一つのタンパク質が音声言語の出現を形作った可能性(A single protein may have helped shape the emergence of spoken language)

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2025-02-18  ロックフェラー大学

ロックフェラー大学の研究チームは、ヒトに特有のNOVA1タンパク質変異が音声言語の進化に関与した可能性を示す成果を『Nature Communications』誌に発表した。NOVA1はRNA結合タンパク質で、神経発達に関与。マウスにヒト型のNOVA1(I197V変異)を導入したところ、発声パターンに変化が見られた。この変異はネアンデルタール人やデニソワ人には見られず、現生人類固有とされる。研究では、発声に関連する複数の遺伝子がこの変異型NOVA1の標的であることも判明。言語能力の遺伝的基盤の一端を明らかにする画期的な成果とされる。

<関連情報>

ヒト化NOVA1スプライシング因子がマウスの音声コミュニケーションを変化させる A humanized NOVA1 splicing factor alters mouse vocal communications

Yoko Tajima,César D. M. Vargas,Keiichi Ito,Wei Wang,Ji-Dung Luo,Jiawei Xing,Nurdan Kuru,Luiz Carlos Machado,Adam Siepel,Thomas S. Carroll,Erich D. Jarvis & Robert B. Darnell
Nature Communications  Published:18 February 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56579-2

一つのタンパク質が音声言語の出現を形作った可能性(A single protein may have helped shape the emergence of spoken language)

Abstract

NOVA1, a neuronal RNA-binding protein expressed in the central nervous system, is essential for survival in mice and normal development in humans. A single amino acid change (I197V) in NOVA1’s second RNA binding domain is unique to modern humans. To study its physiological effects, we generated mice carrying the human-specific I197V variant (Nova1hu/hu) and analyzed the molecular and behavioral consequences. While the I197V substitution had minimal impact on NOVA1’s RNA binding capacity, it led to specific effects on alternative splicing, and CLIP revealed multiple binding peaks in mouse brain transcripts involved in vocalization. These molecular findings were associated with behavioral differences in vocalization patterns in Nova1hu/hu mice as pups and adults. Our findings suggest that this human-specific NOVA1 substitution may have been part of an ancient evolutionary selective sweep in a common ancestral population of Homo sapiens, possibly contributing to the development of spoken language through differential RNA regulation during brain development.

生物工学一般
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