There's always some interesting new discovery going on in this area. Right now, the most fascinating is with human evolution. In the last few years scientists have managed to extract dna from bones up to 50-60,000 years old, with the potential to push this back even further. At last we can answer some questions with certainty that would always have been in dispute otherwise.
We now have dna from two species of humans which have died out - Neanderthals (mostly Europe) and Denisovans (mostly Asia/Polynesia). In addition we have evidence of a third as yet unidentified species, which may be homo erectus (from which modern man is believed to have descended).
We also know that we were able to interbeed with these species and (depending on where you live) you may have a small percentage of Neanderthal or Denisovan dna in you. The interbreeding was small, either because of limited opportunity or limited fertility, we don't know.
This proves beyond all doubt that these other species are indeed human relations. The story of our relationship is complex and still being argued, but of the central fact there is no doubt. All of this is exactly as you would expect if TOE were correct.
(It remains the case that everything we have discovered in all fields of science is consistent with TOE, although there is much still to be done. It is perverse to focus on the incomplete parts and ignore the massive accumulation of evidence in the other direction. It would be like refusing to accept the logic of 1-100, just because 20 of the numbers hadn't been 'discovered' yet.)
For Creationists, these discoveries cause two problems. One, it provides further evidence of human evolution. Two, it makes some Creation stories hard to reconcile. For instance, I have seen some daft suggestions that one of the people who went on the Ark was a Denisovan and another a Neanderthal, the rest modern humans. This is clutching at straws.
Please note, TOE is not the same as a theory of origin of life. TOE describes how it changes, not how it starts. It's possible to accept TOE but still believe in divine creation of life. (And many Christians and Muslims do.) You are defending a position that doesn't need defending.
There's a report about one of the discoveries here but many more around the web:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-25423498