TŁUMA
Unknown Human Lineage Found Buried in The Neanderthal
Genome
Story by Russell McLendon
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Ancient Human Skull© Provided by
ScienceAlert
As Homo
sapiens migrated into Eurasia more than 70,000 years ago,
much of the continent was already inhabited by Neanderthals, hominins who
shared an ancestor with us but had spent roughly half a million years
diverging.
We don't know much
about their ensuing relationship, but it was probably contentious at
times. While Neanderthals eventually disappeared 40,000 years ago, there are
now 8 billion of us.
During their Late
Pleistocene overlap in Eurasia, however, we know the two hominin species
sometimes interbred, since many humans today still have traces of
Neanderthal DNA.
And according to a
new study, this relationship goes back even farther than we thought, with a
long-forgotten earlier chapter re-emerging from clues in the Neanderthal genome.
When modern humans
reached Eurasia in the Late Pleistocene, the study suggests, Neanderthals
living there already carried traces of our species' DNA,
apparently from a much older, previously unknown run-in with an even more
ancient lineage of anatomically modern humans.
That would mean
some Homo sapiens ventured into Eurasia more than 250,000
years ago, the study's authors report, long before the continent's earliest
evidence of modern humans. For context, the fossil record indicates our species
evolved in Africa only 300,000 years ago.
"We found this
reflection of ancient interbreeding where genes flowed from ancient modern
humans into Neanderthals," says Alexander Platt, an evolutionary
biologist at the University of Pennsylvania.
"This group of
individuals left Africa between 250,000 and 270,000 years ago. They were sort
of the cousins to all humans alive today, and they were much more like us than
Neanderthals," Platt says.
The early modern
humans who made it to Eurasia later died out, the researchers note, and
Neanderthals continued to dominate the continent for another 200,000 years or
so. Hidden in the Neanderthal genome, however, were remnants from this ancient
encounter.
To reveal this, the
study's authors first followed clues uncovered by another recent study, which found
Neanderthal-like chunks of DNA – called Neanderthal-homologous regions (NHRs) –
in multiple present-day human populations from Africa.
This was surprising,
since most interbreeding between modern humans and Neanderthals likely happened
in Eurasia. It raised questions about how Neanderthal DNA, typically associated
with Eurasian ancestry, could be seemingly abundant in Africa.
The actual
prevalence of NHRs across Africa was still unclear, though. Previous research
had relied on a limited set of genomes with a relatively recent common ancestry
in West and Central Africa, note the authors of the new study.
To address that,
they analyzed a wider range of modern genomes, representing 180 people from 12
genetically diverse populations in Botswana, Cameroon, Ethiopia, and Tanzania.
Researchers compared these with a Neanderthal genome from an
individual that lived in Russia's Altai Mountains about 120,000 years
ago.
"This study
highlights the importance of including ethnically and geographically diverse
populations in human genetics and genomic studies," says senior
author Sarah Tishkoff, a geneticist at the University of Pennsylvania.
Using a novel
statistical technique, the researchers investigated when and how NHRs entered
these populations. Did modern humans inherit genes from Neanderthals and bring
them back to Africa? Or did our species give these genes to Neanderthals in the
first place?
The answer is some
of both, the researchers say, but mainly the latter.
NHRs were found in
every population tested, showing they are widespread in Africa. Most of this
'Neanderthal-like' DNA originated not with Neanderthals, however, but with
ancient modern humans who migrated from Africa to Eurasia about 250,000 years
ago.
As the newcomers
interbred with Neanderthals, they left a legacy: Up to 6 percent of the
Neanderthal genome came from early members of our species, the researchers
report.
The study also found
evidence that, in certain populations, Neanderthal genes were introduced by
people migrating back to Africa from Eurasia, where their ancestors had
presumably interbred with Neanderthals.
Gene variants
from Homo sapiens are mostly located in noncoding regions of
the Neanderthal genome, the researchers point out, which suggests natural
selection was weeding them out of the coding sections – possibly because our
DNA wasn't helpful for Neanderthals.
Our own genome is
also still gradually shedding gene variants from Neanderthals, they note.
"So a
Neanderthal allele might work great in Neanderthals, but you plop it into a
modern human genome and it causes problems. Both modern humans and Neanderthals
slowly rid themselves of the alleles of the other group," Platt says.
Despite
interbreeding "quite readily," Neanderthals and modern humans had
evolved some significant differences during their roughly 500,000 years apart,
and "we were very far along the path to becoming distinct species,"
Platt says.
The study was
published in Current Biology.
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