送交者: xj 于 2005-3-16, 01:52:39:
N.Y. Times
March 14, 2005
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
A Family Tree in Every Gene
By ARMAND MARIE LEROI
London -- Shortly after last year's tsunami devastated the lands on the 
Indian Ocean, The Times of India ran an article with this headline: 
"Tsunami May Have Rendered Threatened Tribes Extinct." The tribes in 
question were the Onge, Jarawa, Great Andamanese and Sentinelese - all 
living on the Andaman Islands - and they numbered some 400 people in all. 
The article, noting that several of the archipelago's islands were 
low-lying, in the direct path of the wave, and that casualties were 
expected to be high, said, "Some beads may have just gone missing from the 
Emerald Necklace of India."
The metaphor is as colorful as it is well intentioned. But what exactly 
does it mean? After all, in a catastrophe that cost more than 150,000 
lives, why should the survival of a few hundred tribal people have any 
special claim on our attention? There are several possible answers to this 
question. The people of the Andamans have a unique way of life. True, 
their material culture does not extend beyond a few simple tools, and 
their visual art is confined to a few geometrical motifs, but they are 
hunter-gatherers and so a rarity in the modern world. Linguists, too, find 
them interesting since they collectively speak three languages seemingly 
unrelated to any others. But the Times of India took a slightly different 
tack. These tribes are special, it said, because they are of "Negrito 
racial stocks" that are "remnants of the oldest human populations of Asia 
and Australia."
It's an old-fashioned, even Victorian, sentiment. Who speaks of "racial 
stocks" anymore? After all, to do so would be to speak of something that 
many scientists and scholars say does not exist. If modern anthropologists 
mention the concept of race, it is invariably only to warn against and 
dismiss it. Likewise many geneticists. "Race is social concept, not a 
scientific one," according to Dr. Craig Venter - and he should know, since 
he was first to sequence the human genome. The idea that human races are 
only social constructs has been the consensus for at least 30 years.
But now, perhaps, that is about to change. Last fall, the prestigious 
journal Nature Genetics devoted a large supplement to the question of 
whether human races exist and, if so, what they mean. The journal did this 
in part because various American health agencies are making race an 
important part of their policies to best protect the public - often over 
the protests of scientists. In the supplement, some two dozen geneticists 
offered their views. Beneath the jargon, cautious phrases and academic 
courtesies, one thing was clear: the consensus about social constructs was 
unraveling. Some even argued that, looked at the right way, genetic data 
show that races clearly do exist.
The dominance of the social construct theory can be traced to a 1972 
article by Dr. Richard Lewontin, a Harvard geneticist, who wrote that most 
human genetic variation can be found within any given "race." If one 
looked at genes rather than faces, he claimed, the difference between an 
African and a European would be scarcely greater than the difference 
between any two Europeans. A few years later he wrote that the continued 
popularity of race as an idea was an "indication of the power of 
socioeconomically based ideology over the supposed objectivity of 
knowledge." Most scientists are thoughtful, liberal-minded and socially 
aware people. It was just what they wanted to hear.
Three decades later, it seems that Dr. Lewontin's facts were correct, and 
have been abundantly confirmed by ever better techniques of detecting 
genetic variety. His reasoning, however, was wrong. His error was an 
elementary one, but such was the appeal of his argument that it was only a 
couple of years ago that a Cambridge University statistician, A. W. F. 
Edwards, put his finger on it.
The error is easily illustrated. If one were asked to judge the ancestry 
of 100 New Yorkers, one could look at the color of their skin. That would 
do much to single out the Europeans, but little to distinguish the 
Senegalese from the Solomon Islanders. The same is true for any other 
feature of our bodies. The shapes of our eyes, noses and skulls; the color 
of our eyes and our hair; the heaviness, height and hairiness of our 
bodies are all, individually, poor guides to ancestry.
But this is not true when the features are taken together. Certain skin 
colors tend to go with certain kinds of eyes, noses, skulls and bodies. 
