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Dive into the research topics where Carles Lalueza-Fox is active.

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Featured researches published by Carles Lalueza-Fox.


Science | 2009

Targeted retrieval and analysis of five Neandertal mtDNA genomes

Adrian W. Briggs; Jeffrey M. Good; Richard E. Green; Johannes Krause; Tomislav Maricic; Udo Stenzel; Carles Lalueza-Fox; Pavao Rudan; Dejana Brajković; Željko Kućan; Ivan Gušić; Ralf Schmitz; Vladimir B. Doronichev; Liubov V. Golovanova; Marco de la Rasilla; Javier Fortea; Antonio Rosas; Svante Pääbo

Economic Ancient DNA Sequencing Analysis of ancient DNA is often limited by the availability of ancient material for sequencing. Briggs et al. (p. 318; see the news story by Pennisi) describe a method of ancient DNA sequence retrieval that greatly reduces shotgun sequencing costs while avoiding the many difficulties associated with direct PCR-based approaches. They generated five complete and one near-complete Neandertal mitochondrial DNA genomes, which would have been economically impossible with a simple shotgun approach. Analysis of these genomes shows that Neandertal populations had a much smaller effective population size than modern humans or great apes. Targeted sequencing improves Neandertal mitochondrial DNA retrieval and reveals low diversity among individuals. Analysis of Neandertal DNA holds great potential for investigating the population history of this group of hominins, but progress has been limited due to the rarity of samples and damaged state of the DNA. We present a method of targeted ancient DNA sequence retrieval that greatly reduces sample destruction and sequencing demands and use this method to reconstruct the complete mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genomes of five Neandertals from across their geographic range. We find that mtDNA genetic diversity in Neandertals that lived 38,000 to 70,000 years ago was approximately one-third of that in contemporary modern humans. Together with analyses of mtDNA protein evolution, these data suggest that the long-term effective population size of Neandertals was smaller than that of modern humans and extant great apes.


Nature | 2001

Complete mitochondrial genome sequences of two extinct moas clarify ratite evolution

Alan Cooper; Carles Lalueza-Fox; Simon G. Anderson; Andrew Rambaut; Jeremy J. Austin; Ryk Ward

The origin of the ratites, large flightless birds from the Southern Hemisphere, along with their flighted sister taxa, the South American tinamous, is central to understanding the role of plate tectonics in the distributions of modern birds and mammals. Defining the dates of ratite divergences is also critical for determining the age of modern avian orders. To resolve the ratite phylogeny and provide biogeographical data to examine these issues, we have here determined the first complete mitochondrial genome sequences of any extinct taxa— two New Zealand moa genera—along with a 1,000-base-pair sequence from an extinct Madagascan elephant-bird. For comparative data, we also generated 12 kilobases of contiguous sequence from the kiwi, cassowary, emu and two tinamou genera. This large dataset allows statistically precise estimates of molecular divergence dates and these support a Late Cretaceous vicariant speciation of ratite taxa, followed by the subsequent dispersal of the kiwi to New Zealand. This first molecular view of the break-up of Gondwana provides a new temporal framework for speciation events within other Gondwanan biota and can be used to evaluate competing biogeographical hypotheses.


Current Biology | 2007

The Derived FOXP2 Variant of Modern Humans Was Shared with Neandertals

Johannes Krause; Carles Lalueza-Fox; Ludovic Orlando; Wolfgang Enard; Richard E. Green; Hernán A. Burbano; Jean-Jacques Hublin; Catherine Hänni; Javier Fortea; Marco de la Rasilla; Jaume Bertranpetit; Antonio Rosas; Svante Pääbo

Although many animals communicate vocally, no extant creature rivals modern humans in language ability. Therefore, knowing when and under what evolutionary pressures our capacity for language evolved is of great interest. Here, we find that our closest extinct relatives, the Neandertals, share with modern humans two evolutionary changes in FOXP2, a gene that has been implicated in the development of speech and language. We furthermore find that in Neandertals, these changes lie on the common modern human haplotype, which previously was shown to have been subject to a selective sweep. These results suggest that these genetic changes and the selective sweep predate the common ancestor (which existed about 300,000-400,000 years ago) of modern human and Neandertal populations. This is in contrast to more recent age estimates of the selective sweep based on extant human diversity data. Thus, these results illustrate the usefulness of retrieving direct genetic information from ancient remains for understanding recent human evolution.


