The Pan social brain: An evolutionary history of neurochemical receptor genes and their potential impact on sociocognitive differences.
Abstract
Humans have unique cognitive capacities that, compared with apes, are not only simply
expressed as a higher level of general intelligence, but also as a quantitative difference
in sociocognitive skills. Humans' closest living relatives, bonobos (Pan paniscus),
and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), show key between-species differences in social
cognition despite their close phylogenetic relatedness, with bonobos arguably showing
greater similarities to humans. To better understand the evolution of these traits,
we investigate the neurochemical mechanisms underlying sociocognitive skills by focusing
on variation in genes encoding proteins with well-documented roles in mammalian social
cognition: the receptors for vasopressin (AVPR1A), oxytocin (OXTR), serotonin (HTR1A),
and dopamine (DRD2). Although these genes have been well studied in humans, little
is known about variation in these genes that may underlie differences in social behavior
and cognition in apes. We comparatively analyzed sequence data for 33 bonobos and
57 chimpanzees, together with orthologous sequence data for other apes. In all four
genes, we describe genetic variants that alter the amino acid sequence of the respective
receptors, raising the possibility that ligand binding or signal transduction may
be impacted. Overall, bonobos show 57% more fixed substitutions than chimpanzees compared
with the ancestral Pan lineage. Chimpanzees, show 31% more polymorphic coding variation,
in line with their larger historical effective population size estimates and current
wider distribution. An extensive literature review comparing allelic changes in Pan
with known human behavioral variants revealed evidence of homologous evolution in
bonobos and humans (OXTR rs4686301(T) and rs237897(A)), while humans and chimpanzees
shared OXTR rs2228485(A), DRD2 rs6277(A), and DRD2 rs11214613(A) to the exclusion
of bonobos. Our results offer the first in-depth comparison of neurochemical receptor
gene variation in Pan and put forward new variants for future behavior-genotype association
studies in apes, which can increase our understanding of the evolution of social cognition
in modern humans.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22417Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.jhevol.2021.102949Publication Info
Staes, Nicky; Guevara, Elaine E; Helsen, Philippe; Eens, Marcel; & Stevens, Jeroen
MG (2021). The Pan social brain: An evolutionary history of neurochemical receptor genes and
their potential impact on sociocognitive differences. Journal of human evolution, 152. pp. 102949. 10.1016/j.jhevol.2021.102949. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22417.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Elaine Elizabeth Gomez Guevara
Lecturer in Evolutionary Anthropology
Research interests: Aging and life history, sensory ecology, epigenetics, conservation,
lemurs

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