PDA

View Full Version : Milk Drinking Still a Mystery



microrobert
01-23-2014, 05:15 AM
Milk Drinking Still a Mystery

The mutation for milk-drinking evolved independently in different parts of the world over the last 10,000 years as a result of strong natural selection, but why was it so advantageous?

Among the more momentous developments in human evolution was the ability to digest milk beyond early childhood.

Mutations that enabled lifelong milk drinking appeared independently in several parts of the world over the last 7,500 years, according to growing evidence. And those genes spread rapidly. Today, about a third of adults around the world can drink milk without stomach problems, a trait known as lactase persistence.

But why was milk drinking so advantageous to humankind?

A new study debunks one leading theory: that milk provided a valuable source of vitamin D, which would’ve helped people absorb its calcium.

Newly analyzed human skeletons from an ancient site in Spain show that the milk-drinking gene spread just as rapidly in that sun-drenched climate as it did in other places, suggesting that milk must have been beneficial there for some reason other than its vitamin D content.

“Throughout the years, I have heard so many evolutionary hypotheses about lactase persistence because they are so fun to coin,” said Oddný Sverrisdóttir, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Uppsala in Sweden. “For decades now, people have hypothesized that it was because of lack of sunlight in the north of Europe that people would have had to supplement the lack of calcium and vitamin D by drinking milk.”

“Now, looking at this picture from Spain,” she said, “the calcium-assimilation hypothesis either didn’t affect the evolution of lactase persistence at all, or other forces were there as well.”

Sverrisdóttir has long been interested in how and why Europe’s early farmers began drinking milk, so she was excited when she got her hands on well-preserved samples of skeletal remains from eight people who lived in northeastern Spain about 5,000 years ago. That was well after the milk-drinking mutation had appeared in northern Europe, and she was eager to find out if those ancient Spaniards were drinking milk, too. So the first thing she did was test their DNA for lactase persistence.

“I thought at least one would have the mutation,” since so many of today’s Spanish adults can drink milk without health consequences, Sverrisdóttir said. “None did.”

To figure out whether the recent and rapid spread of lactase persistence in Spain was a fluke or if natural selection was at play, Sverrisdóttir and colleagues compared the mitochondrial DNA of modern Spaniards with the ancient samples. Mitochondrial DNA changes very slowly, making it ideal for tracing family trees over time.

And, the researchers report today in the journal Molecular Biology and Evolution, analyses showed that the ancient cave dwellers were indeed ancestors of people who live and frequently drink milk in Spain today.

http://news.discovery.com/human/health/milk-drinking-still-a-mystery-140121.htm

Unome
01-23-2014, 06:06 AM
Lactose intolerance generally occurs because young mammals are not supposed to drink milk after a certain stage of development.

This is called "weaning", as-in, weaning children off of breast-feeding and breast-milk.

Nature doesn't want mammals to drink milk after a certain stage of maturity and body development. European cultures adapted to this development with cheese and yogurt, which are forms of pre-digested milk (both cheese and yogurt use bacteria to breakdown milk proteins).

Atlantic Islander
01-23-2014, 06:15 AM
Interesting.

Äijä
01-23-2014, 06:25 AM
Getting more protein to grow big would be an advantage also.

SardiniaAtlantis
01-23-2014, 06:29 AM
So long as it is not done from a bag, I have no qualms with it. http://www.theapricity.com/forum/showthread.php?110856-Canadian-Milk-Bags!!

McCauley
01-23-2014, 06:29 AM
Getting more protein to grow big would be an advantage also.

I used to drink so much milk baby, but im still a skinny little fucker. I'm tall though.

You like tall American boys?

Äijä
01-23-2014, 06:36 AM
I used to drink so much milk baby, but im still a skinny little fucker. I'm tall though.

You like tall American boys?

Yes, they fall harder.