Chinese
scientists discover natural selection played a role
Stephen Chen – South China
Morning Post
Natural
selection in East Asian populations has favoured genetic mutations leading to
bigger brains, according to a new study by Chinese researchers that did not
find a similar preference in Europe or Africa.
The
study has shed new light on a controversial issue that has puzzled scientists
for decades: why is the average Asian brain bigger than the average European or
African one?
The
world’s largest survey of brain sizes, conducted by American scientists three
decades ago using more than 20,000 modern human skulls from around the globe,
found that the average cranial volume among East Asians was 1,415 cubic
centimetres, compared with 1,362 for Europeans and 1,268 for Africans.
Subsequent
studies have confirmed those results. Among them was a magnetic resonance
imaging survey last year which found that East Asians had a higher cranial
vault, which allowed their skulls to house a bigger brain.
Researchers
proposed a range of hypotheses to explain the differences, with some suggesting
that living in a cold climate could lead to a boost in brain size because in
such conditions a bigger brain would be better at maintaining a constant
temperature at its core, where most thinking took place.
But
the climate theory could not fully explain differences in the brain sizes of
people living in the same latitudes, such as Chinese and Europeans.
The
Chinese researchers said a gene called CASC5 – one of eight regulating human
brain size – might provide more clues. Unlike most of the other genes, which
also regulated the brain sizes of monkeys or early human species such as
Denisovans and Neanderthals, genetic mutations of CASC5 in Homo sapiens are
relatively young, only occurring after our species left Africa between 50,000
and 100,000 years ago.
The
researchers, led by Professor Su Bing, from the Chinese Academy of Sciences’
Kunming Institute of Zoology, compared CASC5 mutations in different populations
for the first time.
They
found a “high frequency” of four mutations closely related to increased brain
size among East Asian populations including Chinese, Japanese and Mongolians. But
such mutations rarely occurred in Europe or Africa.
“At
the population level, our results suggest a selection of CASC5 in East Asian
populations, which seems to favour a larger grey matter volume of the brain,”
the researchers said in a paper published in the journal Human Genetics late
last month. “By contrast, no signal of selection was detected in Europeans and
Africans.”
“Precisely
why this occurred is not entirely clear,” they added.
Besides
climate, other forces that might drive such selection included social structure
and cultural preference, Su told the South China Morning Post this week, while
adding that such theories were pure speculation at this stage.
“Precise
answers require further studies,” he said.
Su
said the study in no way suggested that Asians were smarter than other humans.
“Scientific
research has found no evidence, none at all, to support the existence of
intellectual difference among races,” he said.
However,
scientists generally agreed that humans had made significant sacrifices in
return for increased brain size, Su said.
The
brain consumed lots of energy, and a bigger brain made birth more difficult and
drained resources from the rest of the body, resulting in many issues such as
decreased physical strength. Europeans were generally bigger and stronger than
Asians, Su said, but whether the physical difference was associated with brain
size required further investigation.
“The Darwinian selection may still be going on
today, but I think the brain size difference among races will eventually
disappear due to the widespread genetic exchange occurring around the world
today,” he said.
An
anthropologist based in Beijing said the study tackled an important but
sensitive issue in human evolution.
“The
findings may fuel racist debate,” said the anthropologist, who requested
anonymity.
Data
in the study also showed a high frequency of genetic mutations occurring in
South Asian populations, who lived in a warmer climate, and the anthropologist
said it would be interesting to investigate whether Darwinian positive
selection favouring bigger brains had also occurred there.
If
so, it might suggest that brains grew bigger as humans spread further from
Africa.
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