Access
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).
Review
Nature 422, 849-857 (24 April 2003) | doi:10.1038/nature01495
Open Innovation Challenges
-
Novel Approaches to Protecting Maize from Insect Damage
The Seeker is looking for novel approaches to protecting maize from insect damage. This Challenge re...
-
Optimizing Sub-cellular Localization Tags
The Seeker is looking for methods to optimize sub-cellular localization tags for protein expression....
nature jobs
Account Director -India
- Indegene Lifesystems Pvt. Ltd
- Bengaluru 560 071 India
Gastroenterologist / Nutrition
- Cleveland Clinic Foundation
- Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Genetics and the making of Homo sapiens
Sean B. Carroll
Abstract
Understanding the genetic basis of the physical and behavioural traits that distinguish humans from other primates presents one of the great new challenges in biology. Of the millions of base-pair differences between humans and chimpanzees, which particular changes contributed to the evolution of human features after the separation of the Pan and Homo lineages 5–7 million years ago? How can we identify the 'smoking guns' of human genetic evolution from neutral ticks of the molecular evolutionary clock? The magnitude and rate of morphological evolution in hominids suggests that many independent and incremental developmental changes have occurred that, on the basis of recent findings in model animals, are expected to be polygenic and regulatory in nature. Comparative genomics, population genetics, gene-expression analyses and medical genetics have begun to make complementary inroads into the complex genetic architecture of human evolution.
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).

