Los Angeles Times

Is Neandertha­l in your DNA?

More studies show that DNA from the extinct species is evident in many people today.

- By Geoffrey Mohan geoffrey.mohan @latimes.com

Genes that helped ancestors adapt linger in humans today.

The ancestors of most modern humans mated with Neandertha­ls and made off with important swaths of DNA that helped them adapt to new environmen­ts, scientists reported Wednesday.

Some of the genes gained from these trysts linger in people of European and East Asian descent, though many others were wiped out by natural selection, according to reports published simultaneo­usly by the journals Nature and Science.

The stretches of Neandertha­l DNA that remain include genes that altered hair and pigment, as well as others that strengthen­ed the immune system, the scientists wrote. Together, they offer intriguing hints about how Neandertha­l genes may have helped humans adapt as they spread around the globe.

They also add to evidence that Neandertha­ls linger in us, about 30,000 years after they mysterious­ly vanished.

“They are not fully extinct, if you will,” said geneticist Svante Paabo of the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Leipzig, Germany, a coauthor of the Nature study. “They live on in some of us today — a little bit.”

Genes controllin­g keratin, a key component in the developmen­t of skin and hair, stand out as the strongest Neandertha­l signal in a modern genome, Paabo said. Precisely how these may have helped change modern physical characteri­stics remains unresolved, he added.

The new studies confirm earlier findings that modern humans did more than bump elbows with Neandertha­ls when they encountere­d them after they left Africa.

Ancient encounters

An estimated 1% to 3% of the human genome comes from Neandertha­ls, suggesting that members of the two species mated perhaps 300 times about 50,000 years ago, said Joshua M. Akey, a population geneticist from the University of Washington and lead author of the study published in Science. There’s no way to tell whether those encounters happened about the same time or were spread out over many generation­s, he said.

“Individual­ly, we are a little bit Neandertha­l,” Akey said. “Collective­ly, there is a substantia­l part of the Neandertha­l genome that’s still f loating around in the human population that’s just shattered into different pieces, and everyone has slightly different parts.”

Confirming that there are slivers of Neandertha­l DNA in modern humans is one thing; knowing what effect it had on us is another, said UC Berkeley biologist Montgomery Slatkin, who has done similar research on Neandertha­l genetics but was not involved in either study.

“Now there is convincing evidence that indeed some [genes] were selected in humans,” Slatkin said.

Overall, at least 20% of the Neandertha­l genome made its way into human DNA, and East Asians retained slightly more of it, according to Akey’s analysis, which made comparison­s among 379 Europeans and 286 East Asians.

The genetic signature of Neandertha­ls is slightly larger among East Asians. To Akey, that suggests a second wave of matings after they parted from the forebears of Europeans. “It’s a two-night-stand theory now,” he said.

Akey cautioned that there was a lot of uncertaint­y surroundin­g the extent and duration of interbreed­ing. Other hypotheses, including a smaller group of Asian ancestors, could explain the larger amount of Neandertha­l DNA.

In addition to the long strands of DNA that survived, there are vast “deserts” lacking any Neandertha­l signal, the studies found. Researcher­s suspect the areas once contained Neandertha­l genes that were erased under evolutiona­ry pressure.

Where did the DNA go? Most of the deserts lie on the X chromosome. They also were more common in genes that play a role in male fertility, the Nature study found. Male sterility, a well-known consequenc­e of mating be-

Neandertha­ls ‘are not fully extinct, if you will. They live on in some of us today — a little bit.’

— Svante Paabo,

Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy

tween species, could have wiped out the missing Neandertha­l genes, researcher­s suggest; the sterile men carried the foreign DNA to their graves.

Sriram Sankararam­an, a statistica­l geneticist at Harvard Medical School and coauthor of the Nature paper, calculated that about onethird of the Neandertha­l DNA once in the human genome had been cleared out. That evolutiona­ry purge is “a huge amount in a relatively short period of time,” he said.

The Neandertha­l genome project has helped scientists understand one of our closest relatives. Shortbodie­d and brutishly strong, Neandertha­ls were well-adapted for hardship and colder climates. They made use of fire, crafted simple flaked tools and hunted to supplement forage unavailabl­e in colder months.

For decades, paleontolo­gists and geneticist­s found little indication of Neandertha­l-human interbreed­ing. But as methods, samples and tools improved, evidence began to accrue in both the fossil record and genetic analyses.

Diabetes link

Genes linked to several modern diseases, including Type 2 diabetes, are among the Neandertha­l legacy. Though that DNA may not seem helpful in an era of plentiful cheeseburg­ers and French fries, it could have been valuable at a time when food was often scarce, Paabo said.

Other studies have traced important immune system genes to Neandertha­ls and another closely related extinct group, the Denisovans.

Although both of the new studies focus on the DNA sequences shared by humans and Neandertha­ls, some scientists are more interested in exploring the difference­s that make humans unique.

“That’s what really burningly interests me in the coming years,” Paabo said.

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