When we glance at a stranger's face we use those associations to infer 
what continent, or even what country, he or his ancestors came from - and 
we usually get it right. To put it more abstractly, human physical 
variation is correlated; and correlations contain information.
Genetic variants that aren't written on our faces, but that can be 
detected only in the genome, show similar correlations. It is these 
correlations that Dr. Lewontin seems to have ignored. In essence, he 
looked at one gene at a time and failed to see races. But if many - a few 
hundred - variable genes are considered simultaneously, then it is very 
easy to do so. Indeed, a 2002 study by scientists at the University of 
Southern California and Stanford showed that if a sample of people from 
around the world are sorted by computer into five groups on the basis of 
genetic similarity, the groups that emerge are native to Europe, East 
Asia, Africa, America and Australasia - more or less the major races of 
traditional anthropology.
One of the minor pleasures of this discovery is a new kind of genealogy. 
Today it is easy to find out where your ancestors came from - or even when 
they came, as with so many of us, from several different places. If you 
want to know what fraction of your genes are African, European or East 
Asian, all it takes is a mouth swab, a postage stamp and $400 - though 
prices will certainly fall.
Yet there is nothing very fundamental about the concept of the major 
continental races; they're just the easiest way to divide things up. Study 
enough genes in enough people and one could sort the world's population 
into 10, 100, perhaps 1,000 groups, each located somewhere on the map. 
This has not yet been done with any precision, but it will be. Soon it may 
be possible to identify your ancestors not merely as African or European, 
but Ibo or Yoruba, perhaps even Celt or Castilian, or all of the above.
The identification of racial origins is not a search for purity. The human 
species is irredeemably promiscuous. We have always seduced or coerced our 
neighbors even when they have a foreign look about them and we don't 
understand a word. If Hispanics, for example, are composed of a recent and 
evolving blend of European, American Indian and African genes, then the 
Uighurs of Central Asia can be seen as a 3,000-year-old mix of West 
European and East Asian genes. Even homogenous groups like native Swedes 
bear the genetic imprint of successive nameless migrations.
Some critics believe that these ambiguities render the very notion of race 
worthless. I disagree. The physical topography of our world cannot be 
accurately described in words. To navigate it, you need a map with 
elevations, contour lines and reference grids. But it is hard to talk in 
numbers, and so we give the world's more prominent features - the mountain 
ranges and plateaus and plains - names. We do so despite the inherent 
ambiguity of words. The Pennines of northern England are about one-tenth 
as high and long as the Himalayas, yet both are intelligibly described as 
mountain ranges.
So, too, it is with the genetic topography of our species. The billion or 
so of the world's people of largely European descent have a set of genetic 
variants in common that are collectively rare in everyone else; they are a 
race. At a smaller scale, three million Basques do as well; so they are a 
race as well. Race is merely a shorthand that enables us to speak 
sensibly, though with no great precision, about genetic rather than 
cultural or political differences.
But it is a shorthand that seems to be needed. One of the more painful 
spectacles of modern science is that of human geneticists piously 
disavowing the existence of races even as they investigate the genetic 
relationships between "ethnic groups." Given the problematic, even 
vicious, history of the word "race," the use of euphemisms is 
understandable. But it hardly aids understanding, for the term "ethnic 
group" conflates all the possible ways in which people differ from each 
other.
Indeed, the recognition that races are real should have several benefits. 
To begin with, it would remove the disjunction in which the government and 
public alike defiantly embrace categories that many, perhaps most, 
scholars and scientists say do not exist.
Second, the recognition of race may improve medical care. Different races 
are prone to different diseases. The risk that an African-American man 
will be afflicted with hypertensive heart disease or prostate cancer is 
nearly three times greater than that for a European-American man. On the 
other hand, the former's risk of multiple sclerosis is only half as great. 