Nature | 2015

Genome-wide patterns of selection in 230 ancient Eurasians

Iain Mathieson; Iosif Lazaridis; Nadin Rohland; Swapan Mallick; Nick Patterson; Songül Alpaslan Roodenberg; Eadaoin Harney; Kristin Stewardson; Daniel Fernandes; Mario Novak; Kendra Sirak; Cristina Gamba; Eppie R. Jones; Bastien Llamas; Stanislav Dryomov; Joseph K. Pickrell; Juan Luis Arsuaga; José María Bermúdez de Castro; Eudald Carbonell; F.A. Gerritsen; Aleksandr Khokhlov; Pavel Kuznetsov; Marina Lozano; Harald Meller; Oleg Mochalov; Vayacheslav Moiseyev; Manuel Ángel Rojo Guerra; Jacob Roodenberg; Josep Maria Vergès; Johannes Krause

Ancient DNA makes it possible to observe natural selection directly by analysing samples from populations before, during and after adaptation events. Here we report a genome-wide scan for selection using ancient DNA, capitalizing on the largest ancient DNA data set yet assembled: 230 West Eurasians who lived between 6500 and 300 bc, including 163 with newly reported data. The new samples include, to our knowledge, the first genome-wide ancient DNA from Anatolian Neolithic farmers, whose genetic material we obtained by extracting from petrous bones, and who we show were members of the population that was the source of Europe’s first farmers. We also report a transect of the steppe region in Samara between 5600 and 300 bc, which allows us to identify admixture into the steppe from at least two external sources. We detect selection at loci associated with diet, pigmentation and immunity, and two independent episodes of selection on height.


Science | 2007

A melanocortin 1 receptor allele suggests varying pigmentation among Neanderthals

Carles Lalueza-Fox; Holger Römpler; David Caramelli; Claudia Stäubert; Giulio Catalano; David A. Hughes; Nadin Rohland; Elena Pilli; Laura Longo; Silvana Condemi; Marco de la Rasilla; Javier Fortea; Antonio Rosas; Mark Stoneking; Torsten Schöneberg; Jaume Bertranpetit; Michael Hofreiter

The melanocortin 1 receptor (MC1R) regulates pigmentation in humans and other vertebrates. Variants of MC1R with reduced function are associated with pale skin color and red hair in humans of primarily European origin. We amplified and sequenced a fragment of the MC1R gene (mc1r) from two Neanderthal remains. Both specimens have a mutation that was not found in ∼3700 modern humans analyzed. Functional analyses show that this variant reduces MC1R activity to a level that alters hair and/or skin pigmentation in humans. The impaired activity of this variant suggests that Neanderthals varied in pigmentation levels, potentially on the scale observed in modern humans. Our data suggest that inactive MC1R variants evolved independently in both modern humans and Neanderthals.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Evidence for a genetic discontinuity between Neandertals and 24,000-year-old anatomically modern Europeans.

David Caramelli; Carles Lalueza-Fox; Cristiano Vernesi; Martina Lari; Antonella Casoli; Francesco Mallegni; Brunetto Chiarelli; Isabelle Dupanloup; Jaume Bertranpetit; Guido Barbujani; Giorgio Bertorelle

During the late Pleistocene, early anatomically modern humans coexisted in Europe with the anatomically archaic Neandertals for some thousand years. Under the recent variants of the multiregional model of human evolution, modern and archaic forms were different but related populations within a single evolving species, and both have contributed to the gene pool of current humans. Conversely, the Out-of-Africa model considers the transition between Neandertals and anatomically modern humans as the result of a demographic replacement, and hence it predicts a genetic discontinuity between them. Following the most stringent current standards for validation of ancient DNA sequences, we typed the mtDNA hypervariable region I of two anatomically modern Homo sapiens sapiens individuals of the Cro-Magnon type dated at about 23 and 25 thousand years ago. Here we show that the mtDNAs of these individuals fall well within the range of variation of todays humans, but differ sharply from the available sequences of the chronologically closer Neandertals. This discontinuity is difficult to reconcile with the hypothesis that both Neandertals and early anatomically modern humans contributed to the current European gene pool.


Nature | 2014

Derived immune and ancestral pigmentation alleles in a 7,000-year-old Mesolithic European

Iñigo Olalde; Morten E. Allentoft; Federico Sánchez-Quinto; Gabriel Santpere; Charleston W. K. Chiang; Michael DeGiorgio; Javier Prado-Martinez; Juan Antonio Rodríguez; Simon Rasmussen; Javier Quilez; Oscar Ramirez; Urko M. Marigorta; Marcos Fernandez-Callejo; María E. Prada; Julio Manuel Vidal Encinas; Rasmus Nielsen; Mihai G. Netea; John Novembre; Richard A. Sturm; Pardis C. Sabeti; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Arcadi Navarro; Carles Lalueza-Fox

