use genomes of living people to investigate selection over the past 50 years, we identify loci associated with a range of biological and behavioral traits, but very little overlap with historical selection signals. The one locus that does overlap–FADS1–has been under fluctuating selection for tens of hundreds of thousands of years, likely related to changes in diet, though the mechanism is speculative. Finally, by comparing information from ancient DNA, skeletal measurements, stable isotope and paleopathology data, we investigate genetic and environmental factors associated with changes in stature over time. We find examples of change that may be genetic, and others that are definitely environmental. Overall, our results illustrate the dynamic landscape of recent human evolution, and both the opportunities and limits of genomics to learn about that landscape.
About the Speaker
Professor Iain Mathieson
Assistant Professor of Genetics at Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania
Iain is developing methods for inference of demography and selection from ancient DNA, and for the interpretation of genome-wide association studies.
His main interest is in human evolution - and what genomic data can tell us about that process. We use data from both present-day and ancient humans to learn about the history of our species, and combine that data with information from medical genetic studies to learn about the evolution of complex traits, and the distribution of disease risk. To analyze this data, we use tools from statistics and computer science to manage and make inference from large datasets.