Such differences could be due to socioeconomic factors. Even so, 
geneticists have started searching for racial differences in the 
frequencies of genetic variants that cause diseases. They seem to be 
finding them.
Race can also affect treatment. African-Americans respond poorly to some 
of the main drugs used to treat heart conditions - notably beta blockers 
and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors. Pharmaceutical corporations 
are paying attention. Many new drugs now come labeled with warnings that 
they may not work in some ethnic or racial groups.  Here, as so often, the 
mere prospect of litigation has concentrated minds.
Such differences are, of course, just differences in average. Everyone 
agrees that race is a crude way of predicting who gets some disease or 
responds to some treatment. Ideally, we would all have our genomes 
sequenced before swallowing so much as an aspirin. Yet until that is 
technically feasible, we can expect racial classifications to play an 
increasing part in health care.
The argument for the importance of race, however, does not rest purely on 
utilitarian grounds. There is also an aesthetic factor. We are a 
physically variable species. Yet for all the triumphs of modern genetics, 
we know next to nothing about what makes us so. We do not know why some 
people have prominent rather than flat noses, round rather than pointed 
skulls, wide rather than narrow faces, straight rather than curly hair. We 
do not know what makes blue eyes blue.
One way to find out would be to study people of mixed race ancestry. In 
part, this is because racial differences in looks are the most striking 
that we see. But there is also a more subtle technical reason. When 
geneticists map genes, they rely on the fact that they can follow our 
ancestors' chromosomes as they get passed from one generation to the next, 
dividing and mixing in unpredictable combinations. That, it turns out, is 
much easier to do in people whose ancestors came from very different 
places.
The technique is called admixture mapping. Developed to find the genes 
responsible for racial differences in inherited disease, it is only just 
moving from theory to application. But through it, we may be able to write 
the genetic recipe for the fair hair of a Norwegian, the 
black-verging-on-purple skin of a Solomon Islander, the flat face of an 
Inuit, and the curved eyelid of a Han Chinese. We shall no longer gawp 
ignorantly at the gallery; we shall be able to name the painters.
There is a final reason race matters. It gives us reason - if there were 
not reason enough already - to value and protect some of the world's most 
obscure and marginalized people. When the Times of India article referred 
to the Andaman Islanders as being of ancient Negrito racial stock, the 
terminology was correct. Negrito is the name given by anthropologists to a 
people who once lived throughout Southeast Asia. They are very small, very 
dark, and have peppercorn hair. They look like African pygmies who have 
wandered away from Congo's jungles to take up life on a tropical isle. But 
they are not.
The latest genetic data suggest that the Negritos are descended from the 
first modern humans to have invaded Asia, some 100,000 years ago.  In time 
they were overrun or absorbed by waves of Neolithic agriculturalists, and 
later nearly wiped out by British, Spanish and Indian colonialists. Now 
they are confined to the Malay Peninsula, a few islands in the Philippines 
and the Andamans.
Happily, most of the Andamans' Negritos seem to have survived December's 
tsunami. The fate of one tribe, the Sentinelese, remains uncertain, but an 
Indian coast guard helicopter sent to check up on them came under bow and 
arrow attack, which is heartening. Even so, Negrito populations, wherever 
they are, are so small, isolated and impoverished that it seems certain 
that they will eventually disappear.
Yet even after they have gone, the genetic variants that defined the 
Negritos will remain, albeit scattered, in the people who inhabit the 
littoral of the Bay of Bengal and the South China Sea. They will remain 
visible in the unusually dark skin of some Indonesians, the unusually 
curly hair of some Sri Lankans, the unusually slight frames of some 
Filipinos. But the unique combination of genes that makes the Negritos so 
distinctive, and that took tens of thousands of years to evolve, will have 
disappeared. A human race will have gone extinct, and the human species 
will be the poorer for it.
---
Armand Marie Leroi, an evolutionary developmental biologist at Imperial 
College in London, is the author of "Mutants: On Genetic Variety and the 
Human Body."
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