Ancient genomic sequences have started to reveal the origin and the demographic impact of farmers from the Neolithic period spreading into Europe. The adoption of farming, stock breeding and sedentary societies during the Neolithic may have resulted in adaptive changes in genes associated with immunity and diet. However, the limited data available from earlier hunter-gatherers preclude an understanding of the selective processes associated with this crucial transition to agriculture in recent human evolution. Here we sequence an approximately 7,000-year-old Mesolithic skeleton discovered at the La Braña-Arintero site in León, Spain, to retrieve a complete pre-agricultural European human genome. Analysis of this genome in the context of other ancient samples suggests the existence of a common ancient genomic signature across western and central Eurasia from the Upper Paleolithic to the Mesolithic. The La Braña individual carries ancestral alleles in several skin pigmentation genes, suggesting that the light skin of modern Europeans was not yet ubiquitous in Mesolithic times. Moreover, we provide evidence that a significant number of derived, putatively adaptive variants associated with pathogen resistance in modern Europeans were already present in this hunter-gatherer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Paleobiology and comparative morphology of a late Neandertal sample from El Sidrón, Asturias, Spain

Antonio Rosas; Cayetana Martinez-Maza; Markus Bastir; Antonio García-Tabernero; Carles Lalueza-Fox; Rosa Huguet; José E. Ortiz; Ramon Julià; Vicente Soler; Trinidad Torres; Enrique Martínez; Juan Carlos Cañaveras; Sergio Sanchez-Moral; Soledad Cuezva; Javier Lario; David Santamaría; Marco de la Rasilla; Javier Fortea

Fossil evidence from the Iberian Peninsula is essential for understanding Neandertal evolution and history. Since 2000, a new sample ≈43,000 years old has been systematically recovered at the El Sidrón cave site (Asturias, Spain). Human remains almost exclusively compose the bone assemblage. All of the skeletal parts are preserved, and there is a moderate occurrence of Middle Paleolithic stone tools. A minimum number of eight individuals are represented, and ancient mtDNA has been extracted from dental and osteological remains. Paleobiology of the El Sidrón archaic humans fits the pattern found in other Neandertal samples: a high incidence of dental hypoplasia and interproximal grooves, yet no traumatic lesions are present. Moreover, unambiguous evidence of human-induced modifications has been found on the human remains. Morphologically, the El Sidrón humans show a large number of Neandertal lineage-derived features even though certain traits place the sample at the limits of Neandertal variation. Integrating the El Sidrón human mandibles into the larger Neandertal sample reveals a north–south geographic patterning, with southern Neandertals showing broader faces with increased lower facial heights. The large El Sidrón sample therefore augments the European evolutionary lineage fossil record and supports ecogeographical variability across Neandertal populations.


Science | 2006

Nuclear Gene Indicates Coat-Color Polymorphism in Mammoths

Holger Römpler; Nadin Rohland; Carles Lalueza-Fox; T. A. Kuznetsova; Gernot Rabeder; Jaume Bertranpetit; Torsten Schöneberg; Michael Hofreiter

By amplifying the melanocortin type 1 receptor from the woolly mammoth, we can report the complete nucleotide sequence of a nuclear-encoded gene from an extinct species. We found two alleles and show that one allele produces a functional protein whereas the other one encodes a protein with strongly reduced activity. This finding suggests that mammoths may have been polymorphic in coat color, with both dark- and light-haired individuals co-occurring.


Nature | 2016

Ancient gene flow from early modern humans into Eastern Neanderthals

Martin Kuhlwilm; Ilan Gronau; Melissa J. Hubisz; Cesare de Filippo; Javier Prado-Martinez; Martin Kircher; Qiaomei Fu; Hernán A. Burbano; Carles Lalueza-Fox; Marco de la Rasilla; Antonio Rosas; Pavao Rudan; Dejana Brajković; Željko Kućan; Ivan Gušić; Tomas Marques-Bonet; Aida M. Andrés; Bence Viola; Svante Pääbo; Matthias Meyer; Adam Siepel; Sergi Castellano

It has been shown that Neanderthals contributed genetically to modern humans outside Africa 47,000–65,000 years ago. Here we analyse the genomes of a Neanderthal and a Denisovan from the Altai Mountains in Siberia together with the sequences of chromosome 21 of two Neanderthals from Spain and Croatia. We find that a population that diverged early from other modern humans in Africa contributed genetically to the ancestors of Neanderthals from the Altai Mountains roughly 100,000 years ago. By contrast, we do not detect such a genetic contribution in the Denisovan or the two European Neanderthals. We conclude that in addition to later interbreeding events, the ancestors of Neanderthals from the Altai Mountains and early modern humans met and interbred, possibly in the Near East, many thousands of years earlier than previously thought.

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Antonio Rosas

Spanish National Research Council

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Marco de la Rasilla

Facultad de Filosofía y Letras

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Oscar Ramirez

Spanish National Research Council

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Antonio García-Tabernero

Spanish National Research Council

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Elena Gigli

Spanish National Research Council

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